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Golden Gate University Law Review

Journal

Criminal registers

Publication Year

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Full-Text Articles in Law

The Sex Offender Registration And Notification Act: The Need To Break The Constitutional Mold, Bailey Bifoss Jun 2011

The Sex Offender Registration And Notification Act: The Need To Break The Constitutional Mold, Bailey Bifoss

Golden Gate University Law Review

The Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA) is an example of legislation that utilizes the constitutional mold, as it contains a jurisdictional hook that expressly limits its application to activities that affect interstate commerce. SORNA’s jurisdictional hook states that a sex offender is guilty of violating its provisions if, after that offender travels in interstate commerce, he or she fails to register or update a registration as required. This hook provides federal jurisdiction over sex offenders even though SORNA’s purpose is to regulate criminal conduct and thus traditionally within the states’ power to regulate. SORNA, therefore, exemplifies the way …


Just Desserts, Or A Rotten Apple? Will The Ninth Circuit's Decision In Doe V. Otte Stand To Ensure That Convicted Sex Offenders Are Not Excessively Punished?, Colleen Miles Sep 2010

Just Desserts, Or A Rotten Apple? Will The Ninth Circuit's Decision In Doe V. Otte Stand To Ensure That Convicted Sex Offenders Are Not Excessively Punished?, Colleen Miles

Golden Gate University Law Review

In Doe v. Otte, the Ninth Circuit addressed the constitutionality of Alaska's sex offender registration and notification statute. In finding that Alaska's statute violated the Ex Post Facto Clause, the Ninth Circuit focused on the legislature's intent and the statute's punitive effect in deciding how far a state, and more specifically Alaska, can go to inform its citizens of the whereabouts of released sex offenders.