Supplemental Guidelines for Sex Offender Registration and Notification, 1630-1640 [2011-505]
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Catherine Poston, Attorney Advisor,
Office on Violence Against Women,
United States Department of Justice, 145
N Street, NE., Suite 10W 121,
Washington, DC 20530; by telephone at:
(202) 514–5430; e-mail:
Catherine.poston@usdoj.gov; or fax:
(202) 305–2589. You may also view
information about the NAC on the
Office on Violence Against Women Web
site at: https://www.ovw.usdoj.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Notice of
this meeting is required under section
10(a)(2) of the Federal Advisory
Committee Act. The National Advisory
Committee on Violence Against Women
(NAC) was re-chartered on March 3,
2010 by the Attorney General. The
purpose of this Federal advisory
committee is to provide advice and
recommendations to the Department of
Justice and the Department of Health
and Human Services on how to improve
the Nation’s response to violence
against women, with a specific focus on
successful interventions with children
and teens who witness and/or are
victimized by domestic violence, dating
violence, and sexual assault. The NAC
will bring together experts, advocates,
researchers, and criminal justice
professionals for the exchange of
innovative ideas and the development
of practical solutions to help the Federal
government address and prevent these
serious problems. This Federal advisory
committee will develop
recommendations for successful
interventions with children and teens
who witness and/or are victimized by
domestic violence, dating violence, and
sexual assault. The NAC members will
also examine the relationship between
children and teens who are witnesses to
or victims of such violence and the
overall public safety of communities
across the country.
This is the first meeting of the NAC
and will include an introduction of
Federal advisory committee members,
presentations by Department of Justice
staff on Federal efforts to address these
problems, and a discussion of the goals
for the NAC. The Director of the Office
on Violence Against Women, the
Honorable Susan B. Carbon, serves as
the Designated Federal Official of the
NAC.
The NAC is also welcoming public
oral comment at this meeting and has
reserved an estimated 30 minutes for
this purpose. Time will be reserved for
public comment on January 28, 2011
from 12:05 p.m. to 12:20 p.m. and from
4:30 p.m. to 4:45 p.m. See the section
below for information on reserving time
for public comment.
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Access: This meeting will be open to
the pubic but registration on a space
available basis and for security reasons
is required. All members of the public
who wish to attend must register at least
six (6) days in advance of the meeting
by contacting Catherine Poston,
Attorney Advisor, Office on Violence
Against Women, United States
Department of Justice, 145 N Street, NE.,
Suite 10W 121, Washington, DC 20530;
by telephone at: (202) 514–5430; e-mail:
Catherine.poston@usdoj.gov; or fax:
(202) 305–2589. All attendees will be
required to sign in at the Department of
Justice security entrance and at the
meeting registration desk. Please bring
photo identification and allow extra
time prior to the start of the meeting.
The meeting site is accessible to
individuals with disabilities.
Individuals who require special
accommodation in order to attend the
meeting should notify Catherine Poston
no later than January 21, 2011.
Written Comments: Interested parties
are invited to submit written comments
by January 21, 2011 to Catherine Poston,
Attorney Advisor, Office on Violence
Against Women, United States
Department of Justice, 145 N Street, NE.,
Suite 10W 121, Washington, DC 20530;
by telephone at: (202) 514–5430;
e-mail: Catherine.poston@usdoj.gov; or
fax: (202) 305–2589.
Public Comment: Persons interested
in participating during the public
comment periods of the meeting are
requested to reserve time on the agenda
by contacting Catherine Poston,
Attorney Advisor, Office on Violence
Against Women, United States
Department of Justice, 145 N Street, NE.,
Suite 10W 121, Washington, DC 20530;
by telephone at: (202) 514–5430;
e-mail: Catherine.poston@usdoj.gov; or
fax: (202) 305–2589. Requests must
include the participant’s name,
organization represented, if appropriate,
and a brief description of the subject of
the comments. Each participant will be
permitted approximately 3 to 5 minutes
to present comments, depending on the
number of individuals reserving time on
the agenda. Participants are also
encouraged to submit written copies of
their comments. Comments that are
submitted to Catherine Poston, Attorney
Advisor, Office on Violence Against
Women, United States Department of
Justice, 145 N Street, NE., Suite 10W
121, Washington, DC 20530; by
telephone at: (202) 514–5430;
e-mail: Catherine.poston@usdoj.gov; or
fax: (202) 305–2589 will be circulated to
NAC members prior to the meeting.
Given the expected number of
individuals interested in presenting
comments at the meeting, reservations
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should be made as soon as possible.
Persons unable to obtain reservations to
speak during the meeting are
encouraged to submit written
comments, which will be accepted at
the meeting location or may be mailed
to the NAC, to the attention of Catherine
Poston, Attorney Advisor, Office on
Violence Against Women, United States
Department of Justice, 145 N Street, NE.,
Suite 10W 121, Washington, DC 20530;
by telephone at: (202) 514–5430; e-mail:
Catherine.poston@usdoj.gov; or fax:
(202) 305–2589.
Dated: January 5, 2010.
Susan B. Carbon,
Director, Office on Violence Against Women.
[FR Doc. 2011–365 Filed 1–10–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–FX–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Office of the Attorney General
[Docket No. OAG 134; AG Order No. 3241–
2011]
RIN 1105–AB36
Supplemental Guidelines for Sex
Offender Registration and Notification
Department of Justice.
Final guidelines.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Sex Offender Registration
and Notification Act (SORNA),
establishes minimum national standards
for sex offender registration and
notification. The Attorney General
issued the National Guidelines for Sex
Offender Registration and Notification
(‘‘SORNA Guidelines’’ or ‘‘Guidelines’’)
on July 2, 2008, to provide guidance and
assistance to jurisdictions in
implementing the SORNA standards in
their sex offender registration and
notification programs. These
supplemental guidelines augment or
modify certain features of the SORNA
Guidelines in order to make a change
required by the KIDS Act and to address
other issues arising in jurisdictions’
implementation of the SORNA
requirements. The matters addressed
include certain aspects of public Web
site posting of sex offender information,
interjurisdictional tracking and
information sharing regarding sex
offenders, the review process
concerning jurisdictions’ SORNA
implementation, the classes of sex
offenders to be registered by
jurisdictions retroactively, and the
treatment of Indian tribes newly
recognized by the Federal government
subsequent to the enactment of SORNA.
DATES: Effective Date: January 11, 2011.
SUMMARY:
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Linda M. Baldwin, Director, Office of
Sex Offender Sentencing, Monitoring,
Apprehending, Registering, and
Tracking; Office of Justice Programs,
United States Department of Justice,
Washington, DC, 202 305–2463.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Overview
The Sex Offender Registration and
Notification Act, which is title I of the
Adam Walsh Child Protection and
Safety Act of 2006, Public Law 109–248,
was enacted on July 27, 2006. SORNA
(42 U.S.C. 16901 et seq.) establishes
minimum national standards for sex
offender registration and notification in
the jurisdictions to which it applies.
‘‘Jurisdictions’’ in the relevant sense are
the 50 states, the District of Columbia,
the five principal U.S. territories, and
Indian tribes that satisfy certain criteria.
42 U.S.C. 16911(10). SORNA directs the
Attorney General to issue guidelines
and regulations to interpret and
implement SORNA. See id. 16912(b).
To this end, the Attorney General
issued the National Guidelines for Sex
Offender Registration and Notification,
73 FR 38030, on July 2, 2008. The
SORNA standards are administered by
the Office of Sex Offender Sentencing,
Monitoring, Apprehending, Registering,
and Tracking (‘‘SMART Office’’), which
assists all jurisdictions in their SORNA
implementation efforts and determines
whether jurisdictions have successfully
completed these efforts. See 42 U.S.C.
16945; 73 FR at 38044, 38047–48.
Since the publication of the SORNA
Guidelines, issues have arisen in
SORNA implementation that require
that some aspects of the Guidelines be
augmented or modified. Consequently,
the Department of Justice proposed and
solicited public comment on
supplemental guidelines addressing
these issues, which were published in
the Federal Register on May 14, 2010,
at 75 FR 27362. The public comment
period closed on July 13, 2010.
Following consideration of the public
comments received, the Department of
Justice is now finalizing the
supplemental guidelines, which do the
following:
(1) Allow jurisdictions, in their
discretion, to exempt information
concerning sex offenders required to
register on the basis of juvenile
delinquency adjudications from public
Web site posting.
(2) Require jurisdictions to exempt
sex offenders’ e-mail addresses and
other Internet identifiers from public
Web site posting, pursuant to the KIDS
Act, 42 U.S.C. 16915a.
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(3) Require jurisdictions to have sex
offenders report international travel 21
days in advance of such travel and to
submit information concerning such
travel to the appropriate Federal
agencies and databases.
(4) Clarify the means to be utilized to
ensure consistent interjurisdictional
information sharing and tracking of sex
offenders.
(5) Expand required registration
information to include the forms signed
by sex offenders acknowledging that
they were advised of their registration
obligations.
(6) Provide additional information
concerning the review process for
determining that jurisdictions have
substantially implemented the SORNA
requirements in their programs and
continue to comply with these
requirements.
(7) Afford jurisdictions greater
latitude regarding the registration of sex
offenders who have fully exited the
justice system but later reenter through
a new (non-sex-offense) criminal
conviction by providing that
jurisdictions may limit such registration
to cases in which the new conviction is
for a felony.
(8) Provide, for Indian tribes that are
newly recognized by the Federal
government following the enactment of
SORNA, authorization and time frames
for such tribes to elect whether to
become SORNA registration
jurisdictions and to implement SORNA.
Summary of Comments on the Proposed
Supplemental Guidelines
About 280 separate comments were
received from a wide variety of
agencies, organizations, and
individuals. Many of the comments
were favorable to the supplemental
guidelines, either generally or with
respect to particular measures therein.
The grounds of support included the
value of the changes in the
supplemental guidelines in facilitating
jurisdictions’ implementation of
SORNA or enhancing the efficacy of sex
offender registration and notification.
Some commenters criticized the
supplemental guidelines as potentially
resulting in greater disparity among
jurisdictions in sex offender registration
or notification standards by increasing
jurisdictions’ discretion in certain areas.
SORNA, however, does not aim at
complete uniformity among
jurisdictions, but rather establishes a
national baseline of sex offender
registration and notification standards
and generally leaves jurisdictions free to
adopt different approaches and
provisions beyond the required
minimum. See 73 FR at 38032–35. The
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provisions in the supplemental
guidelines that broaden jurisdictions’
discretion affect limited areas,
specifically, whether jurisdictions will
publicly disclose information
concerning sex offenders required to
register on the basis of juvenile
delinquency adjudications, and whether
jurisdictions will require registration by
sex offenders who have left the justice
system but later reenter the system
through subsequent non-felony, nonsex-offense convictions. By relaxing a
couple of requirements that have been
impediments to SORNA
implementation in some jurisdictions,
these changes further the nationwide
implementation of the remainder of the
SORNA requirements and hence are
likely to promote greater overall
uniformity among jurisdictions in sex
offender registration and notification
standards. Considering the foregoing,
the public comments that criticized
certain features of the supplemental
guidelines as resulting in an undesirable
loss of uniformity do not persuasively
establish that there will be such an
effect that outweighs the benefits of
these changes.
Some commenters criticized changes
made in these supplemental guidelines
as an inappropriate or impermissible
exercise of legislative power by the
Attorney General, and urged that such
changes could properly be made only by
Congress. However, SORNA expressly
affords the Attorney General authority
to expand the range of required
registration information and to create
exceptions to the required disclosure of
registration information. See 42 U.S.C.
16914(a)(7), (b)(8), 16918(b)(4), (c)(4),
16921(b). SORNA further charges the
Attorney General with responsibility for
issuing guidelines and regulations to
interpret and implement SORNA and
for determining whether jurisdictions
have substantially implemented SORNA
in their programs. See 42 U.S.C.
16912(b), 16925. These authorities
adequately support the measures
adopted in these supplemental
guidelines.
Some of the comments received
concerned matters outside the scope of
these supplemental guidelines. Those
comments, and the Department’s
responses thereto, include the
following: (i) Some comments generally
criticized SORNA, state sex offender
registration and notification laws, or
state laws imposing measures that
SORNA does not require, such as
residency restrictions on sex offenders,
and explicitly or implicitly urged that
such laws should be repealed or
amended. The Attorney General has no
authority to repeal or amend Federal or
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State laws by issuing guidelines. (ii)
Some comments criticized measures in
the preexisting SORNA Guidelines that
the proposed supplemental guidelines
did not attempt to address. The final
supplemental guidelines have not been
changed on the basis of such comments
because they did not concern matters
within the scope of these supplemental
guidelines. Moreover, these comments
did not provide persuasive reasons for
changing other requirements under
SORNA or its implementing guidelines.
(iii) Some comments raised questions
regarding SORNA implementation by
jurisdictions that did not specifically
concern the measures adopted in these
supplemental guidelines. Questions of
this type should be addressed directly to
the SMART Office. The SMART Office
is available at all times to answer
jurisdictions’ questions regarding
SORNA implementation and to assist
them in such implementation.
Some commenters, on varying
grounds, were critical of particular
changes made by these supplemental
guidelines or urged that the changes do
not go far enough in qualifying or
supplementing SORNA’s requirements.
The main substantive comments and
criticisms are most conveniently
discussed on a topic-by-topic basis:
Juvenile Delinquents
Many favorable comments were
received concerning Part I.A of these
supplemental guidelines, which
provides that it is within jurisdictions’
discretion whether they will publicly
disclose information concerning
juvenile delinquent sex offenders. Some
commenters, however, urged that the
Attorney General should go further in
limiting public disclosure of such
information, or that the Attorney
General should also restrict or eliminate
SORNA’s registration requirements for
juvenile delinquent sex offenders. The
grounds urged for further changes
included that, absent such changes,
juvenile delinquent sex offenders would
be improperly equated to adult sex
offenders, stigmatized, unjustifiably
subjected to lifetime registration, and
not effectively rehabilitated in
conformity with the objectives of
juvenile justice systems.
In assessing these comments, it must
be understood that, following the
issuance of these supplemental
guidelines, there is no remaining
requirement under SORNA that
jurisdictions publicly disclose
information about sex offenders whose
predicate sex offense ‘‘convictions’’ are
juvenile delinquency adjudications.
There are two provisions in SORNA that
require public disclosure of certain
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information concerning sex offenders.
One of these provisions is 42 U.S.C.
