Fla. Gets Tough New Child-Sex Law
Many Sex Offenders Required To Wear Tracking Devices For Life
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Play CBS Video Video Zero Tolerance Florida officials are calling for zero tolerance against sex offenders after a convicted sex offender was arrested for the murder of 9-year-old Jessica Lunsford. Mark Strassman reports.
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Video Sex Offender's Murder Plea In Florida, convicted sex offender David Onstott allegedly has confessed to the murder of 13-year-old Sarah Lunde. CBS News Correspondent Jim Acosta reports.
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Jessica Lunsford (AP/Citrus County Sheriff's Dept)
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Gov. Jeb Bush, seated, signs the Jessica Lunsford Act into law. (AP)
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Sarah Lunde (AP)
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Photo Essay Search For Jessica A 9-year-old girl disappears overnight from her Florida home.
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Photo Essay Sarah Lunde Images of the search for a missing Florida girl and its end in tragedy and an arrest.
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Interactive Out Of Sight: Missing Kids Get the facts on kidnappings, learn predator profiles and check out resources for locating missing children.
The measure gives Florida one of the toughest child-sex laws in the nation.
The Jessica Lunsford Act was quickly drafted after Jessica's death was discovered in March and was pushed through by lawmakers outraged that the man accused of killing her was a registered sex offender. It passed both the Senate and House unanimously.
It establishes a mandatory sentence of at least 25 years behind bars for people convicted of certain sex crimes against children 11 and younger, with lifetime tracking by global positioning satellite after they are freed.
Bush was joined by Jessica's father, Mark Lunsford, who wore a tie bearing pictures of his daughter and said he had been working so furiously on the legislation that he has not yet really grieved.
"I'm still lost, I haven't really dealt with it yet," Lunsford said. He called the tie his "hug" from Jessica. "I'm still minus my kiss, but that's my hug."
John E. Couey, a convicted sex offender who was living near Jessica, was arrested in Georgia and was charged with snatching her from her bedroom and murdering her.
The bill's momentum in the Legislature increased in April after another Florida girl, 13-year-old Sarah Lunde, was found dead and another registered sex offender was charged with murdering her.
The 25-year minimum would not apply to anyone convicted of molesting older children. Those offenders would have to be monitored electronically only during their probation, not for life.
Some offenders already on the street could be ordered back to jail or be placed under GPS monitoring if they violated their probation.
Lots of other states have minimum mandatory sentences for sex crimes against children. A number of states already require some form of lifetime supervision of sex offenders, including GPS tracking, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
However, Florida's new law may be the first requirement of lifetime GPS monitoring for an entire group of people who commit a certain crime, the NCSL said.
Florida's new law could also open the door to the death penalty for more killers, because it allows a defendant's status as a sexual predator to be considered as an aggravating factor during sentencing for a murder.
Sarah Lunde's mother and sister also were at the governor's side as he signed the bill.
"I'm just glad something's being done," said Sarah's sister, Rebekah Lunde. "Maybe no one else will have to go through this."
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