Registered sex offender fired from Dawson Fire Dept.

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By Marilyn Parker| May 16, 2019 at 7:49 AM EDT – Updated May 16 at 7:49 AM

DAWSON, Ga. (WALB) – Dawson’s public safety director said he’s to blame for re-hiring a registered sex offender at the fire department.

The firefighter, Norrick Brown, has now been dismissed from the department.

Dawson Public Safety Director Tommy Poupard said he wasn’t aware Brown was a registered sex offender, until WALB got a tip about it, and contacted Poupard.

Now, he said he’s going to be more careful when reviewing applications.

Have you ever wondered who is under the masks, fighting fires in your neighborhood?

“Norrick Brown had worked with us in the past. He got in some trouble. I thought I knew what it was, but it appears I didn’t,” said Poupard.

Poupard said he didn’t know Brown had been accused of sending sexual messages to a 13-year-old girl, according to WALB’s archives in 2013.

“Well that was news to us, so I went to do some checking,” he said.

It wasn’t until WALB reached out to Poupard Tuesday when the station got a tip about Brown’s re-hiring.

Now, after the district attorney’s office said he pleaded guilty to sexual battery in 2014, Brown is listed as a registered sex offender on the GBI website.

“I dropped the ball on it. I should’ve performed a little more due diligence but thankfully we caught,” he explained.

The assistant district attorney told WALB Brown was sentenced to five years probation.

Poupard said on Brown’s application it only stated battery as a prior offense, as well as three references from within the department.

“All three with the fire department here in Dawson, and they were happy to see him back. He was a good firefighter,” he said.

But Poupard said being a good firefighter is not enough for him to remain on the force.

Moving forward, he said they’re looking into adding more questions to job applications, if legally allowed.

“Because of the people, we deal with the public, we just can’t have that perception sitting there,” he explained.

WALB did try to get the court documents for Brown’s case, but the court has sealed them from the public.

Poupard said he’s been in contact with the Dawson interim city manager about changing applications to ask for more information.

The city manager did not want to comment.

Copyright 2019 WALB. All rights reserved.

Source: https://www.walb.com/2019/05/16/registered-sex-offender-fired-dawson-fire-dept/

NWGa sheriffs remove GPS trackers but continue monitoring sexual predators in their counties

nwga-sheriffs-remove-gps-trackers-but-continue-monitoring-sexual-predators-in-their-counties

Across Northwest Georgia, ankle monitors are being removed from sexual predators who have served their time — but authorities will still be keeping tabs on them for the rest of their lives.

Under state law, people convicted of sex offenses must register their addresses with the sheriff’s office of the county where they reside and keep it updated every time they move.

“They’re still required to abide by all the rules of the sex offender registry,” said Deputy Anthony Cromer, who runs the Floyd County Sheriff’s Office registry. “We check on them multiple times a year.”

They each hold one of three classifications: Level 1, Level 2 or Sexually Dangerous Predator. Their classification is assigned upon their release from prison by the Sexual Offender Registry Review Board, based on the risk that they’ll re-offend.

“Anybody classified as a dangerous predator is required to wear an ankle monitor,” Cromer said. “It used to be for life, but now it’s just while they’re on probation or parole.”

The Georgia Supreme Court unanimously ruled in early March that requiring people to be continuously tracked by GPS after they’ve completed their sentences “authorizes a patently unreasonable search that runs afoul of the protections afforded by the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution.”

Gordon County’s registry had 172 residents listed on the sex offender registry, with seven of those classified as predators. The oldest conviction date was 1993, for aggravated child molestation, with a second offense in 2018 for sexual battery of a child. The other six men had single convictions, all child crimes, ranging from 2004 to 2011.

The Gordon County Sheriff’s Office maintains the addresses of registered sex offenders in its database. A map can be found on the sheriff’s office website, gordonsheriff.org/resources/sex-offender-registry. This map “is based upon a third party database of coordinates from a web-based mapping tool provided by Google.”

Bartow County Sheriff Clark Millsap announced earlier this month that the electronic monitors had been removed from the four predators registered in his county who fit the criteria of the order.

Chattooga County Sheriff Mark Schrader was doing it Wednesday, according to Serpentfoot — a Rome native whose 89-year-old husband James A. Ragan is monitored in that county. She said they had previously petitioned for removal due to Ragan’s health and the court ruling comes as a relief.

“He’s bedridden, he has home health care and that thing was cutting into his little skinny legs,” she said. “It was cruel.”