16918, which generally requires that
jurisdictions make sex offender
information available on publicly
accessible Internet sites. The other is 42
U.S.C. 16921(b), which requires targeted
disclosures of sex offender information,
some aspects of which could be
characterized as involving public
disclosure. Specifically, the required
disclosures under the latter provision
include disclosure to certain school,
public housing, social service, and
volunteer entities, and to other
organizations, companies, or
individuals who request notification. As
a practical matter, the public disclosures
required under § 16921(b) may
effectively merge with the Internet
disclosure required under § 16918(b),
because the SORNA Guidelines explain
that jurisdictions may satisfy the public
disclosure aspects of § 16921(b) by
including functions on their public sex
offender Web sites that enable members
of the public to request automatic
notification when sex offenders
commence residence, employment, or
school attendance in specified areas.
See 73 FR at 38061.
Under both public disclosure
provisions in SORNA, the Attorney
General has express statutory authority
to limit the required disclosure of
information. See 42 U.S.C. 16918(c)(4)
(‘‘[a] jurisdiction may exempt from
disclosure * * * any other information
exempted from disclosure by the
Attorney General’’); id. § 16921(b)
(registry information to be provided to
specified entities ‘‘other than
information exempted from disclosure
by the Attorney General’’). Moreover,
under both of these provisions, the
Attorney General has exercised his
authority in these supplemental
guidelines to provide that jurisdictions
need not publicly disclose information
concerning persons required to register
on the basis of juvenile delinquency
adjudications.
Given this change, the effect of the
remaining registration requirements
under SORNA for certain juvenile
delinquent sex offenders is, in essence,
to enable registration authorities to track
such offenders following their release
and to make information about them
available to law enforcement agencies.
See 73 FR at 38060; Part I.A of these
supplemental guidelines. There is no
remaining requirement under SORNA
that jurisdictions engage in any form of
public disclosure or notification
regarding juvenile delinquent sex
offenders. Jurisdictions are free to do so,
but need not do so to any greater extent
than they may wish.
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The comments that proposed some
further restriction or elimination of
SORNA’s registration requirements in
relation to juveniles often appeared to
reflect misunderstanding of the
foregoing points or other
misunderstandings regarding SORNA’s
provisions relating to juveniles. One
possible misunderstanding concerns the
Attorney General’s legal authorities
under SORNA. As noted above, the
Attorney General has express statutory
authority to create exceptions to the
required public disclosure of
registration information under SORNA.
In contrast, SORNA affords the Attorney
General no open-ended authority to
restrict or eliminate registration (as
opposed to information disclosure)
requirements under SORNA. Hence,
these comments misconceived the legal
situation to the extent they assumed the
Attorney General could simply
eliminate registration requirements
under SORNA in relation to juveniles or
other classes of offenders, parallel to his
authority to create exceptions to
SORNA’s information disclosure
requirements.
Regarding other apparent
misunderstandings that appeared in the
comments, the following points may
help to provide a clear picture of
SORNA’s registration requirements and
their effects on juveniles:
First, SORNA’s treatment of juvenile
sex offenders is very different from its
treatment of adult sex offenders.
Registration is required on the basis of
a juvenile delinquency adjudication
only if the juvenile is at least 14 years
old at the time of the offense and the
adjudication is for an offense
comparable to or more severe than
aggravated sexual abuse as defined in
Federal law or an attempt or conspiracy
to commit such a crime. See 42 U.S.C.
16911(8). The SORNA Guidelines
explain that it suffices for substantial
implementation of SORNA if
jurisdictions register individuals in this
class who have been adjudicated
delinquent for the most serious types of
sexually assaultive crimes, which
generally limits the required coverage to
juveniles adjudicated delinquent for
committing nonconsensual sex offenses
involving penetration or related
attempts or conspiracies. See 73 FR at
38030, 38040–41, 38050. There is no
requirement that jurisdictions register
juveniles adjudicated delinquent for
lesser sexual assaults or for nonviolent
sexual conduct whose criminality
depends on the age of the victim. See id.
Moreover, SORNA does not require
lifetime registration without
qualification even for juveniles
adjudicated delinquent for the most
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serious sexually assaultive crimes, but
allows registration to be terminated after
25 years for those maintaining a clean
record. See 42 U.S.C. 16915(b)(2)(B),
(3)(B); 73 FR at 38068–69.
Second, SORNA does not bar taking
account of differences between juveniles
and adults in the manner in which
registration is carried out. For example,
SORNA requires in-person appearances
to report certain important changes in
registration information and for periodic
verification, see 42 U.S.C. 16913(c),
16916, but this does not mean that
juveniles must be required to appear at
locations that will result in their being
exposed to adult sex offenders or in
public exposure of their status as sex
offenders. Rather, jurisdictions have
discretion as to how meetings between
sex offenders and persons responsible
for their registration will be carried out
and may adopt different approaches for
different classes of registrants. See 73
FR at 38065, 38067.
Third, following the adoption of these
supplemental guidelines, there is no
requirement that jurisdictions engage in
any form of public disclosure or
notification for juvenile delinquents
subject to SORNA’s requirements.
Rather, as discussed above, the effect of
the remaining registration requirements
under SORNA is essentially to enable
registration authorities to track such
delinquents following their release and
to make information about them
available to law enforcement.
Internet Identifiers
Part I.B of these supplemental
guidelines creates a mandatory
exemption of sex offenders’ e-mail
addresses and other Internet identifiers
from public Web site posting, a measure
required by 42 U.S.C. 16915a(c). Some
commenters urged that there should be
further restriction of the disclosure of
such information. Specifically, some
argued that jurisdictions should also be
restrained from disclosing sex offenders’
Internet identifiers by means other than
public Web site posting, and that
entities other than registration
jurisdictions should be prohibited or
prevented from disclosing such
information.
As noted, the measure concerning
Internet identifiers included in these
supplemental guidelines is required by
42 U.S.C. 16915a(c), which directs the
Attorney General to utilize the authority
provided in 42 U.S.C. 16918(b)(4) to
exempt Internet identifier information
from disclosure. Section 16918 is the
statute that directs registration
jurisdictions to establish Internet sites
that disclose information on registered
sex offenders to the public, and
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subsection (b)(4) in that section
authorizes the Attorney General to
create mandatory exemptions of
information from such disclosure. There
is no corresponding authorization in
SORNA to prohibit jurisdictions from
disseminating registration information
by means other than public Web site
posting, or to prohibit entities other
than registration jurisdictions from
disclosing information about sex
offenders.
Looking beyond the question of legal
authority, the comments received did
not provide persuasive reasons for
adopting new Federal restrictions on the
disclosure of information about sex
offenders’ Internet identifiers,
supplementary to the limitation
required by 42 U.S.C. 16915a(c) and
other existing legal restrictions. As a
practical matter, there are legitimate
reasons for disclosure of such
information by means other than public
Web site posting and by entities other
than registration jurisdictions, such as
disclosure by jurisdictions or private
individuals or entities of information
about sex offenders’ Internet identifiers
to law enforcement agencies
investigating sex crimes involving
solicitation of the victims through the
Internet.
Some of the comments received
included complaints or criticisms
relating to 42 U.S.C. 16915b, which
directs the Attorney General to establish
a system enabling social networking
Web sites to compare the Internet
identifiers of their users to information
in the National Sex Offender Registry.
Section 16915b was separately enacted
by the KIDS Act, Public Law 110–400.
It is not part of SORNA. Any measures
that may be needed in the
implementation of § 16915b would not
belong in these supplemental
guidelines, which are concerned with
the implementation of SORNA.
International Travel
Part II.A of these supplemental
guidelines exercises ‘‘[t]he authority
under 42 U.S.C. 16914(a)(7) to expand
the range of required registration
information * * * to provide that
registrants must be required to inform
their residence jurisdictions of intended
travel outside of the United States at
least 21 days in advance of such travel.’’
Some commenters objected to this
requirement on the ground that it would
prevent sex offenders from engaging in
legitimate international travel, because
it may be necessary for sex offenders to
travel abroad for business, familial, or
other reasons without being able to
anticipate the need three weeks in
advance. However, these supplemental
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guidelines recognize that there may be
circumstances in which requiring 21
days advance notice would be
unnecessary or inappropriate, and
expressly allow jurisdictions to adopt
policies accommodating such situations
subject to approval by the SMART
Office.
Some commenters claimed that there
is no authority for the Attorney General
to adopt notice requirements concerning
sex offenders leaving the United States,
or concerning domestic travel by sex
offenders, because 42 U.S.C. 16928 only
directs the Attorney General to establish
a system for informing relevant
jurisdictions about persons entering the
United States who are required to
register under SORNA. These
commenters apparently did not
understand the legal basis for the
Attorney General’s adoption of
additional requirements relating to
reporting of travel or intended travel by
sex offenders. Such requirements are
adequately supported by 42 U.S.C.
16914(a)(7), which provides general
authority for the Attorney General to
expand the information sex offenders
are required to provide for inclusion in
sex offender registries. The reporting
requirement relating to intended
international travel adopted in these
supplemental guidelines is expressly
premised on § 16914(a)(7), as are preexisting reporting requirements adopted
in the SORNA Guidelines relating to
international and domestic travel that go
beyond those expressly stated in
SORNA itself, see 73 FR at 38056.
Some comments expressed concern or
frustration that jurisdictions have been
presented with a moving target in their
SORNA implementation efforts, a
concern apparently felt with particular
force in relation to the new reporting
requirement regarding international
travel. Relatively little time remains
until the end of the compliance periods
allowed under 42 U.S.C. 16924, which
can create a difficult situation for
jurisdictions attempting to carry out
new requirements.
These comments are well taken.
Congress in SORNA has authorized the
Attorney General to augment or modify
SORNA’s express requirements in
certain areas, including authority to
expand the range of required
registration information and authority to
create discretionary or mandatory
exceptions to disclosure of such
information. See 42 U.S.C. 16914(a)(7),
(b)(8), 16918(b)(4), (c)(4), 16921(b).
These authorities could be exercised by
the Attorney General at any time during
the periods afforded for SORNA
implementation under 42 U.S.C. 16924
or thereafter. Given the inclusion in
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SORNA of these express authorities to
augment or modify certain SORNA
requirements, SORNA is reasonably
read so as not to require that
jurisdictions be regarded as falling short
of substantial implementation based on
new requirements without time afforded
to correct the deficiency. Accordingly,
the SMART Office will take account of
the novelty of requirements and the
time that has been available to carry
them out in determining whether
jurisdictions have substantially
implemented SORNA, and will afford
jurisdictions a reasonable amount of
time to implement new requirements,
which may extend beyond the
implementation deadlines otherwise
applicable under SORNA. Cf. Chicago &
Alton R.R. Co. v. Tranbarger, 238 U.S.
67, 73–74 (1915) (statute may be
construed to allow a reasonable amount
of time to take an action where the
normal statutory time limit for taking
such actions cannot sensibly be
applied).
The comments received included a
concern that the new requirement
relating to international travel reporting
will unduly burden jurisdictions. This
concern appears to reflect an
exaggerated impression of the nature of
the requirement and its impact on
jurisdictions. Under pre-existing
requirements of SORNA and the
SORNA Guidelines, jurisdictions are
required to obtain a range of information
from sex offenders and to make that
information available to other
registration jurisdictions and
appropriate Federal agencies, including
information regarding domestic and
international travel by sex offenders.
See 42 U.S.C. 16913(c), 16919(b), 16921;
73 FR at 38055–56, 38065–67. The
requirement under these supplemental
guidelines to obtain information
concerning international travel by sex
offenders more consistently does not
differ fundamentally in character from
these pre-existing requirements and the
mechanisms utilized in carrying out the
pre-existing requirements can be
extended and adapted to encompass this
additional information. To the extent
the concern about a resulting burden on
jurisdictions reflects the novelty of this
requirement and the apprehension that
inadequate time will be afforded to
implement it, the information in the
preceding paragraph about how
implementation of new requirements
will be treated is responsive to the
concern.
While the comments received did not
provide persuasive reasons to abrogate
or restrict the international travel
reporting requirements as set forth in
Part II.A of the proposed supplemental
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guidelines, in one respect the provisions
regarding this requirement are modified
in the final supplemental guidelines.
The proposed supplemental guidelines
noted that, as the international tracking
system continues to develop, the
SMART Office may issue additional
directions to jurisdictions to notify
certain agencies concerning
international travel by sex offenders.
Additional direction may also be
needed concerning the specific
information sex offenders should be
required to provide in notifying their
residence jurisdictions about intended
international travel. This is so because
obtaining the bare information that a
registrant will be going somewhere
outside of the United States at some
time three weeks or more in the future
may not be sufficient to achieve the
objectives of the international tracking
system—objectives that include reliably
tracking sex offenders as they leave and
return to the United States, and
notifying as appropriate U.S. or foreign
authorities in foreign countries to which
sex offenders travel. See 73 FR at
38066–67. More specific information
may be needed to realize these
objectives, such as information
concerning expected itinerary,
departure and return dates, and means
and purpose of travel.
The final supplemental guidelines
accordingly state that the SMART Office
may issue additional directions
concerning the information to be
required in international travel
notifications by sex offenders. To the
extent that the SMART Office’s exercise
of the authority to flesh out the
international tracking system results in
new, more specific requirements
relating to international travel reporting,
the novelty of these requirements will
be taken into account, as with other new
requirements under SORNA as
discussed above. The amount of time
that has been available to carry out such
requirements will be considered by the
SMART Office in assessing substantial
implementation and jurisdictions will
be afforded a reasonable amount of time
to carry them out.
Domestic Interjurisdictional Tracking
Part II.B of the supplemental
guidelines, relating to use of the SORNA
Exchange Portal in domestic
interjurisdictional sex offender tracking,
was commented on favorably as
improving and facilitating such
tracking. There were also some general
questions in the comments relating to
use of the SORNA Exchange Portal and
interjurisdictional notifications. As
noted above, the SMART Office is
available at all times to answer
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questions from jurisdictions regarding
SORNA implementation and such
questions should be addressed directly
to the SMART Office.
The second paragraph in Part II.B
explains that regular use of the SORNA
Exchange Portal is essential to effective
interjurisdictional information sharing
and sex offender tracking. In relation to
these objectives, the wording of the final
sentence in this paragraph in the
proposed supplemental guidelines was
unduly narrow, referring to use of the
Portal to access messages from other
jurisdictions but not to use of the Portal
for other information sharing purposes
required under SORNA. The sentence
accordingly has been modified in the
final supplemental guidelines to
reference more generally use of the
Portal in information sharing in
conformity with guidance issued by the
SMART Office.
