February 11, 2009 7:24 PM
- Text
Fed Site To Track Sex Offenders
(AP)
State-by-state information on sex offenders will be available on a new Internet site run by the federal government, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales announced Friday.
Participation by states is voluntary, and the Justice Department said it hopes to have the site up and running within two months.
The announcement was being made to coincide with National Missing Children's Day.
The site won't provide any information not already made available by 48 states, the District of Columbia and U.S. territories. But it will be designed to allow someone to do a national search to determine whether an individual who has been convicted in one state has moved to another.
Most states publish the names, photos and backgrounds of people convicted of a variety of sex crimes, particularly those involving children. But different rules apply as to what information can be accessed.
In Florida, for example, state officials this week expanded the area that residents can check, up to a five-mile radius from their home or school. For years, the search could only encompass the same zip code.
The change followed several highly publicized child abductions and killings, including the slaying of nine-year-old Jessica Lunsford. John Couey, the man authorities say has confessed to the crime, is a registered sex offender who was living 150 yards from Lunsford's home in Homosassa, Fla.
Participation by states is voluntary, and the Justice Department said it hopes to have the site up and running within two months.
The announcement was being made to coincide with National Missing Children's Day.
The site won't provide any information not already made available by 48 states, the District of Columbia and U.S. territories. But it will be designed to allow someone to do a national search to determine whether an individual who has been convicted in one state has moved to another.
Most states publish the names, photos and backgrounds of people convicted of a variety of sex crimes, particularly those involving children. But different rules apply as to what information can be accessed.
In Florida, for example, state officials this week expanded the area that residents can check, up to a five-mile radius from their home or school. For years, the search could only encompass the same zip code.
The change followed several highly publicized child abductions and killings, including the slaying of nine-year-old Jessica Lunsford. John Couey, the man authorities say has confessed to the crime, is a registered sex offender who was living 150 yards from Lunsford's home in Homosassa, Fla.
Latest Now in National
- Extra: Jimmy Siokos on Mark Twitchell
- Extra: Chris Heward's bizarre experience
- Extra: Drive with a killer
- Whitney Houston dies at 48
- Evening News Online, 02.11.12
- Video: Whitney Houston's ups and downs
- Chicago to design vehicle sticker itself
- US sex abuse lawsuit against Vatican dismissed
- American flight makes emergency landing in Ky.
- US sex abuse lawsuit against Vatican dismissed
- Making the 1st ever US women's Olympic boxing team
- Ohio unemployment hits 3-year-low
- Some glimmer of hope in Ohio employment
- State senator, wife attacked at western NY casino
- State senator, wife attacked at western NY casino
- Oldest federal judge remembered at Kan. service
- Suspect charged in gay GA man's videotaped beating
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook
on CBS News
- Holliday leads 76ers past short-handed Cavs 99-84
- Nuggets upend Pacers 113-109
- Griffin, Paul lead Clippers over Bobcats 111-86
- Whitney Houston died in Beverly Hills hotel room
on Facebook
- Adele sings a cappella for Anderson Cooper
- Occupy protestors kicked out of CPAC
- CPAC: Will Sarah Palin spring a surprise?
- Beyonce and Jay-Z post first photos of Blue Ivy Carter
on CBS News