Serpentfoot and Ragan still claim he’s innocent of the child molestation charge that put him in jail in 2006 and on the registry for life. The vast majority of the sexual predators listed in Floyd and surrounding counties were convicted of crimes against children.

In Floyd County, 10 of the 240 residents on the registry as of Wednesday were classified as predators and all of their crimes involved minors.

The oldest conviction dates to 1990, for child molestation, and two other men were convicted in the late ’90s. Three men on the list have two or more convictions several years apart.

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation maintains an online searchable statewide sex offender registry and each county sheriff has a local tracker on their website. Floyd, Polk and Bartow counties also have contracts with OffenderWatch, a national sex offender and community notice service.

Polk County had five sexual predators among the 122 residents listed on its registry — all convicted of child molestation.

Sentencing dates ranged from 1996 to 2010 and none of the five had second offenses.

Three of Chattooga County’s 122 registered sex offenders are classified as predators. Two were convicted of child molestation and one served time for enticing a child for indecent purposes.

Bartow had a total of 261 sex offenders registered, including 11 classed as sexual predators. Conviction dates ranged from 1983 to 2013, and one man had two convictions for sexual assault more than a decade apart — both in Wisconsin.

Source: https://www.mdjonline.com/neighbor_newspapers/news/state/nwga-sheriffs-remove-gps-trackers-but-continue-monitoring-sexual-predators-in-their-counties/article_4c4812c6-42b7-5dca-92df-2ac31aff624c.html

COLUMN: Georgia City Wrong to Target Sex Offenders in New ‘Homelessness Ordinance”

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The following article is an opinion piece and reflects the views of only the author and not necessarily those of AllOnGeorgia.


The City of Ringgold in northwest Georgia has enacted an emergency ordinance to address sex offenders living under a bridge in the community.

The council adopted an “urban camping” ordinance Monday night which, according to The Times Free Press, bans “tents, “other temporary structures,” clothes, sleeping bags, cookware or luggage from public property.” The ordinance deals with homelessness generally, but is directed at those with criminal pasts.

Councilman Larry Black brought the idea forward after he learned that five men living under a bridge were sex offenders recently released from prison.”We have no way of knowing what that person is doing, as far as our safety concerns of our children, at 3, 4 o’clock in the morning, when we’re very vulnerable,” he’s quoted saying in the paper. A citizen was quoted voicing concerns over fishing safety near the bridge with the homeless using the restroom in such close proximity.

The new ordinance comes with a written warning to vacate within 24 hours and is then followed by tickets with $1,000 fines, 60 days in jail, and orders for community service.

Before we go any further, let’s first be clear that 99.9% of people who are homeless cannot afford to pay a $1,000 fine and many homeless people would prefer to spend a night in jail, especially as the winter months approach.

Now, to the merits of the ordinance….

The emergency ordinance was put in place to allow the council time to properly advertise and pass a more permanent ordinance. As an advocate for transparency and accountability in government, I can’t say that I’m a fan of this practice. Usually, emergency ordinances are reserved for natural disasters or extenuating circumstances of a manmade disaster. Five men under a bridge is neither an emergency nor a disaster, and it isn’t something that can’t wait 30 days to be done correctly. But there is more substance to discuss than the ‘how.’

Why are these men living under a bridge?

Arguably, it is because laws on the books restrict where sex offenders can live and a criminal background that can often be a hurdle for employment.

This is a conversation that partially reared its ugly head when reports of cities and counties requiring sex offenders to report to a secure location on Halloween came to light. “What to do” with sex offenders is understandably an emotional topic, and while there are a number of people who would love to see those who commit sexual offenses be locked away forever, our current system doesn’t allow for that. So as long as these offenders are being released into society, we have to discuss what to do with them.

Since 2008, state law has prohibited convicted sex offenders from working or living within 1,000 feet of a church, school, park, or other place where children gather. It doesn’t seem outrageous until you consider places like Catoosa County where only two apartment complexes meet the standard. In metro areas, more housing is available, but if you concentrate so many offenders to metro areas, you’ll eventually run into the same problem — not enough housing.

Whether you are talking about a metro area or a rural area, not enough housing will always lead to homelessness. Find me a community where there isn’t homelessness, while we’re on the topic.

So, back to the ordinance.