Acknowledgment Forms
Part II.C of these supplemental
guidelines expands the range of
required registration information to
include the acknowledgment forms used
to inform sex offenders of their
registration obligations. Favorable
comment was received on this change as
facilitating the prosecution of sex
offenders who violate those obligations.
Other commenters were critical of this
change on the ground that
acknowledgment forms should be
utilized to inform sex offenders of their
registration obligations, rather than to
prosecute them if they violate those
obligations. However, there is no
inconsistency in using the
acknowledgment forms for both
purposes. The forms both advise sex
offenders of the registration
requirements to which they are subject
and can help to show that they were
aware of those requirements in
prosecutions for violations.
Some commenters complained that
the acknowledgment forms do not
provide sufficient information, for
example, because they only advise sex
offenders of their registration
obligations under state law and do not
advise them of their registration
obligations under SORNA. However, the
SORNA standards require that sex
offenders be informed of their duties
under SORNA and that sex offenders be
required to sign a form stating that the
duty to register has been explained and
understood. See 42 U.S.C. 16917(a); 73
FR at 38063. In jurisdictions that have
implemented SORNA in their
registration programs, the jurisdictions’
registration laws and policies will
encompass the SORNA requirements
and sex offenders will be informed
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concerning these requirements. In any
event, regardless of what limitations
there may be in the information
currently provided in particular
jurisdictions’ acknowledgment forms,
that does not weigh against requiring
the inclusion of these forms in sex
offenders’ registration information. The
forms do provide sex offenders with
information concerning their
registration obligations and may be
useful in the prosecution of violations of
those obligations by helping to establish
that sex offenders were aware of the
requirement to register.
Ongoing Implementation Assurance
Some comments objected to the
requirements of Part III of the
supplemental guidelines, relating to
‘‘ongoing implementation assurance,’’ on
the ground that they would unduly
burden jurisdictions and would
inappropriately require the state
administering agencies for the Byrne
Justice Assistance Grant program to
certify the state’s SORNA
implementation status, though these
agencies are not generally responsible
for sex offender registration matters.
These comments reflect
misunderstandings of this part of the
supplemental guidelines. The
supplemental guidelines state that
Byrne grantees will need to establish
that their systems continue to meet the
SORNA standards in connection with
the annual grant application process
because such continuing compliance is
a condition of full Byrne Grant
eligibility in each program year. See 42
U.S.C. 16925. This does not mean that
the state agencies responsible for Byrne
Grant matters must verify the status of
SORNA implementation. Rather, states
(and other jurisdictions that apply for
Byrne Grants) may obtain information
concerning ongoing implementation
from their agencies that generally deal
with the SMART Office on SORNA
implementation matters and include the
information with their Byrne Grant
applications.
The requirement appearing in Part III
of the supplemental guidelines is not
new in principle. SORNA was preceded
by the original Federal law setting
national standards for sex offender
registration and notification, the Jacob
Wetterling Crimes Against Children and
Sexually Violent Offender Registration
Act. The Attorney General’s guidelines
under the Wetterling Act similarly
required an annual determination of
continuing compliance with the
national standards. See, e.g., 64 FR 572,
587 (1999) (‘‘After the reviewing
authority has determined that a state is
in compliance with the [Wetterling] Act,
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the state will be required as part of the
Byrne Formula Grant application
process in subsequent program years to
certify that the state remains in
compliance with the Act.’’). Given the
connection to eligibility for full Byrne
Grant funding under both Acts, annual
determinations of continuing
compliance are as necessary under
SORNA as they were under the
predecessor law, and in neither case
should this requirement be unduly
burdensome for jurisdictions.
Retroactive Classes
Many commenters approved of the
change in Part IV of these supplemental
guidelines. Part IV provides that it
suffices for substantial implementation
of SORNA, with respect to sex offenders
reentering the justice system through
subsequent (non-sex offense) criminal
convictions, if registration of such
offenders by jurisdictions is limited to
cases in which the subsequent
conviction is for a felony. However,
some commenters proposed that the
requirement to register sex offenders
whose convictions predate SORNA or
SORNA’s implementation in particular
jurisdictions should be further restricted
or eliminated. The grounds urged for
such further limitation included the
following:
Some commenters argued that
requiring sex offenders who reenter the
justice system through subsequent (nonsex offense) criminal convictions to
register discriminates against sex
offenders because non-sex offenders
who reenter the justice system through
subsequent (non-sex offense) criminal
convictions are not subject to such a
requirement. However, differences in
the treatment of different classes of
offenders are not intrinsically unfair and
such differences are not
unconstitutionally discriminatory where
there is a rational basis for the
distinction. See Chapman v. United
States, 500 U.S. 453, 465 (1991). Sex
offender registration by its nature
involves imposing certain requirements
on sex offenders that are not applied to
non-sex offenders. This is so regardless
of whether registration requirements are
imposed on sex offenders whose
convictions occur after SORNA’s
enactment or its implementation or on
sex offenders whose convictions
occurred at earlier times.
Some commenters claimed that the
remaining retroactivity requirements
under SORNA would, absent further
changes, have anomalous and
unwarranted effects on juvenile
delinquent sex offenders. For example,
some comments asserted that juveniles
adjudicated delinquent for sex offenses
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committed when they were below the
age of 14 will have to be registered if
they have subsequent adult convictions
for (non-sex offense) felonies, and some
claimed that public notification will be
required concerning persons qualifying
as sex offenders on the basis of juvenile
delinquency adjudications if they have
subsequent adult convictions for (nonsex offense) felonies. These comments
reflect misunderstandings of SORNA
and its implementing guidelines.
SORNA and the guidelines never
require registration on the basis of
juvenile delinquency adjudications
except for adjudications for offenses
comparable to aggravated sexual abuse
(or related attempt or conspiracy)
committed when the juvenile was at
least 14 years old. Persons with juvenile
adjudications not satisfying these
criteria are not ‘‘sex offenders’’ as
defined in SORNA and are not subject
to SORNA’s requirements at all. See 42
U.S.C. 16911(1), (8). Likewise, following
the adoption of these supplemental
guidelines, public disclosure or
notification is never required under
SORNA regarding persons whose
predicate sex offense convictions are
juvenile delinquency adjudications.
Some comments pointed in this
connection to the decision in United
States v. Juvenile Male, 590 F.3d 924
(9th Cir. 2010), which held that SORNA
cannot constitutionally be applied to a
sex offender on the basis of a Federal
juvenile delinquency adjudication
predating SORNA’s enactment.
However, Juvenile Male is not binding
precedent for Federal courts outside of
the Ninth Circuit and not binding
precedent for state courts anywhere.
Considered on its own terms, the
decision has no bearing on SORNA’s
application to sex offenders with adult
convictions. The Department of Justice
has sought review of the Juvenile Male
decision by the U.S. Supreme Court
and, as a result, further proceedings in
the case are pending before the U.S.
Supreme Court and the Montana
Supreme Court. See United States v.
Juvenile Male, 130 S.Ct. 2518 (2010).
Considering the foregoing, there is no
basis at this time for making changes in
the implementing guidelines or rules for
SORNA on the basis of the Juvenile
Male decision.
Some commenters expressed the
concern that the remaining retroactivity
requirements under SORNA will unduly
burden jurisdictions. However, under
the SORNA Guidelines, it suffices for
substantial implementation of SORNA if
a jurisdiction registers sex offenders
who remain in the justice system as
prisoners, supervisees, or registrants, or
who reenter the justice system through
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a subsequent criminal conviction. The
Guidelines note that such offenders are
within the cognizance of the
jurisdiction, and the jurisdiction will
often have independent reasons to
review their criminal histories for penal,
correctional, or registration/notification
purposes. See 73 FR at 38046. This
point applies with greater force now
that the covered class of ‘‘reentrants’’
who must be registered is limited to
those with subsequent felony
convictions, as provided in these
supplemental guidelines.
Various other features of SORNA and
the SORNA Guidelines limit any
resulting burden on jurisdictions.
Jurisdictions are not required to register
sex offenders in the retroactive classes
whose SORNA registration periods have
already run, and jurisdictions may
credit such sex offenders with the time
that has elapsed from their release (or
from sentencing in case of a
nonincarcerative sentence) in
determining what, if any, remaining
registration time is required, even if
they have never actually been
registered. See 73 FR at 38035–36,
38046–47. Jurisdictions may rely on
their normal methods and standards for
obtaining and reviewing criminal
history information, and on the
information available in the records
obtained by such means, in ascertaining
SORNA registration requirements for
sex offenders in the retroactive classes.
This point applies both in determining
whether such sex offenders need to be
registered at all and in determining the
sex offender’s ‘‘tier’’ for SORNA
purposes. See 73 FR at 38043, 38064. In
relation to sex offenders in the
retroactive classes, there is no
requirement that jurisdictions make
special efforts to obtain records or
information that would not turn up
through the normal type of criminal
history searches they conduct.
In light of these considerations, the
comments received do not persuasively
establish that the public safety benefits
of registering in conformity with
SORNA sex offenders who remain in the
justice system as prisoners, supervisees,
or registrants, or who reenter through
subsequent felony convictions, are
outweighed by a resulting burden on
jurisdictions.
Newly Recognized Tribes
A number of favorable comments
were received about affording newly
recognized Indian tribes the option of
becoming SORNA registration
jurisdictions, as provided in Part V of
these supplemental guidelines.
Tribal commenters urged that
additional matters under SORNA
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affecting the tribes should be addressed,
including particularly the possibility of
involuntary delegation of tribal
registration functions to the states
pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 16927(a)(2)(C),
which permits such delegation if the
Attorney General determines that a
tribal jurisdiction has not substantially
implemented SORNA and is not likely
to become capable of doing so within a
reasonable amount of time. The
comments urged that such involuntary
delegations should occur only as an
absolute last resort and through a
transparent process. Comments
submitted on behalf of state
jurisdictions also expressed concern
about the resulting burden on states if
they were required to assume
responsibility for tribal registration
functions based on the failure of a tribe
or tribes to substantially implement
SORNA.
The Department of Justice and the
SMART Office fully agree that
involuntary delegation of tribal
registration functions to the states
should occur only as a last resort, if at
all. The SORNA Guidelines state: ‘‘The
Department of Justice hopes and expects
* * * that the occurrence of such an
involuntary delegation will never be
necessary, given the strong interest of
the tribes in effective registration and
notification for sex offenders subject to
their jurisdictions, and the priority that
the SMART Office gives to working with
all tribes and other jurisdictions to
facilitate the implementation of
SORNA’s requirements in relation to
tribal areas.’’ 73 FR at 38039. This matter
is not addressed in these supplemental
guidelines because the Department did
not solicit public comment about it in
the proposed supplemental guidelines
and further input from the affected
jurisdictions would be desirable prior to
any articulation of more detailed
standards or procedures for such
delegations.
Some additional tribal issues were
raised in the comments, including the
need for cooperative activities between
the tribes that are not SORNA
registration jurisdictions and the states
in order to effect the registration of sex
offenders within the jurisdiction of such
tribes, and concern that law
enforcement agencies in such tribes will
not be adequately notified or informed
concerning sex offenders in their
territories. These issues were previously
raised by tribal commenters in the
public comments on the SORNA
Guidelines and they are addressed at
some length in those Guidelines. See 73
FR at 38039, 38049, 38060. The
measures relating to these matters
outlined in the Guidelines are integral
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elements of SORNA’s implementation
in relation to tribal areas and the
SMART Office will continue to work
with all tribes and state jurisdictions to
ensure that they are effectively carried
out.
The Department of Justice and the
SMART Office seek and welcome the
counsel and views of Indian tribal
governments and communities at all
times and will continue to consult with
them on SORNA implementation
matters affecting the tribes in
conformity with Executive Order 13175.
Supplemental Guidelines for Sex
Offender Registration and Notification
Contents
I. Public Notification
A. Juvenile Delinquents
B. Internet Identifiers
II. Interjurisdictional Tracking and
Information Sharing
A. International Travel
B. Domestic Interjurisdictional Tracking
C. Acknowledgment Forms
III. Ongoing Implementation Assurance
IV. Retroactive Classes
V. Newly Recognized Tribes
I. Public Notification
A. Juvenile Delinquents
SORNA includes as covered ‘‘sex
offender[s]’’ juveniles at least 14 years
old who are adjudicated delinquent for
particularly serious sex offenses. See 42
U.S.C. 16911(1), (8). While the SORNA
Guidelines endeavored to facilitate
jurisdictions’ compliance with this
aspect of SORNA, see 73 FR at 38030,
38040–41, 38050, resistance by some
jurisdictions to public disclosure of
information about sex offenders in this
class has continued to be one of the
largest impediments to SORNA
implementation.
Hence, the Attorney General is
exercising his authority under 42 U.S.C.
16918(c)(4) to create additional
discretionary exemptions from public
Web site disclosure to allow
jurisdictions to exempt from public Web
site disclosure information concerning
sex offenders required to register on the
basis of juvenile delinquency
adjudications. This change creates a
new discretionary, not mandatory,
exemption from public Web site
disclosure. It does not limit the
discretion of jurisdictions to include
information concerning sex offenders
required to register on the basis of
juvenile delinquency adjudications on
their public Web sites if they so wish.
The change regarding public Web site
disclosure does not authorize treating
sex offenders required to register on the
basis of juvenile delinquency
adjudications differently from sex
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offenders with adult convictions in
other respects. Whether a case involves
a juvenile delinquency adjudication in
the category covered by SORNA or an
adult conviction, SORNA’s registration
requirements remain applicable, see 42
U.S.C. 16913–16, as do the requirements
to transmit or make available
registration information to the national
(non-public) databases of sex offender
information, to law enforcement and
supervision agencies, and to registration
authorities in other jurisdictions, see 73
FR at 38060.
Jurisdictions are not required to
provide registration information
concerning sex offenders required to
register on the basis of juvenile
delinquency adjudications to the
entities described in the SORNA
Guidelines at 73 FR 38061, i.e., certain
school, public housing, social service,
and volunteer entities, and other
organizations, companies, or
individuals who request notification.
This reflects an exercise of the Attorney
General’s authority to create exceptions
to required information disclosure
under 42 U.S.C. 16921(b). Accordingly,
if a jurisdiction decides not to include
information on a juvenile delinquent
sex offender on its public Web site, as
is allowed by these supplemental
guidelines, information on the sex
offender does not have to be disclosed
to these entities.
