Oklahoma
State Senate
Senator
Jay Paul Gumm
Assistant Majority Leader
Atoka, Bryan, Coal, Johnston & Marshall Counties
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For Immediate Release: January
20, 2006
Senator Jay Paul Gumm
Senator Gumm Says Death Penalty
Should be Option for Repeat Child Molesters
Senator Jay
Paul Gumm says repeat child molesters should face the death
penalty or life without parole, and he has written legislation to
ensure they do just that.
“Those who repeatedly prey on our children in this unspeakable
manner should face the most severe penalties allowed under our justice
system,” said Gumm, a Democrat from Durant who is a Senate
assistant majority leader.
Senate Bill 1747 would make repeat child molesters subject to the
death penalty or life without parole. That, Gumm said, would let
the justice system better protect children from those sex offenders
who never will be rehabilitated.
“There are too many stories of child molesters who are set
free only to shatter the life of another innocent child,”
he said. “The case of Jessica Lunsford in Florida is only
one example, and I want to make certain her story is never repeated
in Oklahoma.”
The 9-year-old Florida girl was kidnapped and murdered last year
by a convicted sex offender. That tragedy led to the passage of
“Jessica’s Law” in Florida and a number of other
states, including Oklahoma. That law requires lifetime global positioning
system monitoring of repeat sex offenders.
Gumm’s bill expands on the new Oklahoma law making the most
heinous repeat offenders subject to the death penalty.
“If there was ever a crime that was worthy of punishment by
death or life without parole, it is certainly this most horrible
crime that is committed against an innocent, defenseless child,”
said Gumm, himself a new father. “As a parent and lawmaker,
I want the strongest laws possible on the books to protect Oklahoma’s
children.”
Recently, Gumm added a link to the National Sex Offender Registry
to his website, located on the Internet at www.gumm.us. With a few
clicks on a computer, parents can learn whether sex offenders live
in their neighborhoods and communities.
“I am committed to making Oklahoma the safest state possible
for our children,” he said. “We in the Legislature should
leave no stone unturned in our efforts to protect the most innocent
and precious among us, our children.”
Lawmakers will consider the measure when the 2006 session begins
on Feb. 6.
For
more information contact:
Senator Gumm's Office - (405) 521-5586

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