Do we want these convicts living under a bridge or do we want them gainfully employed somewhere and contributing to society? Do we want them focused on rebuilding and re-entering regular life or do we want them bored, living outdoors, and willing to do whatever it takes to survive? Is the end goal to eradicate sex offenders from a city, or county, or state as a whole? Does anyone think that’s financially or practically possible, short of literally rounding them up and taking them elsewhere?

When we are talking about issues as serious as this, we can’t talk in wide platitudes of what should happen in a perfect world or if you were ruling on the bench. We have to talk about practicality of what makes sense and what can actually be enforced. Does this ordinance meet that threshold?

And just like every other law, this one has unintended consequences.

The city is criminalizing homelessness. The wide net will capture those who aren’t sex offenders, or even convicts at all, and put them in a position to have a criminal background when they otherwise would not. With regard to the homeless who don’t have a criminal past — is the goal to tell them to pull themselves up by their bootstraps and get back on their feet as long as they do it somewhere else?

By criminalizing homelessness, those who are out on parole or probation will be reincarcerated if they are arrested. If that is the end goal, the City of Ringgold should just acknowledge that the method is simply to make an offender ‘someone else’s problem.’

Another thing to consider is whether or not something like this can hold up in court. The same ordinance passed in Grants Pass, Oregon as is working its way through the courts right now under constitutional right violations – specifically the 8th and 14th Amendments. In September, a federal court of appeals ruled that the Constitution forbids cities from prosecuting homeless persons for sleeping in public places when they have no alternative.

I won’t claim to know the proximity of this bridge in Ringgold to children and I won’t even claim to have all the answers. But I can assert that this type of ordinance is NOT the answer.  One of the men under the bridge has reportedly lived there for decades, without incident. Pretending to be ‘tough on crime,’ pro-children, and anti-sex offender when you’re really just ‘pro-cycle of poverty’ is disingenuous, especially when courts have already ruled on the matter.

The City of Ringgold doesn’t know what the answer is, either. As evidenced by those voicing concerns over the ability to track homeless sex offenders, the cleanliness of fishing sources, the dangers of cooking under a bridge, and any of the other reasons mustered to try to tip the scales of public opinion to fear, it appears that council members and the community in Ringgold may not even know the question.

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Source: https://allongeorgia.com/georgia-opinions/column-georgia-city-wrong-to-target-sex-offenders-in-new-homelessness-ordinance/

Ga. Supreme Court ruling forces GBI to remove names from sex offender list

ga.-supreme-court-ruling-forces-gbi-to-remove-names-from-sex-offender-list

GEORGIA

More than 20 sex offenders pardoned by the state after serving their sentence will be removed from the state sex offender registry.

More than 20 sex offenders will be removed from a state database following a recent decision by the Georgia Supreme Court.

It’s a case that has led to outrage in the state – especially among victims’ rights advocates. It’s also drawn questions from the Georgia Bureau of Investigation – the agency first charged with combing through the sex offender registry.

“We completely understand why those concerns are there and we have concerns as well,” GBI spokesperson Nelly Miles said. “We are still trying to learn and understand, but what we do is we follow the law.”

The ruling specifically dealt with one man’s court battle but now extends to 21 others.

In the court’s review of State v. Davis, justices ruled that Barry Craig Davis, who previously pleaded guilty to aggravated sodomy of his 6-year-old daughter, must be removed from the sex offender registry after he received a pardon from the State of Georgia.

Davis was sentenced to ten years in prison with two to serve in confinement in 1995 and was required to register for life as a sex offender. In July 2005, his probation was terminated. He received his pardon in 2013.

Roughly five years later, on May 21, the Georgia Supreme Court determined that the pardon restored all of his rights other than his right to carry a firearm. Viewing his registration as a sex offender as a “disability imposed by law” the court ruled he must be removed from the registry.

“One of the steps that we have to assure the public is that the information that we deleted is maintained by the GBI and sheriff’s offices can maintain that information and we have it available,” Miles said.

Agents combed through 50 cases of pardoned sex offenders in the state and narrowed that list down to less than half for people specifically pardoned for a sex offense.

The Board of Pardons and Paroles said they’ve since tightened their requirements for pardoning sex offenders and no registered offender has been pardoned since 2013.

They said the pardon does not expunge, erase or remove an offender’s permanent record but helps them re-enter society. The state board added they will notify victims if they’re registered with the state.

Source: https://www.13wmaz.com/article/news/crime/ga-supreme-court-ruling-forces-gbi-to-remove-names-from-sex-offender-list/93-572516105