B. Internet Identifiers
The KIDS Act, which was enacted in
2008, directed the Attorney General to
utilize pre-existing legal authorities
under SORNA to adopt certain measures
relating to sex offenders’ ‘‘Internet
identifiers,’’ defined to mean e-mail
addresses and other designations used
for self-identification or routing in
Internet communication or posting. The
KIDS Act requires the Attorney General
to (i) include appropriate Internet
identifier information in the registration
information sex offenders are required
to provide, (ii) specify the time and
manner for keeping that information
current, (iii) exempt such information
from public Web site posting, and (iv)
ensure that procedures are in place to
notify sex offenders of resulting
obligations. See 42 U.S.C. 16915a.
The SORNA Guidelines incorporate
requirements (i)–(ii) and (iv), as
described above. See 73 FR at 38055
(Internet identifiers to be included in
registration information), 38066
(reporting of changes in Internet
identifiers), 38063–65 (notifying sex
offenders of SORNA requirements).
However, while the Guidelines
discouraged the inclusion of sex
offenders’ Internet identifiers on the
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public Web sites, they did not adopt a
mandatory exclusion of this information
from public Web site posting, which the
KIDS Act now requires. See 42 U.S.C.
16915a(c); 73 FR at 38059–60.
The authority under 42 U.S.C.
16918(b)(4) to create additional
mandatory exemptions from public Web
site disclosure is accordingly exercised
to exempt sex offenders’ Internet
identifiers from public Web site posting.
This means that jurisdictions cannot,
consistent with SORNA, include sex
offenders’ Internet identifiers (such as email addresses) in the sex offenders’
public Web site postings or otherwise
list or post sex offenders’ Internet
identifiers on the public sex offender
Web sites.
This change does not limit
jurisdictions’ retention and use of sex
offenders’ Internet identifier
information for purposes other than
public disclosure, including submission
of the information to the national (nonpublic) databases of sex offender
information, sharing of the information
with law enforcement and supervision
agencies, and sharing of the information
with registration authorities in other
jurisdictions. See 73 FR at 38060. The
change also does not limit the discretion
of jurisdictions to include on their
public Web sites functions by which
members of the public can ascertain
whether a specified e-mail address or
other Internet identifier is reported as
that of a registered sex offender, see id.
at 38059–60, or to disclose Internet
identifier information to any one by
means other than public Web site
posting.
The exemption of sex offenders’
Internet identifiers from public Web site
disclosure does not override or limit the
requirement that sex offenders’ names,
including any aliases, be included in
their public Web site postings. See 73
FR at 38059. A sex offender’s use of his
name or an alias to identify himself or
for other purposes in Internet
communications or postings does not
exempt the name or alias from public
Web site disclosure.
II. Interjurisdictional Tracking and
Information Sharing
A. International Travel
Certain features of SORNA and the
SORNA Guidelines require the
Department of Justice, in conjunction
with other Federal agencies, to develop
reliable means for identifying and
tracking sex offenders who enter or
leave the United States. See 42 U.S.C.
16928; 73 FR at 38066–67. To that end,
the Guidelines provide that sex
offenders must be required to inform
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1637
their residence jurisdictions if they
intend to commence residence,
employment, or school attendance
outside of the United States, and that
jurisdictions that are so informed must
notify the U.S. Marshals Service and
update the sex offender’s registration
information in the national databases.
See 73 FR at 38067. (Regarding the
general requirement to provide
registration information for inclusion in
the National Sex Offender Registry and
other appropriate databases at the
national level, see 42 U.S.C. 16921(b)(1);
73 FR at 38060.) In addition, the
Guidelines provide that sex offenders
must be required to inform their
residence jurisdictions about lodging at
places away from their residences for
seven days or more, regardless of
whether that results from domestic or
international travel. See 73 FR at 38056,
38066.
Since the issuance of the Guidelines,
the SMART Office has continued to
work with other agencies of the
Department of Justice, the Department
of Homeland Security, the Department
of State, and the Department of Defense
on the development of a system for
consistently identifying and tracking sex
offenders who engage in international
travel. Although, as noted, the current
Guidelines require reporting of
international travel information in
certain circumstances, the existing
requirements are not sufficient to
provide the information needed for
tracking such travel consistently.
The authority under 42 U.S.C.
16914(a)(7) to expand the range of
required registration information is
accordingly exercised to provide that
registrants must be required to inform
their residence jurisdictions of intended
travel outside of the United States at
least 21 days in advance of such travel.
Pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 16921(b),
jurisdictions so informed must provide
the international travel information to
the U.S. Marshals Service, and must
transmit or make available that
information to national databases, law
enforcement and supervision agencies,
and other jurisdictions as provided in
the Guidelines. See 73 FR at 38060.
Jurisdictions need not disclose
international travel information to the
entities described in the SORNA
Guidelines at 73 FR 38061—i.e., certain
school, public housing, social service,
and volunteer entities, and other
organizations, companies, or
individuals who request notification.
See 42 U.S.C. 16921(b). As the
international tracking system continues
to develop, the SMART Office may issue
additional directions to jurisdictions to
provide notification concerning
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international travel by sex offenders,
such as notice to Interpol, or notice to
Department of Defense agencies
concerning sex offenders who may live
on U.S. military bases abroad. Likewise,
the SMART Office may issue additional
directions to jurisdictions concerning
the information to be required in sex
offenders’ reports of intended
international travel, such as information
concerning expected itinerary,
departure and return dates, and means
and purpose of travel.
While notice of international travel
will generally be required as described
above, it is recognized that requiring 21
days advance notice may occasionally
be unnecessary or inappropriate. For
example, a sex offender may need to
travel abroad unexpectedly because of a
family or work emergency. Or separate
advance notice of intended international
trips may be unworkable and
pointlessly burdensome for a sex
offender who lives in a northern border
state and commutes to Canada for work
on a daily basis. Jurisdictions that wish
to accommodate such situations should
include information about their policies
or practices in this area in their
submissions to the SMART Office and
the SMART Office will determine
whether they adequately serve SORNA’s
international tracking objectives.
B. Domestic Interjurisdictional Tracking
SORNA and the SORNA Guidelines
require interjurisdictional sharing of
registration information in various
contexts and SORNA directs the
Attorney General, in consultation with
the jurisdictions, to develop and
support software facilitating the
immediate exchange of information
among jurisdictions. See 42 U.S.C.
16913(c), 16919(b), 16921(b)(3), 16923;
73 FR at 38047, 38062–68. The SMART
Office accordingly has created and
maintains the SORNA Exchange Portal,
which enables the immediate exchange
of information about registered sex
offenders among the jurisdictions.
Regular use of this tool is essential to
ensuring that information is reliably
shared among jurisdictions and that
interjurisdictional tracking of sex
offenders occurs consistently and
effectively as SORNA contemplates. For
example, if a jurisdiction sends notice
that a sex offender has reported an
intention to change his residence to
another jurisdiction, but the destination
jurisdiction fails to access the notice
promptly, the sex offender’s failure to
appear or register in the destination
jurisdiction may go unnoticed or
detection of the violation may be
delayed. Accordingly, as a necessary
part of SORNA implementation,
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jurisdictions must use the SORNA
Exchange Portal in their information
sharing regarding sex offenders in
conformity with any guidance issued by
the SMART Office on use of the Portal.
Technological improvements may
facilitate the creation of new tools that
may eventually replace the existing
SORNA Exchange Portal. If that occurs,
the SMART Office may issue directions
to jurisdictions concerning the use of
these new tools that jurisdictions will
need to follow to be approved as
substantially implementing SORNA.
C. Acknowledgment Forms
SORNA provides that sex offenders
are to be informed of their registration
obligations and required to sign
acknowledgments that this information
has been provided upon their initial
registration. See 42 U.S.C. 16917. Even
before the enactment of SORNA, similar
requirements were included in the
predecessor national standards for sex
offender registration and notification of
the Jacob Wetterling Crimes Against
Children and Sexually Violent Offender
Registration Act (42 U.S.C.
14071(b)(1)(A), prior to its repeal by
SORNA).
SORNA requires jurisdictions to
provide criminal penalties for sex
offenders who fail to comply with
SORNA’s requirements, see 42 U.S.C.
16913(e), and Federal criminal liability
is authorized for sex offenders who
knowingly fail to register or update a
registration as required by SORNA
under circumstances supporting Federal
jurisdiction, see 18 U.S.C. 2250.
Successful prosecution of sex offenders
for registration violations under these
provisions may require proof that they
were aware of a requirement to register.
The acknowledgment forms signed by
sex offenders regarding their registration
obligations are likely to be the most
consistently available and definitive
proof of such knowledge. Including
these forms in registration information
will make them readily available in the
jurisdictions in which sex offenders are
initially registered, and will make them
available to other jurisdictions pursuant
to the provisions of SORNA and the
Guidelines for transmission of
registration information to other
jurisdictions. See 42 U.S.C. 16921(b)(3);
73 FR at 38060.
The authority under 42 U.S.C.
16914(b)(8) to expand the range of
required registration information is
accordingly exercised to require that sex
offenders’ signed acknowledgment
forms be included in their registration
information. The existing Guidelines
already provide that acknowledgment
forms covering the SORNA
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
requirements are to be obtained from
registrants as part of the SORNA
implementation process and thereafter.
See 73 FR at 38063–65. As with other
forms of documentary registration
information, the inclusion of these
forms in registration information can be
effected by scanning the forms and
including the resulting electronic
documents in the registry databases or
by including links or information that
provides access to other databases in
which the signed acknowledgments are
available in electronic form. See 73 FR
at 38055.
III. Ongoing Implementation Assurance
The SORNA Guidelines explain that
the SMART Office will determine
whether jurisdictions have substantially
implemented the SORNA requirements
in their programs and that jurisdictions
are to provide submissions to the
SMART Office to facilitate this
determination. See 42 U.S.C. 16924–25;
73 FR at 38047–48.
SORNA itself and the Guidelines
assume throughout that jurisdictions
must implement SORNA in practice, not
just on paper, and the Guidelines
provide many directions and
suggestions for putting the SORNA
standards into effect. See, e.g., 42 U.S.C.
16911(9), 16912(a), 16913(c), 16914(b),
16917, 16918, 16921(b), 16922; 73 FR at
38059–61, 38063–70. The Department of
Justice and the SMART Office are
making available to jurisdictions a wide
range of practical aids to SORNA
implementation, including software and
communication systems to facilitate the
exchange of sex offender information
among jurisdictions and other
technology and documentary tools. See
42 U.S.C. 16923; 73 FR at 38031–32,
38047.
Hence, implementation of SORNA is
not just a matter of adopting laws or
rules that facially direct the
performance of the measures required
by SORNA. It entails actually carrying
out those measures and, as noted,
various forms of guidance and
assistance have been provided to that
end. Accordingly, in reviewing
jurisdictions’ requests for approval as
having substantially implemented
SORNA, the SMART Office will not be
limited to facial examination of
registration laws and policies, but rather
will undertake such inquiry as is
needed to ensure that jurisdictions are
substantially implementing SORNA’s
requirements in practice. Jurisdictions
can facilitate approval of their systems
by including in their submissions to the
SMART Office information concerning
practical implementation measures and
mechanisms, in addition to relevant
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laws and rules, such as policy and
procedure manuals, description of
infrastructure and technology resources,
and information about personnel and
budgetary measures relating to the
operation of the jurisdiction’s
registration and notification system. The
SMART Office may require jurisdictions
to provide additional information,
beyond that proffered in their
submissions, as needed for a
determination.
Jurisdictions that have substantially
implemented SORNA have a continuing
obligation to maintain their system’s
consistency with current SORNA
standards. Those that are grantees under
the Byrne Justice Assistance Grant
program will be required in connection
with the annual grant application
process to establish that their systems
continue to meet SORNA standards.
This will entail providing information
as directed by the SMART Office, in
addition to the information otherwise
included in Byrne Grant applications, so
that the SMART Office can verify
continuing implementation.
Jurisdictions that do not apply for Byrne
Grants will also be required to
demonstrate periodically that their
systems continue to meet SORNA
standards as directed by the SMART
Office, and to provide such information
as the SMART Office may require to
make this determination.
If a jurisdiction’s Byrne Justice
Assistance Grant funding is reduced
because of non-implementation of
SORNA, it may regain eligibility for full
funding in later program years by
substantially implementing SORNA in
such later years. The SMART Office will
continue to work with all jurisdictions
to ensure substantial implementation of
SORNA and verify that they continue to
meet the requirements of SORNA on an
ongoing basis.
IV. Retroactive Classes
SORNA’s requirements apply to all
sex offenders, regardless of when they
were convicted. See 28 CFR 72.3.
However, the SORNA Guidelines state
that it will be deemed sufficient for
substantial implementation if
jurisdictions register sex offenders with
pre-SORNA or pre-SORNAimplementation sex offense convictions
who remain in the system as prisoners,
supervisees, or registrants, or who
reenter the system through a subsequent
criminal conviction. See 73 FR at
38035–36, 38043, 38046–47, 38063–64.
This feature of the Guidelines reflects an
assumption that it may not be possible
for jurisdictions to identify and register
all sex offenders who fall within the
SORNA registration categories,
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particularly where they have left the
justice system and merged into the
general population long ago, but that it
will be feasible for jurisdictions to do so
in relation to sex offenders who remain
in the justice system or reenter it
through a subsequent criminal
conviction. See 73 FR at 38046.
Experience supports a qualification of
this assumption in relation to sex
offenders who have fully exited the
justice system but later reenter it
through a subsequent criminal
conviction for a non-sex offense that is
relatively minor in character. (Where
the subsequent conviction is for a sex
offense it independently requires
registration under SORNA.) In many
jurisdictions the volume of
misdemeanor prosecutions is large and
most such cases may need to be
disposed of in a manner that leaves little
time or opportunity for examining the
defendant’s criminal history and
ascertaining whether it contains some
past sex offense conviction that would
entail a present registration requirement
under SORNA. In contrast, where the
subsequent offense is a serious crime,
ordinary practice is likely to involve
closer scrutiny of the defendant’s past
criminal conduct, and ascertaining
whether it includes a prior conviction
requiring registration under SORNA
should not entail an onerous new
burden on jurisdictions.
These supplemental guidelines
accordingly are modifying the
requirements for substantial
implementation of SORNA in relation to
sex offenders who have fully exited the
justice system, i.e., those who are no
longer prisoners, supervisees, or
registrants. It will be sufficient if a
jurisdiction registers such offenders
who reenter the system through a
subsequent criminal conviction in cases
in which the subsequent criminal
conviction is for a felony, i.e., for an
offense for which the statutory
maximum penalty exceeds a year of
imprisonment. This allowance is
limited to cases in which the
subsequent conviction is for a non-sex
offense. As noted above, a later
conviction for a sex offense
independently requires registration
under SORNA, regardless of whether it
is a felony or a misdemeanor.
