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Oklahoma State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release: May 10,
2005
Audio Clip
Sen. Charles Wyrick
Senate Gives Final Approval to GPS Monitoring for Registered Sex
Offenders
Legislation to help keep better tabs on registered
sex offenders has won final Senate approval and is now headed to
Gov. Brad Henry. Sen. Charles Wyrick, D-Fairland, is the author
of Senate Bill 631, named “Jessica Lunsford’s Law,”
after a Florida girl who was molested and murdered. The suspect
in that case is a convicted sex offender. Wyrick said the bill,
which was approved unanimously, would require registered sex offenders
to wear Global Positioning System (GPS) monitors so that law enforcement
can better track their locations.
“Studies have shown that GPS monitoring makes a tremendous
difference in recidivism rates. In Florida, offenders released from
prison without GPS monitoring re-offend about 33 percent of the
time but those who are tracked by GPS had a recidivism rate of only
1.5 percent—and none of the offenses committed by sex offenders
on GPS were sex crimes,” Wyrick said. “Clearly, if they
know someone is watching them, the public is safer.”
Currently there are 3,000 sex offenders in DOC custody, with many
more that have completed their prison sentence and live in communities
throughout Oklahoma.
“Our current sex offender registration laws require sex offenders
to notify local law enforcement anytime they change addresses but
we know that doesn’t always happen. This system will ensure
we know where these predators are,” Wyrick said.
SB 631, co-authored by Rep. Terry Ingmire, R- Stillwater, requires
that any convicted sex offender placed on probation or parole be
required to wear an active GPS monitoring device for the duration
of their required registration period. The required registration
period is life for habitual sexual offenders and 10 years for other
sex offenders. The measure also requires sex offenders to pay for
the costs of their own monitoring.
“It is important to point out that this system will save us
money in the long-run because reduced recidivism will result in
cost savings in prosecution and punishment,” Wyrick said.
“But the most important aspect of this bill is that it will
enable us to do a better job of protecting our children and others
from sexual predators.”
If signed, SB 631 would go into effect immediately and would apply
to all sex offenders convicted from that date forward.
For more
information contact:
Senate Communications Office- (405) 521-5774

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