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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR McSorley
DATE TYPED 3/10/05
HB
SHORT TITLE Sex Offender Registration Act Effectiveness
SB SJM 38
ANALYST Ford
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
Minimal
Various
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to HB 165
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
Attorney General (AGO)
Department of Corrections (NMCD)
Public Defender Department (PDD)
Public Education Department (PED)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Joint Memorial 38 makes a number of findings regarding New Mexico’s Sex Offender
Registration and Notification Act (Act) and calls upon the New Mexico Sentencing Commission
(commission) to conduct a study on the efficacy of the Act to include statistics gathered from
other states as to the rates of sex crimes before and after implementation of the statute. The
commission is to report its findings to the appropriate legislative committee by October 2005.
The memorial further resolves that the study include statistics from states that have more experi-
ence with the implementation of sex offender registration and notification provisions so that such
information can be used in New Mexico to prevent possible problems and legal challenges. The
memorial calls on all state agencies dealing with the implementation of the Act to cooperate with
the commission.
pg_0002
Senate Joint Memorial 38 -- Page 2
Significant Issues
Senate Joint Memorial 38 makes the following findings:
New Mexico has now joined the ranks of states that require persons convicted of sex crimes to
register and report their whereabouts for up to twenty years after they have served their time after
conviction;
States with decades of experience in establishing and maintaining a sex offender registry could
serve as models for New Mexico's efforts to implement the Sex Offender Registration and Notifi-
cation Act;
Washington state, which has had a sex offender registration and notification act in place for well
over a decade and is the only state that has published statistics on the benefits of the act, reports
no reduction in sex crimes;
New Mexico's highly publicized sex offender registry does not contain current information for all
sex offenders, has wrongly included names of innocent persons and is not entirely accurate;
Maintaining the sex offender registry is time consuming and uses law enforcement resources;
Posting a sex offender registry on the internet, where it is available to anyone in the world, can be
seen as a second punishment for a crime for which the person convicted has already served time;
Publicizing the sex offense can re-victimize a crime victim;
The common perception that police are monitoring all sex offenders and that a registry can be all-
inclusive can lead to a false sense of security;
National statistics indicate that sex offenders are usually well-acquainted with their victims, often
being relatives of or persons in authority over the victims, and their whereabouts are well-known
within their communities;
In New Mexico, some small law enforcement agencies may soon face a choice between monitor-
ing sex offenders and pursuing active crimes, and some law enforcement agents have been forced
to provide protections against vigilantes seeking to retaliate against sex offenders whose names
are published in the registry.
The Sex Offender Management Board was created during the 2003 Special Session for the pur-
pose of proposing sex offender registration and notification changes in order to comply with
minimum federal requirements. House Bill 165 reflects the board’s work to bring New Mexico
law into compliance and may help improve the accuracy of information in the registry.
In response to the memorial’s finding that posting on the registry can be seen as a second pun-
ishment for a sex offense, the AGO notes that New Mexico case law has held that the Act enacts
a civil, remedial, regulatory, non-punitive law.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The requested study would result in costs to the commission as well as to other agencies that deal
with implementation of the Act. The total costs are likely to be minimal.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
House Bill 165 would enact changes to the Act to comply with federal requirements.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The memorial calls for completion of the study by October, 2005. Given the complexity of the
issue, this may be too ambitious a timeline.
EF/yr