This allowance only establishes the
minimum required for substantial
implementation of SORNA in this
context. Jurisdictions remain free to
look more broadly and to establish
systems to identify and register sex
offenders who reenter the justice system
through misdemeanor convictions, or
even those who do not reenter the
system through later criminal
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
1639
convictions but fall within the
registration categories of SORNA or the
jurisdiction’s registration law.
V. Newly Recognized Tribes
SORNA affords eligible federallyrecognized Indian tribes a one-year
period, running from the date of
SORNA’s enactment on July 27, 2006, to
elect whether to become SORNA
registration jurisdictions or to delegate
their registration functions to the states
within which they are located. See 42
U.S.C. 16927(a)(1), (2)(B); 73 FR at
38049–50. In principle there is no
reason why an Indian tribe that initially
receives recognition by the Federal
government following the enactment of
SORNA should be treated differently for
SORNA purposes from other federally
recognized tribes. But if such a tribe is
initially recognized more than a year
after the enactment of SORNA, then the
limitation period of § 16927 will have
passed before the tribe became the kind
of entity (a federally recognized tribe)
that may be eligible to become a SORNA
registration jurisdiction.
Where the normal starting point of a
statutory time limit for taking an action
cannot sensibly be applied to a certain
entity, statutes have been construed in
some circumstances to allow the entity
a reasonable amount of time to take the
action. See Chicago & Alton R.R. Co. v.
Tranbarger, 238 U.S. 67, 73–74 (1915).
This principle will be applied to 42
U.S.C. 16927 to allow Indian tribes that
receive Federal recognition following
the enactment of SORNA a reasonable
amount of time to elect whether to
become SORNA registration
jurisdictions as provided in that section,
and to allow such tribes a reasonable
amount of time for substantial
implementation of SORNA if they elect
to be SORNA registration jurisdictions.
In assessing what constitutes a
reasonable amount of time for these
purposes, the Department of Justice will
look to the amount of time SORNA
generally affords for tribal elections and
for jurisdictions’ implementation of the
SORNA requirements. Hence, a tribe
receiving Federal recognition after
SORNA’s enactment that otherwise
qualifies to make the election under
§ 16927(a) will be afforded a period of
one year to make the election, running
from the date of the tribe’s recognition
or the date of publication of these
supplemental guidelines, whichever is
later. Likewise, such a tribe will be
afforded a period of three years for
SORNA implementation, running from
the same starting point, subject to up to
two possible one-year extensions. See
42 U.S.C. 16924.
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 7 / Tuesday, January 11, 2011 / Notices
Dated: January 7, 2011.
Eric H. Holder, Jr.,
Attorney General.
[FR Doc. 2011–505 Filed 1–10–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–18–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms,
and Explosives
[OMB Number 1140–0098]
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Proposed Collection;
Comments Requested
30-Day Notice of Information
Collection Under Review: Prevent All
Cigarette Trafficking (PACT) Act
Registration Form.
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
ACTION:
The Department of Justice (DOJ),
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms,
and Explosives (ATF) will be submitting
the following information collection
request to the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) for review and approval
in accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995. The proposed
information collection is published to
obtain comments from the public and
affected agencies. This proposed
information collection was previously
published in the Federal Register
Volume 75, Number 210, page 67119 on
November 1, 2010, allowing for a 60-day
comment period.
The purpose of this notice is to allow
for an additional 30 days for public
comment until February 10, 2011. This
process is conducted in accordance with
5 CFR 1320.10.
Written comments and/or suggestions
regarding the items contained in this
notice, especially the estimated public
burden and associated response time,
should be directed to the Office of
Management and Budget. To ensure that
comments on the information collection
are received, OMB recommends that
written comments be faxed to the Office
of Information and Regulatory Affairs,
OMB, Attn: DOJ Desk Officer, Fax: 202–
395–7285, or e-mailed to
oira_submission@omb.eop.gov. All
comments should be identified with the
OMB control number [1140–XXXX].
Also include the DOJ docket number
found in brackets in the heading of this
document.
Comments and suggestions from the
public and affected agencies concerning
the proposed collection of information
are encouraged. Your comments should
address one or more of the following
four points:
—Evaluate whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary
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17:33 Jan 10, 2011
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for the proper performance of the
functions of the agency, including
whether the information will have
practical utility;
—Evaluate the accuracy of the agencies
estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
—Enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and
—Minimize the burden of the collection
of information on those who are to
respond, including through the use of
appropriate automated, electronic,
mechanical, or other technological
collection techniques or other forms
of information technology, e.g.,
permitting electronic submission of
responses.
Overview of This Information
Collection
Frm 00049
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[FR Doc. 2011–388 Filed 1–10–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–FY–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Office of Justice Programs
[OJP (BJA) Docket No. 1542]
Establishment of the Office of Justice
Programs’ Science Advisory Board
Office of Justice Programs
(OJP), Justice.
AGENCY:
Notice of establishment of
federal advisory committee.
ACTION:
The OJP Science Advisory
Board is being established in accordance
with the provisions of the Federal
Advisory Committee Act (FACA), as
amended, 5 U.S.C., App. 2. The OJP
Science Advisory Board will provide
OJP, a component of the Department of
Justice, with valuable advice in the
areas of social science and statistics for
the purpose of enhancing the overall
impact and performance of its programs
and activities in criminal and juvenile
justice. The Board will provide input
into developing long-range plans, advise
on program development, and provide
guidance to ensure adherence to the
highest levels of scientific rigor, as
appropriate. The Board will provide an
important base of contact with the
criminal justice academic and
practitioner communities, and is
necessary and in the public interest. The
Board’s Charter is subject to renewal
and will expire two years from its filing.
The OJP Science Advisory Board is
continuing in nature, to remain
functional until the Attorney General
determines that all necessary duties
have been performed.
SUMMARY:
(1) Type of Information Collection:
Extension of a currently approved
collection.
(2) Title of the Form/Collection:
Prevent All Cigarette Trafficking (PACT)
Act Registration Form.
(3) Agency form number, if any, and
the applicable component of the
Department of Justice sponsoring the
collection: Form Number: ATF F 5070.1.
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms
and Explosives.
(4) Affected public who will be asked
or required to respond, as well as a brief
abstract: Primary: Business or ForProfit. Other: None. Abstract: The
purpose of this information collection is
to register delivery sellers of cigarettes
and/or smokeless tobacco products with
the Attorney General in order to
continue to sell and/or advertise these
tobacco products. Respondents will
register the information on ATF F
5070.1.
(5) An estimate of the total number of
respondents and the amount of time
estimated for an average respondent to
respond: There will be an estimated
3,000 respondents, who will take 1 hour
to complete the form.
(6) An estimate of the total burden (in
hours) associated with the collection:
There are an estimated 3,000 total
burden hours associated with this
collection.
If additional information is required
contact: Lynn Murray, Department
Clearance Officer, United States
Department of Justice, Policy and
Planning Staff, Justice Management
Division, Two Constitution Square,
Room 2E–502, 145 N Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20530.
PO 00000
Dated: January 6, 2011.
Lynn Murray,
Department Clearance Officer, PRA, United
States Department of Justice.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Marlene Beckman, Designated Federal
Officer (DFO), Office of the Assistant
Attorney General, Office of Justice
Programs, 810 7th Street Northwest,
Washington, DC 20531; Phone: (202)
616–3562 [Note: this is not a toll-free
number]; E-mail:
marlene.beckman@usdoj.gov.
Dated: January 5, 2011.
Marlene Beckman,
Counsel and SAB DFO, Office of the Assistant
Attorney General, Office of Justice Programs.
[FR Doc. 2011–290 Filed 1–10–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–18–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 7 (Tuesday, January 11, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 1630-1640]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-505]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Office of the Attorney General
[Docket No. OAG 134; AG Order No. 3241-2011]
RIN 1105-AB36
Supplemental Guidelines for Sex Offender Registration and
Notification
AGENCY: Department of Justice.
ACTION: Final guidelines.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA),
establishes minimum national standards for sex offender registration
and notification. The Attorney General issued the National Guidelines
for Sex Offender Registration and Notification (``SORNA Guidelines'' or
``Guidelines'') on July 2, 2008, to provide guidance and assistance to
jurisdictions in implementing the SORNA standards in their sex offender
registration and notification programs. These supplemental guidelines
augment or modify certain features of the SORNA Guidelines in order to
make a change required by the KIDS Act and to address other issues
arising in jurisdictions' implementation of the SORNA requirements. The
matters addressed include certain aspects of public Web site posting of
sex offender information, interjurisdictional tracking and information
sharing regarding sex offenders, the review process concerning
jurisdictions' SORNA implementation, the classes of sex offenders to be
registered by jurisdictions retroactively, and the treatment of Indian
tribes newly recognized by the Federal government subsequent to the
enactment of SORNA.
DATES: Effective Date: January 11, 2011.
[[Page 1631]]
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Linda M. Baldwin, Director, Office of
Sex Offender Sentencing, Monitoring, Apprehending, Registering, and
Tracking; Office of Justice Programs, United States Department of
Justice, Washington, DC, 202 305-2463.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Overview
The Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act, which is title
I of the Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act of 2006, Public Law
109-248, was enacted on July 27, 2006. SORNA (42 U.S.C. 16901 et seq.)
establishes minimum national standards for sex offender registration
and notification in the jurisdictions to which it applies.
``Jurisdictions'' in the relevant sense are the 50 states, the District
of Columbia, the five principal U.S. territories, and Indian tribes
that satisfy certain criteria. 42 U.S.C. 16911(10). SORNA directs the
Attorney General to issue guidelines and regulations to interpret and
implement SORNA. See id. 16912(b).
To this end, the Attorney General issued the National Guidelines
for Sex Offender Registration and Notification, 73 FR 38030, on July 2,
2008. The SORNA standards are administered by the Office of Sex
Offender Sentencing, Monitoring, Apprehending, Registering, and
Tracking (``SMART Office''), which assists all jurisdictions in their
SORNA implementation efforts and determines whether jurisdictions have
successfully completed these efforts. See 42 U.S.C. 16945; 73 FR at
38044, 38047-48.
Since the publication of the SORNA Guidelines, issues have arisen
in SORNA implementation that require that some aspects of the
Guidelines be augmented or modified. Consequently, the Department of
Justice proposed and solicited public comment on supplemental
guidelines addressing these issues, which were published in the Federal
Register on May 14, 2010, at 75 FR 27362. The public comment period
closed on July 13, 2010.
Following consideration of the public comments received, the
Department of Justice is now finalizing the supplemental guidelines,
which do the following:
(1) Allow jurisdictions, in their discretion, to exempt information
concerning sex offenders required to register on the basis of juvenile
delinquency adjudications from public Web site posting.
(2) Require jurisdictions to exempt sex offenders' e-mail addresses
and other Internet identifiers from public Web site posting, pursuant
to the KIDS Act, 42 U.S.C. 16915a.
(3) Require jurisdictions to have sex offenders report
international travel 21 days in advance of such travel and to submit
information concerning such travel to the appropriate Federal agencies
and databases.
(4) Clarify the means to be utilized to ensure consistent
interjurisdictional information sharing and tracking of sex offenders.
(5) Expand required registration information to include the forms
signed by sex offenders acknowledging that they were advised of their
registration obligations.
(6) Provide additional information concerning the review process
for determining that jurisdictions have substantially implemented the
SORNA requirements in their programs and continue to comply with these
requirements.
(7) Afford jurisdictions greater latitude regarding the
registration of sex offenders who have fully exited the justice system
but later reenter through a new (non-sex-offense) criminal conviction
by providing that jurisdictions may limit such registration to cases in
which the new conviction is for a felony.
(8) Provide, for Indian tribes that are newly recognized by the
Federal government following the enactment of SORNA, authorization and
time frames for such tribes to elect whether to become SORNA
registration jurisdictions and to implement SORNA.
Summary of Comments on the Proposed Supplemental Guidelines
About 280 separate comments were received from a wide variety of
agencies, organizations, and individuals. Many of the comments were
favorable to the supplemental guidelines, either generally or with
respect to particular measures therein. The grounds of support included
the value of the changes in the supplemental guidelines in facilitating
jurisdictions' implementation of SORNA or enhancing the efficacy of sex
offender registration and notification.
Some commenters criticized the supplemental guidelines as
potentially resulting in greater disparity among jurisdictions in sex
offender registration or notification standards by increasing
jurisdictions' discretion in certain areas. SORNA, however, does not
aim at complete uniformity among jurisdictions, but rather establishes
a national baseline of sex offender registration and notification
standards and generally leaves jurisdictions free to adopt different
approaches and provisions beyond the required minimum. See 73 FR at
38032-35. The provisions in the supplemental guidelines that broaden
jurisdictions' discretion affect limited areas, specifically, whether
jurisdictions will publicly disclose information concerning sex
offenders required to register on the basis of juvenile delinquency
adjudications, and whether jurisdictions will require registration by
sex offenders who have left the justice system but later reenter the
system through subsequent non-felony, non-sex-offense convictions. By
relaxing a couple of requirements that have been impediments to SORNA
implementation in some jurisdictions, these changes further the
nationwide implementation of the remainder of the SORNA requirements
and hence are likely to promote greater overall uniformity among
jurisdictions in sex offender registration and notification standards.
Considering the foregoing, the public comments that criticized certain
features of the supplemental guidelines as resulting in an undesirable
loss of uniformity do not persuasively establish that there will be
such an effect that outweighs the benefits of these changes.
Some commenters criticized changes made in these supplemental
guidelines as an inappropriate or impermissible exercise of legislative
power by the Attorney General, and urged that such changes could
properly be made only by Congress. However, SORNA expressly affords the
Attorney General authority to expand the range of required registration
information and to create exceptions to the required disclosure of
registration information. See 42 U.S.C. 16914(a)(7), (b)(8),
16918(b)(4), (c)(4), 16921(b). SORNA further charges the Attorney
General with responsibility for issuing guidelines and regulations to
interpret and implement SORNA and for determining whether jurisdictions
have substantially implemented SORNA in their programs. See 42 U.S.C.
16912(b), 16925. These authorities adequately support the measures
adopted in these supplemental guidelines.
Some of the comments received concerned matters outside the scope
of these supplemental guidelines. Those comments, and the Department's
responses thereto, include the following: (i) Some comments generally
criticized SORNA, state sex offender registration and notification
laws, or state laws imposing measures that SORNA does not require, such
as residency restrictions on sex offenders, and explicitly or
implicitly urged that such laws should be repealed or amended. The
Attorney General has no authority to repeal or amend Federal or
[[Page 1632]]
State laws by issuing guidelines. (ii) Some comments criticized
measures in the preexisting SORNA Guidelines that the proposed
supplemental guidelines did not attempt to address. The final
supplemental guidelines have not been changed on the basis of such
comments because they did not concern matters within the scope of these
supplemental guidelines. Moreover, these comments did not provide
persuasive reasons for changing other requirements under SORNA or its
implementing guidelines. (iii) Some comments raised questions regarding
SORNA implementation by jurisdictions that did not specifically concern
the measures adopted in these supplemental guidelines. Questions of
this type should be addressed directly to the SMART Office. The SMART
Office is available at all times to answer jurisdictions' questions
regarding SORNA implementation and to assist them in such
implementation.
Some commenters, on varying grounds, were critical of particular
changes made by these supplemental guidelines or urged that the changes
do not go far enough in qualifying or supplementing SORNA's
requirements. The main substantive comments and criticisms are most
conveniently discussed on a topic-by-topic basis:
Juvenile Delinquents
Many favorable comments were received concerning Part I.A of these
supplemental guidelines, which provides that it is within
jurisdictions' discretion whether they will publicly disclose
information concerning juvenile delinquent sex offenders. Some
commenters, however, urged that the Attorney General should go further
in limiting public disclosure of such information, or that the Attorney
General should also restrict or eliminate SORNA's registration
requirements for juvenile delinquent sex offenders. The grounds urged
for further changes included that, absent such changes, juvenile
delinquent sex offenders would be improperly equated to adult sex
offenders, stigmatized, unjustifiably subjected to lifetime
registration, and not effectively rehabilitated in conformity with the
objectives of juvenile justice systems.
In assessing these comments, it must be understood that, following
the issuance of these supplemental guidelines, there is no remaining
requirement under SORNA that jurisdictions publicly disclose
information about sex offenders whose predicate sex offense
``convictions'' are juvenile delinquency adjudications. There are two
provisions in SORNA that require public disclosure of certain
information concerning sex offenders. One of these provisions is 42
U.S.C. 16918, which generally requires that jurisdictions make sex
offender information available on publicly accessible Internet sites.
The other is 42 U.S.C. 16921(b), which requires targeted disclosures of
sex offender information, some aspects of which could be characterized
as involving public disclosure. Specifically, the required disclosures
under the latter provision include disclosure to certain school, public
housing, social service, and volunteer entities, and to other
organizations, companies, or individuals who request notification. As a
practical matter, the public disclosures required under Sec. 16921(b)
may effectively merge with the Internet disclosure required under Sec.
16918(b), because the SORNA Guidelines explain that jurisdictions may
satisfy the public disclosure aspects of Sec. 16921(b) by including
functions on their public sex offender Web sites that enable members of
the public to request automatic notification when sex offenders
commence residence, employment, or school attendance in specified
areas. See 73 FR at 38061.
Under both public disclosure provisions in SORNA, the Attorney
General has express statutory authority to limit the required
disclosure of information. See 42 U.S.C. 16918(c)(4) (``[a]
jurisdiction may exempt from disclosure * * * any other information
exempted from disclosure by the Attorney General''); id. Sec. 16921(b)
(registry information to be provided to specified entities ``other than
information exempted from disclosure by the Attorney General'').
Moreover, under both of these provisions, the Attorney General has
exercised his authority in these supplemental guidelines to provide
that jurisdictions need not publicly disclose information concerning
persons required to register on the basis of juvenile delinquency
adjudications.
Given this change, the effect of the remaining registration
requirements under SORNA for certain juvenile delinquent sex offenders
is, in essence, to enable registration authorities to track such
offenders following their release and to make information about them
available to law enforcement agencies. See 73 FR at 38060; Part I.A of
these supplemental guidelines. There is no remaining requirement under
SORNA that jurisdictions engage in any form of public disclosure or
notification regarding juvenile delinquent sex offenders. Jurisdictions
are free to do so, but need not do so to any greater extent than they
may wish.
The comments that proposed some further restriction or elimination
of SORNA's registration requirements in relation to juveniles often
appeared to reflect misunderstanding of the foregoing points or other
misunderstandings regarding SORNA's provisions relating to juveniles.
One possible misunderstanding concerns the Attorney General's legal
authorities under SORNA. As noted above, the Attorney General has
express statutory authority to create exceptions to the required public
disclosure of registration information under SORNA. In contrast, SORNA
affords the Attorney General no open-ended authority to restrict or
eliminate registration (as opposed to information disclosure)
requirements under SORNA. Hence, these comments misconceived the legal
situation to the extent they assumed the Attorney General could simply
eliminate registration requirements under SORNA in relation to
juveniles or other classes of offenders, parallel to his authority to
create exceptions to SORNA's information disclosure requirements.
Regarding other apparent misunderstandings that appeared in the
comments, the following points may help to provide a clear picture of
SORNA's registration requirements and their effects on juveniles:
First, SORNA's treatment of juvenile sex offenders is very
different from its treatment of adult sex offenders. Registration is
required on the basis of a juvenile delinquency adjudication only if
the juvenile is at least 14 years old at the time of the offense and
the adjudication is for an offense comparable to or more severe than
aggravated sexual abuse as defined in Federal law or an attempt or
conspiracy to commit such a crime. See 42 U.S.C. 16911(8). The SORNA
Guidelines explain that it suffices for substantial implementation of
SORNA if jurisdictions register individuals in this class who have been
adjudicated delinquent for the most serious types of sexually
assaultive crimes, which generally limits the required coverage to
juveniles adjudicated delinquent for committing nonconsensual sex
offenses involving penetration or related attempts or conspiracies. See
73 FR at 38030, 38040-41, 38050. There is no requirement that
jurisdictions register juveniles adjudicated delinquent for lesser
sexual assaults or for nonviolent sexual conduct whose criminality
depends on the age of the victim. See id. Moreover, SORNA does not
require lifetime registration without qualification even for juveniles
adjudicated delinquent for the most
[[Page 1633]]
serious sexually assaultive crimes, but allows registration to be
terminated after 25 years for those maintaining a clean record. See 42
U.S.C. 16915(b)(2)(B), (3)(B); 73 FR at 38068-69.
Second, SORNA does not bar taking account of differences between
juveniles and adults in the manner in which registration is carried
out. For example, SORNA requires in-person appearances to report
certain important changes in registration information and for periodic
verification, see 42 U.S.C. 16913(c), 16916, but this does not mean
that juveniles must be required to appear at locations that will result
in their being exposed to adult sex offenders or in public exposure of
their status as sex offenders. Rather, jurisdictions have discretion as
to how meetings between sex offenders and persons responsible for their
registration will be carried out and may adopt different approaches for
different classes of registrants. See 73 FR at 38065, 38067.
Third, following the adoption of these supplemental guidelines,
there is no requirement that jurisdictions engage in any form of public
disclosure or notification for juvenile delinquents subject to SORNA's
requirements. Rather, as discussed above, the effect of the remaining
registration requirements under SORNA is essentially to enable
registration authorities to track such delinquents following their
release and to make information about them available to law
enforcement.
Internet Identifiers
Part I.B of these supplemental guidelines creates a mandatory
exemption of sex offenders' e-mail addresses and other Internet
identifiers from public Web site posting, a measure required by 42
U.S.C. 16915a(c). Some commenters urged that there should be further
restriction of the disclosure of such information. Specifically, some
argued that jurisdictions should also be restrained from disclosing sex
offenders' Internet identifiers by means other than public Web site
posting, and that entities other than registration jurisdictions should
be prohibited or prevented from disclosing such information.
As noted, the measure concerning Internet identifiers included in
these supplemental guidelines is required by 42 U.S.C. 16915a(c), which
directs the Attorney General to utilize the authority provided in 42
U.S.C. 16918(b)(4) to exempt Internet identifier information from
disclosure. Section 16918 is the statute that directs registration
jurisdictions to establish Internet sites that disclose information on
registered sex offenders to the public, and subsection (b)(4) in that
section authorizes the Attorney General to create mandatory exemptions
of information from such disclosure. There is no corresponding
authorization in SORNA to prohibit jurisdictions from disseminating
registration information by means other than public Web site posting,
or to prohibit entities other than registration jurisdictions from
disclosing information about sex offenders.
Looking beyond the question of legal authority, the comments
received did not provide persuasive reasons for adopting new Federal
restrictions on the disclosure of information about sex offenders'
Internet identifiers, supplementary to the limitation required by 42
U.S.C. 16915a(c) and other existing legal restrictions. As a practical
matter, there are legitimate reasons for disclosure of such information
by means other than public Web site posting and by entities other than
registration jurisdictions, such as disclosure by jurisdictions or
private individuals or entities of information about sex offenders'
Internet identifiers to law enforcement agencies investigating sex
crimes involving solicitation of the victims through the Internet.
Some of the comments received included complaints or criticisms
relating to 42 U.S.C. 16915b, which directs the Attorney General to
establish a system enabling social networking Web sites to compare the
Internet identifiers of their users to information in the National Sex
Offender Registry. Section 16915b was separately enacted by the KIDS
Act, Public Law 110-400. It is not part of SORNA. Any measures that may
be needed in the implementation of Sec. 16915b would not belong in
these supplemental guidelines, which are concerned with the
implementation of SORNA.
International Travel
Part II.A of these supplemental guidelines exercises ``[t]he
authority under 42 U.S.C. 16914(a)(7) to expand the range of required
registration information * * * to provide that registrants must be
required to inform their residence jurisdictions of intended travel
outside of the United States at least 21 days in advance of such
travel.''
Some commenters objected to this requirement on the ground that it
would prevent sex offenders from engaging in legitimate international
travel, because it may be necessary for sex offenders to travel abroad
for business, familial, or other reasons without being able to
anticipate the need three weeks in advance. However, these supplemental
guidelines recognize that there may be circumstances in which requiring
21 days advance notice would be unnecessary or inappropriate, and
expressly allow jurisdictions to adopt policies accommodating such
situations subject to approval by the SMART Office.
Some commenters claimed that there is no authority for the Attorney
General to adopt notice requirements concerning sex offenders leaving
the United States, or concerning domestic travel by sex offenders,
because 42 U.S.C. 16928 only directs the Attorney General to establish
a system for informing relevant jurisdictions about persons entering
the United States who are required to register under SORNA. These
commenters apparently did not understand the legal basis for the
Attorney General's adoption of additional requirements relating to
reporting of travel or intended travel by sex offenders. Such
requirements are adequately supported by 42 U.S.C. 16914(a)(7), which
provides general authority for the Attorney General to expand the
information sex offenders are required to provide for inclusion in sex
offender registries. The reporting requirement relating to intended
international travel adopted in these supplemental guidelines is
expressly premised on Sec. 16914(a)(7), as are pre-existing reporting
requirements adopted in the SORNA Guidelines relating to international
and domestic travel that go beyond those expressly stated in SORNA
itself, see 73 FR at 38056.
Some comments expressed concern or frustration that jurisdictions
have been presented with a moving target in their SORNA implementation
efforts, a concern apparently felt with particular force in relation to
the new reporting requirement regarding international travel.
Relatively little time remains until the end of the compliance periods
allowed under 42 U.S.C. 16924, which can create a difficult situation
for jurisdictions attempting to carry out new requirements.
These comments are well taken. Congress in SORNA has authorized the
Attorney General to augment or modify SORNA's express requirements in
certain areas, including authority to expand the range of required
registration information and authority to create discretionary or
mandatory exceptions to disclosure of such information. See 42 U.S.C.
16914(a)(7), (b)(8), 16918(b)(4), (c)(4), 16921(b). These authorities
could be exercised by the Attorney General at any time during the
periods afforded for SORNA implementation under 42 U.S.C. 16924 or
thereafter. Given the inclusion in
[[Page 1634]]
SORNA of these express authorities to augment or modify certain SORNA
requirements, SORNA is reasonably read so as not to require that
jurisdictions be regarded as falling short of substantial
implementation based on new requirements without time afforded to
correct the deficiency. Accordingly, the SMART Office will take account
of the novelty of requirements and the time that has been available to
carry them out in determining whether jurisdictions have substantially
implemented SORNA, and will afford jurisdictions a reasonable amount of
time to implement new requirements, which may extend beyond the
implementation deadlines otherwise applicable under SORNA. Cf. Chicago
& Alton R.R. Co. v. Tranbarger, 238 U.S. 67, 73-74 (1915) (statute may
be construed to allow a reasonable amount of time to take an action
where the normal statutory time limit for taking such actions cannot
sensibly be applied).
The comments received included a concern that the new requirement
relating to international travel reporting will unduly burden
jurisdictions. This concern appears to reflect an exaggerated
impression of the nature of the requirement and its impact on
jurisdictions. Under pre-existing requirements of SORNA and the SORNA
Guidelines, jurisdictions are required to obtain a range of information
from sex offenders and to make that information available to other
registration jurisdictions and appropriate Federal agencies, including
information regarding domestic and international travel by sex
offenders. See 42 U.S.C. 16913(c), 16919(b), 16921; 73 FR at 38055-56,
38065-67. The requirement under these supplemental guidelines to obtain
information concerning international travel by sex offenders more
consistently does not differ fundamentally in character from these pre-
existing requirements and the mechanisms utilized in carrying out the
pre-existing requirements can be extended and adapted to encompass this
additional information. To the extent the concern about a resulting
burden on jurisdictions reflects the novelty of this requirement and
the apprehension that inadequate time will be afforded to implement it,
the information in the preceding paragraph about how implementation of
new requirements will be treated is responsive to the concern.
While the comments received did not provide persuasive reasons to
abrogate or restrict the international travel reporting requirements as
set forth in Part II.A of the proposed supplemental guidelines, in one
respect the provisions regarding this requirement are modified in the
final supplemental guidelines. The proposed supplemental guidelines
noted that, as the international tracking system continues to develop,
the SMART Office may issue additional directions to jurisdictions to
notify certain agencies concerning international travel by sex
offenders. Additional direction may also be needed concerning the
specific information sex offenders should be required to provide in
notifying their residence jurisdictions about intended international
travel. This is so because obtaining the bare information that a
registrant will be going somewhere outside of the United States at some
time three weeks or more in the future may not be sufficient to achieve
the objectives of the international tracking system--objectives that
include reliably tracking sex offenders as they leave and return to the
United States, and notifying as appropriate U.S. or foreign authorities
in foreign countries to which sex offenders travel. See 73 FR at 38066-
67. More specific information may be needed to realize these
objectives, such as information concerning expected itinerary,
departure and return dates, and means and purpose of travel.
The final supplemental guidelines accordingly state that the SMART
Office may issue additional directions concerning the information to be
required in international travel notifications by sex offenders. To the
extent that the SMART Office's exercise of the authority to flesh out
the international tracking system results in new, more specific
requirements relating to international travel reporting, the novelty of
these requirements will be taken into account, as with other new
requirements under SORNA as discussed above. The amount of time that
has been available to carry out such requirements will be considered by
the SMART Office in assessing substantial implementation and
jurisdictions will be afforded a reasonable amount of time to carry
them out.
Domestic Interjurisdictional Tracking
Part II.B of the supplemental guidelines, relating to use of the
SORNA Exchange Portal in domestic interjurisdictional sex offender
tracking, was commented on favorably as improving and facilitating such
tracking. There were also some general questions in the comments
relating to use of the SORNA Exchange Portal and interjurisdictional
notifications. As noted above, the SMART Office is available at all
times to answer questions from jurisdictions regarding SORNA
implementation and such questions should be addressed directly to the
SMART Office.
The second paragraph in Part II.B explains that regular use of the
SORNA Exchange Portal is essential to effective interjurisdictional
information sharing and sex offender tracking. In relation to these
objectives, the wording of the final sentence in this paragraph in the
proposed supplemental guidelines was unduly narrow, referring to use of
the Portal to access messages from other jurisdictions but not to use
of the Portal for other information sharing purposes required under
SORNA. The sentence accordingly has been modified in the final
supplemental guidelines to reference more generally use of the Portal
in information sharing in conformity with guidance issued by the SMART
Office.
Acknowledgment Forms
Part II.C of these supplemental guidelines expands the range of
required registration information to include the acknowledgment forms
used to inform sex offenders of their registration obligations.
Favorable comment was received on this change as facilitating the
prosecution of sex offenders who violate those obligations.
Other commenters were critical of this change on the ground that
acknowledgment forms should be utilized to inform sex offenders of
their registration obligations, rather than to prosecute them if they
violate those obligations. However, there is no inconsistency in using
the acknowledgment forms for both purposes. The forms both advise sex
offenders of the registration requirements to which they are subject
and can help to show that they were aware of those requirements in
prosecutions for violations.
Some commenters complained that the acknowledgment forms do not
provide sufficient information, for example, because they only advise
sex offenders of their registration obligations under state law and do
not advise them of their registration obligations under SORNA. However,
the SORNA standards require that sex offenders be informed of their
duties under SORNA and that sex offenders be required to sign a form
stating that the duty to register has been explained and understood.
See 42 U.S.C. 16917(a); 73 FR at 38063. In jurisdictions that have
implemented SORNA in their registration programs, the jurisdictions'
registration laws and policies will encompass the SORNA requirements
and sex offenders will be informed
[[Page 1635]]
concerning these requirements. In any event, regardless of what
limitations there may be in the information currently provided in
particular jurisdictions' acknowledgment forms, that does not weigh
against requiring the inclusion of these forms in sex offenders'
registration information. The forms do provide sex offenders with
information concerning their registration obligations and may be useful
in the prosecution of violations of those obligations by helping to
establish that sex offenders were aware of the requirement to register.
Ongoing Implementation Assurance
Some comments objected to the requirements of Part III of the
supplemental guidelines, relating to ``ongoing implementation
assurance,'' on the ground that they would unduly burden jurisdictions
and would inappropriately require the state administering agencies for
the Byrne Justice Assistance Grant program to certify the state's SORNA
implementation status, though these agencies are not generally
responsible for sex offender registration matters. These comments
reflect misunderstandings of this part of the supplemental guidelines.
The supplemental guidelines state that Byrne grantees will need to
establish that their systems continue to meet the SORNA standards in
connection with the annual grant application process because such
continuing compliance is a condition of full Byrne Grant eligibility in
each program year. See 42 U.S.C. 16925. This does not mean that the
state agencies responsible for Byrne Grant matters must verify the
status of SORNA implementation. Rather, states (and other jurisdictions
that apply for Byrne Grants) may obtain information concerning ongoing
implementation from their agencies that generally deal with the SMART
Office on SORNA implementation matters and include the information with
their Byrne Grant applications.
The requirement appearing in Part III of the supplemental
guidelines is not new in principle. SORNA was preceded by the original
Federal law setting national standards for sex offender registration
and notification, the Jacob Wetterling Crimes Against Children and
Sexually Violent Offender Registration Act. The Attorney General's
guidelines under the Wetterling Act similarly required an annual
determination of continuing compliance with the national standards.
See, e.g., 64 FR 572, 587 (1999) (``After the reviewing authority has
determined that a state is in compliance with the [Wetterling] Act, the
state will be required as part of the Byrne Formula Grant application
process in subsequent program years to certify that the state remains
in compliance with the Act.''). Given the connection to eligibility for
full Byrne Grant funding under both Acts, annual determinations of
continuing compliance are as necessary under SORNA as they were under
the predecessor law, and in neither case should this requirement be
unduly burdensome for jurisdictions.
Retroactive Classes
Many commenters approved of the change in Part IV of these
supplemental guidelines. Part IV provides that it suffices for
substantial implementation of SORNA, with respect to sex offenders
reentering the justice system through subsequent (non-sex offense)
criminal convictions, if registration of such offenders by
jurisdictions is limited to cases in which the subsequent conviction is
for a felony. However, some commenters proposed that the requirement to
register sex offenders whose convictions predate SORNA or SORNA's
implementation in particular jurisdictions should be further restricted
or eliminated. The grounds urged for such further limitation included
the following:
Some commenters argued that requiring sex offenders who reenter the
justice system through subsequent (non-sex offense) criminal
convictions to register discriminates against sex offenders because
non-sex offenders who reenter the justice system through subsequent
(non-sex offense) criminal convictions are not subject to such a
requirement. However, differences in the treatment of different classes
of offenders are not intrinsically unfair and such differences are not
unconstitutionally discriminatory where there is a rational basis for
the distinction. See Chapman v. United States, 500 U.S. 453, 465
(1991). Sex offender registration by its nature involves imposing
certain requirements on sex offenders that are not applied to non-sex
offenders. This is so regardless of whether registration requirements
are imposed on sex offenders whose convictions occur after SORNA's
enactment or its implementation or on sex offenders whose convictions
occurred at earlier times.
Some commenters claimed that the remaining retroactivity
requirements under SORNA would, absent further changes, have anomalous
and unwarranted effects on juvenile delinquent sex offenders. For
example, some comments asserted that juveniles adjudicated delinquent
for sex offenses committed when they were below the age of 14 will have
to be registered if they have subsequent adult convictions for (non-sex
offense) felonies, and some claimed that public notification will be
required concerning persons qualifying as sex offenders on the basis of
juvenile delinquency adjudications if they have subsequent adult
convictions for (non-sex offense) felonies. These comments reflect
misunderstandings of SORNA and its implementing guidelines. SORNA and
the guidelines never require registration on the basis of juvenile
delinquency adjudications except for adjudications for offenses
comparable to aggravated sexual abuse (or related attempt or
conspiracy) committed when the juvenile was at least 14 years old.
Persons with juvenile adjudications not satisfying these criteria are
not ``sex offenders'' as defined in SORNA and are not subject to
SORNA's requirements at all. See 42 U.S.C. 16911(1), (8). Likewise,
following the adoption of these supplemental guidelines, public
disclosure or notification is never required under SORNA regarding
persons whose predicate sex offense convictions are juvenile
delinquency adjudications.
Some comments pointed in this connection to the decision in United
States v. Juvenile Male, 590 F.3d 924 (9th Cir. 2010), which held that
SORNA cannot constitutionally be applied to a sex offender on the basis
of a Federal juvenile delinquency adjudication predating SORNA's
enactment. However, Juvenile Male is not binding precedent for Federal
courts outside of the Ninth Circuit and not binding precedent for state
courts anywhere. Considered on its own terms, the decision has no
bearing on SORNA's application to sex offenders with adult convictions.
The Department of Justice has sought review of the Juvenile Male
decision by the U.S. Supreme Court and, as a result, further
proceedings in the case are pending before the U.S. Supreme Court and
the Montana Supreme Court. See United States v. Juvenile Male, 130
S.Ct. 2518 (2010). Considering the foregoing, there is no basis at this
time for making changes in the implementing guidelines or rules for
SORNA on the basis of the Juvenile Male decision.
Some commenters expressed the concern that the remaining
retroactivity requirements under SORNA will unduly burden
jurisdictions. However, under the SORNA Guidelines, it suffices for
substantial implementation of SORNA if a jurisdiction registers sex
offenders who remain in the justice system as prisoners, supervisees,
or registrants, or who reenter the justice system through
[[Page 1636]]
a subsequent criminal conviction. The Guidelines note that such
offenders are within the cognizance of the jurisdiction, and the
jurisdiction will often have independent reasons to review their
criminal histories for penal, correctional, or registration/
notification purposes. See 73 FR at 38046. This point applies with
greater force now that the covered class of ``reentrants'' who must be
registered is limited to those with subsequent felony convictions, as
provided in these supplemental guidelines.
Various other features of SORNA and the SORNA Guidelines limit any
resulting burden on jurisdictions. Jurisdictions are not required to
register sex offenders in the retroactive classes whose SORNA
registration periods have already run, and jurisdictions may credit
such sex offenders with the time that has elapsed from their release
(or from sentencing in case of a nonincarcerative sentence) in
determining what, if any, remaining registration time is required, even
if they have never actually been registered. See 73 FR at 38035-36,
38046-47. Jurisdictions may rely on their normal methods and standards
for obtaining and reviewing criminal history information, and on the
information available in the records obtained by such means, in
ascertaining SORNA registration requirements for sex offenders in the
retroactive classes. This point applies both in determining whether
such sex offenders need to be registered at all and in determining the
sex offender's ``tier'' for SORNA purposes. See 73 FR at 38043, 38064.
In relation to sex offenders in the retroactive classes, there is no
requirement that jurisdictions make special efforts to obtain records
or information that would not turn up through the normal type of
criminal history searches they conduct.
In light of these considerations, the comments received do not
persuasively establish that the public safety benefits of registering
in conformity with SORNA sex offenders who remain in the justice system
as prisoners, supervisees, or registrants, or who reenter through
subsequent felony convictions, are outweighed by a resulting burden on
jurisdictions.
Newly Recognized Tribes
A number of favorable comments were received about affording newly
recognized Indian tribes the option of becoming SORNA registration
jurisdictions, as provided in Part V of these supplemental guidelines.
Tribal commenters urged that additional matters under SORNA
affecting the tribes should be addressed, including particularly the
possibility of involuntary delegation of tribal registration functions
to the states pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 16927(a)(2)(C), which permits such
delegation if the Attorney General determines that a tribal
jurisdiction has not substantially implemented SORNA and is not likely
to become capable of doing so within a reasonable amount of time. The
comments urged that such involuntary delegations should occur only as
an absolute last resort and through a transparent process. Comments
submitted on behalf of state jurisdictions also expressed concern about
the resulting burden on states if they were required to assume
responsibility for tribal registration functions based on the failure
of a tribe or tribes to substantially implement SORNA.
The Department of Justice and the SMART Office fully agree that
involuntary delegation of tribal registration functions to the states
should occur only as a last resort, if at all. The SORNA Guidelines
state: ``The Department of Justice hopes and expects * * * that the
occurrence of such an involuntary delegation will never be necessary,
given the strong interest of the tribes in effective registration and
notification for sex offenders subject to their jurisdictions, and the
priority that the SMART Office gives to working with all tribes and
other jurisdictions to facilitate the implementation of SORNA's
requirements in relation to tribal areas.'' 73 FR at 38039. This matter
is not addressed in these supplemental guidelines because the
Department did not solicit public comment about it in the proposed
supplemental guidelines and further input from the affected
jurisdictions would be desirable prior to any articulation of more
detailed standards or procedures for such delegations.
Some additional tribal issues were raised in the comments,
including the need for cooperative activities between the tribes that
are not SORNA registration jurisdictions and the states in order to
effect the registration of sex offenders within the jurisdiction of
such tribes, and concern that law enforcement agencies in such tribes
will not be adequately notified or informed concerning sex offenders in
their territories. These issues were previously raised by tribal
commenters in the public comments on the SORNA Guidelines and they are
addressed at some length in those Guidelines. See 73 FR at 38039,
38049, 38060. The measures relating to these matters outlined in the
Guidelines are integral elements of SORNA's implementation in relation
to tribal areas and the SMART Office will continue to work with all
tribes and state jurisdictions to ensure that they are effectively
carried out.
The Department of Justice and the SMART Office seek and welcome the
counsel and views of Indian tribal governments and communities at all
times and will continue to consult with them on SORNA implementation
matters affecting the tribes in conformity with Executive Order 13175.
Supplemental Guidelines for Sex Offender Registration and Notification
Contents
I. Public Notification
A. Juvenile Delinquents
B. Internet Identifiers
II. Interjurisdictional Tracking and Information Sharing
A. International Travel
B. Domestic Interjurisdictional Tracking
C. Acknowledgment Forms
III. Ongoing Implementation Assurance
IV. Retroactive Classes
V. Newly Recognized Tribes
I. Public Notification
A. Juvenile Delinquents
SORNA includes as covered ``sex offender[s]'' juveniles at least 14
years old who are adjudicated delinquent for particularly serious sex
offenses. See 42 U.S.C. 16911(1), (8). While the SORNA Guidelines
endeavored to facilitate jurisdictions' compliance with this aspect of
SORNA, see 73 FR at 38030, 38040-41, 38050, resistance by some
jurisdictions to public disclosure of information about sex offenders
in this class has continued to be one of the largest impediments to
SORNA implementation.
Hence, the Attorney General is exercising his authority under 42
U.S.C. 16918(c)(4) to create additional discretionary exemptions from
public Web site disclosure to allow jurisdictions to exempt from public
Web site disclosure information concerning sex offenders required to
register on the basis of juvenile delinquency adjudications. This
change creates a new discretionary, not mandatory, exemption from
public Web site disclosure. It does not limit the discretion of
jurisdictions to include information concerning sex offenders required
to register on the basis of juvenile delinquency adjudications on their
public Web sites if they so wish.
The change regarding public Web site disclosure does not authorize
treating sex offenders required to register on the basis of juvenile
delinquency adjudications differently from sex
[[Page 1637]]
offenders with adult convictions in other respects. Whether a case
involves a juvenile delinquency adjudication in the category covered by
SORNA or an adult conviction, SORNA's registration requirements remain
applicable, see 42 U.S.C. 16913-16, as do the requirements to transmit
or make available registration information to the national (non-public)
databases of sex offender information, to law enforcement and
supervision agencies, and to registration authorities in other
jurisdictions, see 73 FR at 38060.
Jurisdictions are not required to provide registration information
concerning sex offenders required to register on the basis of juvenile
delinquency adjudications to the entities described in the SORNA
Guidelines at 73 FR 38061, i.e., certain school, public housing, social
service, and volunteer entities, and other organizations, companies, or
individuals who request notification. This reflects an exercise of the
Attorney General's authority to create exceptions to required
information disclosure under 42 U.S.C. 16921(b). Accordingly, if a
jurisdiction decides not to include information on a juvenile
delinquent sex offender on its public Web site, as is allowed by these
supplemental guidelines, information on the sex offender does not have
to be disclosed to these entities.
B. Internet Identifiers
The KIDS Act, which was enacted in 2008, directed the Attorney
General to utilize pre-existing legal authorities under SORNA to adopt
certain measures relating to sex offenders' ``Internet identifiers,''
defined to mean e-mail addresses and other designations used for self-
identification or routing in Internet communication or posting. The
KIDS Act requires the Attorney General to (i) include appropriate
Internet identifier information in the registration information sex
offenders are required to provide, (ii) specify the time and manner for
keeping that information current, (iii) exempt such information from
public Web site posting, and (iv) ensure that procedures are in place
to notify sex offenders of resulting obligations. See 42 U.S.C. 16915a.
The SORNA Guidelines incorporate requirements (i)-(ii) and (iv), as
described above. See 73 FR at 38055 (Internet identifiers to be
included in registration information), 38066 (reporting of changes in
Internet identifiers), 38063-65 (notifying sex offenders of SORNA
requirements). However, while the Guidelines discouraged the inclusion
of sex offenders' Internet identifiers on the public Web sites, they
did not adopt a mandatory exclusion of this information from public Web
site posting, which the KIDS Act now requires. See 42 U.S.C. 16915a(c);
73 FR at 38059-60.
The authority under 42 U.S.C. 16918(b)(4) to create additional
mandatory exemptions from public Web site disclosure is accordingly
exercised to exempt sex offenders' Internet identifiers from public Web
site posting. This means that jurisdictions cannot, consistent with
SORNA, include sex offenders' Internet identifiers (such as e-mail
addresses) in the sex offenders' public Web site postings or otherwise
list or post sex offenders' Internet identifiers on the public sex
offender Web sites.
This change does not limit jurisdictions' retention and use of sex
offenders' Internet identifier information for purposes other than
public disclosure, including submission of the information to the
national (non-public) databases of sex offender information, sharing of
the information with law enforcement and supervision agencies, and
sharing of the information with registration authorities in other
jurisdictions. See 73 FR at 38060. The change also does not limit the
discretion of jurisdictions to include on their public Web sites
functions by which members of the public can ascertain whether a
specified e-mail address or other Internet identifier is reported as
that of a registered sex offender, see id. at 38059-60, or to disclose
Internet identifier information to any one by means other than public
Web site posting.
The exemption of sex offenders' Internet identifiers from public
Web site disclosure does not override or limit the requirement that sex
offenders' names, including any aliases, be included in their public
Web site postings. See 73 FR at 38059. A sex offender's use of his name
or an alias to identify himself or for other purposes in Internet
communications or postings does not exempt the name or alias from
public Web site disclosure.
II. Interjurisdictional Tracking and Information Sharing
A. International Travel
Certain features of SORNA and the SORNA Guidelines require the
Department of Justice, in conjunction with other Federal agencies, to
develop reliable means for identifying and tracking sex offenders who
enter or leave the United States. See 42 U.S.C. 16928; 73 FR at 38066-
67. To that end, the Guidelines provide that sex offenders must be
required to inform their residence jurisdictions if they intend to
commence residence, employment, or school attendance outside of the
United States, and that jurisdictions that are so informed must notify
the U.S. Marshals Service and update the sex offender's registration
information in the national databases. See 73 FR at 38067. (Regarding
the general requirement to provide registration information for
inclusion in the National Sex Offender Registry and other appropriate
databases at the national level, see 42 U.S.C. 16921(b)(1); 73 FR at
38060.) In addition, the Guidelines provide that sex offenders must be
required to inform their residence jurisdictions about lodging at
places away from their residences for seven days or more, regardless of
whether that results from domestic or international travel. See 73 FR
at 38056, 38066.
Since the issuance of the Guidelines, the SMART Office has
continued to work with other agencies of the Department of Justice, the
Department of Homeland Security, the Department of State, and the
Department of Defense on the development of a system for consistently
identifying and tracking sex offenders who engage in international
travel. Although, as noted, the current Guidelines require reporting of
international travel information in certain circumstances, the existing
requirements are not sufficient to provide the information needed for
tracking such travel consistently.
The authority under 42 U.S.C. 16914(a)(7) to expand the range of
required registration information is accordingly exercised to provide
that registrants must be required to inform their residence
jurisdictions of intended travel outside of the United States at least
21 days in advance of such travel. Pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 16921(b),
jurisdictions so informed must provide the international travel
information to the U.S. Marshals Service, and must transmit or make
available that information to national databases, law enforcement and
supervision agencies, and other jurisdictions as provided in the
Guidelines. See 73 FR at 38060. Jurisdictions need not disclose
international travel information to the entities described in the SORNA
Guidelines at 73 FR 38061--i.e., certain school, public housing, social
service, and volunteer entities, and other organizations, companies, or
individuals who request notification. See 42 U.S.C. 16921(b). As the
international tracking system continues to develop, the SMART Office
may issue additional directions to jurisdictions to provide
notification concerning
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international travel by sex offenders, such as notice to Interpol, or
notice to Department of Defense agencies concerning sex offenders who
may live on U.S. military bases abroad. Likewise, the SMART Office may
issue additional directions to jurisdictions concerning the information
to be required in sex offenders' reports of intended international
travel, such as information concerning expected itinerary, departure
and return dates, and means and purpose of travel.
While notice of international travel will generally be required as
described above, it is recognized that requiring 21 days advance notice
may occasionally be unnecessary or inappropriate. For example, a sex
offender may need to travel abroad unexpectedly because of a family or
work emergency. Or separate advance notice of intended international
trips may be unworkable and pointlessly burdensome for a sex offender
who lives in a northern border state and commutes to Canada for work on
a daily basis. Jurisdictions that wish to accommodate such situations
should include information about their policies or practices in this
area in their submissions to the SMART Office and the SMART Office will
determine whether they adequately serve SORNA's international tracking
objectives.
B. Domestic Interjurisdictional Tracking
SORNA and the SORNA Guidelines require interjurisdictional sharing
of registration information in various contexts and SORNA directs the
Attorney General, in consultation with the jurisdictions, to develop
and support software facilitating the immediate exchange of information
among jurisdictions. See 42 U.S.C. 16913(c), 16919(b), 16921(b)(3),
16923; 73 FR at 38047, 38062-68. The SMART Office accordingly has
created and maintains the SORNA Exchange Portal, which enables the
immediate exchange of information about registered sex offenders among
the jurisdictions.
Regular use of this tool is essential to ensuring that information
is reliably shared among jurisdictions and that interjurisdictional
tracking of sex offenders occurs consistently and effectively as SORNA
contemplates. For example, if a jurisdiction sends notice that a sex
offender has reported an intention to change his residence to another
jurisdiction, but the destination jurisdiction fails to access the
notice promptly, the sex offender's failure to appear or register in
the destination jurisdiction may go unnoticed or detection of the
violation may be delayed. Accordingly, as a necessary part of SORNA
implementation, jurisdictions must use the SORNA Exchange Portal in
their information sharing regarding sex offenders in conformity with
any guidance issued by the SMART Office on use of the Portal.
Technological improvements may facilitate the creation of new tools
that may eventually replace the existing SORNA Exchange Portal. If that
occurs, the SMART Office may issue directions to jurisdictions
concerning the use of these new tools that jurisdictions will need to
follow to be approved as substantially implementing SORNA.
C. Acknowledgment Forms
SORNA provides that sex offenders are to be informed of their
registration obligations and required to sign acknowledgments that this
information has been provided upon their initial registration. See 42
U.S.C. 16917. Even before the enactment of SORNA, similar requirements
were included in the predecessor national standards for sex offender
registration and notification of the Jacob Wetterling Crimes Against
Children and Sexually Violent Offender Registration Act (42 U.S.C.
14071(b)(1)(A), prior to its repeal by SORNA).
SORNA requires jurisdictions to provide criminal penalties for sex
offenders who fail to comply with SORNA's requirements, see 42 U.S.C.
16913(e), and Federal criminal liability is authorized for sex
offenders who knowingly fail to register or update a registration as
required by SORNA under circumstances supporting Federal jurisdiction,
see 18 U.S.C. 2250. Successful prosecution of sex offenders for
registration violations under these provisions may require proof that
they were aware of a requirement to register.
The acknowledgment forms signed by sex offenders regarding their
registration obligations are likely to be the most consistently
available and definitive proof of such knowledge. Including these forms
in registration information will make them readily available in the
jurisdictions in which sex offenders are initially registered, and will
make them available to other jurisdictions pursuant to the provisions
of SORNA and the Guidelines for transmission of registration
information to other jurisdictions. See 42 U.S.C. 16921(b)(3); 73 FR at
38060.
The authority under 42 U.S.C. 16914(b)(8) to expand the range of
required registration information is accordingly exercised to require
that sex offenders' signed acknowledgment forms be included in their
registration information. The existing Guidelines already provide that
acknowledgment forms covering the SORNA requirements are to be obtained
from registrants as part of the SORNA implementation process and
thereafter. See 73 FR at 38063-65. As with other forms of documentary
registration information, the inclusion of these forms in registration
information can be effected by scanning the forms and including the
resulting electronic documents in the registry databases or by
including links or information that provides access to other databases
in which the signed acknowledgments are available in electronic form.
See 73 FR at 38055.
III. Ongoing Implementation Assurance
The SORNA Guidelines explain that the SMART Office will determine
whether jurisdictions have substantially implemented the SORNA
requirements in their programs and that jurisdictions are to provide
submissions to the SMART Office to facilitate this determination. See
42 U.S.C. 16924-25; 73 FR at 38047-48.
SORNA itself and the Guidelines assume throughout that
jurisdictions must implement SORNA in practice, not just on paper, and
the Guidelines provide many directions and suggestions for putting the
SORNA standards into effect. See, e.g., 42 U.S.C. 16911(9), 16912(a),
16913(c), 16914(b), 16917, 16918, 16921(b), 16922; 73 FR at 38059-61,
38063-70. The Department of Justice and the SMART Office are making
available to jurisdictions a wide range of practical aids to SORNA
implementation, including software and communication systems to
facilitate the exchange of sex offender information among jurisdictions
and other technology and documentary tools. See 42 U.S.C. 16923; 73 FR
at 38031-32, 38047.
Hence, implementation of SORNA is not just a matter of adopting
laws or rules that facially direct the performance of the measures
required by SORNA. It entails actually carrying out those measures and,
as noted, various forms of guidance and assistance have been provided
to that end. Accordingly, in reviewing jurisdictions' requests for
approval as having substantially implemented SORNA, the SMART Office
will not be limited to facial examination of registration laws and
policies, but rather will undertake such inquiry as is needed to ensure
that jurisdictions are substantially implementing SORNA's requirements
in practice. Jurisdictions can facilitate approval of their systems by
including in their submissions to the SMART Office information
concerning practical implementation measures and mechanisms, in
addition to relevant
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laws and rules, such as policy and procedure manuals, description of
infrastructure and technology resources, and information about
personnel and budgetary measures relating to the operation of the
jurisdiction's registration and notification system. The SMART Office
may require jurisdictions to provide additional information, beyond
that proffered in their submissions, as needed for a determination.
Jurisdictions that have substantially implemented SORNA have a
continuing obligation to maintain their system's consistency with
current SORNA standards. Those that are grantees under the Byrne
Justice Assistance Grant program will be required in connection with
the annual grant application process to establish that their systems
continue to meet SORNA standards. This will entail providing
information as directed by the SMART Office, in addition to the
information otherwise included in Byrne Grant applications, so that the
SMART Office can verify continuing implementation. Jurisdictions that
do not apply for Byrne Grants will also be required to demonstrate
periodically that their systems continue to meet SORNA standards as
directed by the SMART Office, and to provide such information as the
SMART Office may require to make this determination.
If a jurisdiction's Byrne Justice Assistance Grant funding is
reduced because of non-implementation of SORNA, it may regain
eligibility for full funding in later program years by substantially
implementing SORNA in such later years. The SMART Office will continue
to work with all jurisdictions to ensure substantial implementation of
SORNA and verify that they continue to meet the requirements of SORNA
on an ongoing basis.
IV. Retroactive Classes
SORNA's requirements apply to all sex offenders, regardless of when
they were convicted. See 28 CFR 72.3. However, the SORNA Guidelines
state that it will be deemed sufficient for substantial implementation
if jurisdictions register sex offenders with pre-SORNA or pre-SORNA-
implementation sex offense convictions who remain in the system as
prisoners, supervisees, or registrants, or who reenter the system
through a subsequent criminal conviction. See 73 FR at 38035-36, 38043,
38046-47, 38063-64. This feature of the Guidelines reflects an
assumption that it may not be possible for jurisdictions to identify
and register all sex offenders who fall within the SORNA registration
categories, particularly where they have left the justice system and
merged into the general population long ago, but that it will be
feasible for jurisdictions to do so in relation to sex offenders who
remain in the justice system or reenter it through a subsequent
criminal conviction. See 73 FR at 38046.
Experience supports a qualification of this assumption in relation
to sex offenders who have fully exited the justice system but later
reenter it through a subsequent criminal conviction for a non-sex
offense that is relatively minor in character. (Where the subsequent
conviction is for a sex offense it independently requires registration
under SORNA.) In many jurisdictions the volume of misdemeanor
prosecutions is large and most such cases may need to be disposed of in
a manner that leaves little time or opportunity for examining the
defendant's criminal history and ascertaining whether it contains some
past sex offense conviction that would entail a present registration
requirement under SORNA. In contrast, where the subsequent offense is a
serious crime, ordinary practice is likely to involve closer scrutiny
of the defendant's past criminal c