The good news here is that unlike North Korealina, TennNASTEE is actually going to allow registrants attend church. BUT, the bad news is that there's a catch.
If this law passes, registrants would have to disclose their status to churches and get written consent to attend. Since this will require written notification, how many churches in the state will tun people away?
https://fox17.com/news/local/tennessee-bill-would-allow-sex-offenders-to-attend-churches-under-certain-conditions
Tennessee bill would allow sex offenders to attend churches under certain conditions
by ADRIAN MOJICA | WZTV Staff
Monday, January 27th 2020
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WZTV) --Legislation proposed in the Tennessee General Assembly on Monday would allow sexual or violent sex offenders to attend church or another house of worship under certain circumstances.
HB 1922 was filed by Representative Patsy Hazlewood (R-Signal Mountain). Under the bill, the offender would be allowed to attend houses of worship for religious services or to receive educational or social support services.
However, the offender would have to provide written notice of their offender status to the leader of the house of worship. They would also have to be granted permission in writing from the house of worship's leader.
If passed in both houses of the General Assembly, the bill would go into effect July 1, 2020.
TEXT OF HB 1922
HOUSE BILL 1922
By Hazlewood
AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 40, Chapter 39, relative to sexual and violent sexual offenders.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF TENNESSEE:
SECTION 1. Tennessee Code Annotated, Section 40-39-211(d)(2), is amended by
adding the following new subdivision:
( ) Is at a house of worship for the purpose of attending religious services or
receiving educational or social support services, and the person has provided written
notice of the person's offender status to the leader of the house of worship and received
written permission from the house of worship's leader.
SECTION 2. This act shall take effect July 1, 2020, the public welfare requiring it.
Blogroll of nominees for the Annual Shiitake Awards, which spotlights the dumbest "sex offender-related stories of the year." The Shiitake Awards is a project of Once Fallen. For a full description of the Shiitake Awards and its mission, or to learn how to submit a nominee, click on the "About the Shiitake Awards" tab. Articles on this site fall under Fair Use Doctrine (Copyright Act of 1976, 17 USC 107) for purposes related to news, information, and social commentary.
Wednesday, January 29, 2020
Tuesday, January 28, 2020
Bye, Felicia! Felicia Sonmez of the Washington Post tweets about NBA legend Kobe Bryants's 20-year-old rape allegation just minutes after his tragic death
If it wasn't for the fact that Kobe Bryant was a famous basketball player, Felicia would not have been suspended. I ranted about how the media loves to shame people even in death, so it was refreshing to see someone actually get reprimanded for doing so.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/washington-post-suspends-reporter-who-tweeted-about-kobe-bryant-rape-allegations-following-his-death/2020/01/27/babe9c04-413b-11ea-b5fc-eefa848cde99_story.html
Washington Post reporter who tweeted about Kobe Bryant rape allegations placed on administrative leave
By: Paul Farhi
January 27, 2020 at 7:10 PM EST
The Washington Post has placed on administrative leave a reporter who tweeted a link to a news story about rape allegations against the late basketball star Kobe Bryant after his death on Sunday, saying “her tweets displayed poor judgment that undermined the work of her colleagues.”
The tweet by political reporter Felicia Sonmez sparked a furious backlash on social media, with many deeming it inappropriate just hours after Bryant and his daughter, Gianna, were killed in a helicopter crash outside of Los Angeles. In the wake of her posting, Sonmez said she received death and rape threats and her home address was posted online, compelling her to stay at a hotel overnight.
The Post placed Sonmez on paid leave while newsroom managers look into the episode.
Sonmez sparked the uproar by linking to a 2016 Daily Beast article headlined “Kobe Bryant’s Disturbing Rape Case: The DNA Evidence, the Accuser’s Story, and the Half-Confession.”
The story recounted details of an accusation of sexual assault against Bryant by a 19-year-old woman employed by a Colorado hotel that Bryant visited in 2003. Bryant was charged with sexual assault and false imprisonment, but the charges were dropped after the woman declined to testify. The Los Angeles Lakers star acknowledged having sexual relations with the woman but said the relationship was consensual. He later apologized to the woman, acknowledging that she hadn’t given her consent.
In an interview, Sonmez said her intent was to fill in an important piece of information in the early accounts of Bryant’s life and career and to counter tweets that had popped up dismissing the allegations against Bryant as insignificant.
“It was jarring to me to see the initial coverage [of Bryant’s death] omitting any mention” of the 2003 case, she said. “The early obits and news stories made only passing mention” to it. “The seriousness of those allegations is a valid part of his legacy and his life. Those allegations should not be minimized in any way.”
Sonmez, who has been open about her own experience with sexual assault, said survivors of assault and their family members praised her for highlighting the Bryant allegations. Rather than undermining her colleagues, she said, her tweets did the opposite. “It demonstrates to survivors that we see them and hear them, and they are not ignored,” she said. “No matter how rich and powerful and beloved [an alleged perpetrator is], we will treat them with the seriousness they deserve.”
As the criticism of Sonmez mounted Sunday night, a Post managing editor, Tracy Grant, instructed Sonmez to delete any tweets referring to her original posting. Sonmez complied.
News organizations have repeatedly disciplined employees for social-media postings that run afoul of general newsroom guidelines and violate journalists’ obligation of neutrality. But the rules don’t cover every circumstance and are sometimes irregularly enforced.
In a letter to Grant and Post Executive Editor Martin Baron, The Post’s newsroom union, the Newspaper Guild, protested Sonmez’s suspension.
“We write to share our alarm and dismay that our newsroom leaders have chosen to place Felicia Sonmez on leave over a social media post,” the letter said.
It added: “We understand . . . the hours after Bryant’s death were a fraught time to share reporting about past accusations of sexual assault. The loss of such a beloved figure, and of so many other lives, is a tragedy. But we believe it is our responsibility as a news organization to tell the public the whole truth as we know it — about figures and institutions both popular and unpopular, at moments timely and untimely.”
The letter urged The Post to ensure Sonmez’s safety in the face of threats, to make a statement condemning abuse of its reporters and to rescind any disciplinary action against her.
Sonmez said that she had been warned previously by Post management about statements on social media regarding her own sexual assault allegations and that this has left her “deeply frustrated.”
Grant on Monday referred to her statement that Sonmez’s conduct had “undermined” her colleagues. She declined further comment.
Sunday, January 26, 2020
Whittier, CA mayoral candidate L. Leon Savage wants to kick registrants out of their homes to make room for the homeless
It is a good thing this clown is a long shot candidate and has already lost by a landslide in the same election.
https://www.lavote.net/docs/rrcc/election-info/03032020_final-list-of-qualified-candidates-on-the-ballot.pdf?v=4
I.L. LEON SAVAGE
Accounting Bookkeeper
CAMILLA STREET AT NEWLIN AVE
WHITTIER, CA 90601
Phone: (562) 328-4499
https://www.whittierdailynews.com/2020/01/26/how-whittier-mayor-city-council-candidates-would-solve-the-homeless-crisis/
Challenger I.L. Leon Savage, an accounting bookkeeper, would remove sex offenders from their homes to create space for the homeless.
“I would put good hard-working families in those places,” Savage said. “We would have child predators taken out of our communities. We are rewarding the wrong behavior.”
https://www.whittierdailynews.com/2017/12/26/potential-challengers-to-whittier-mayor-vinatieri-councilmen-henderson-dutra-line-up-ahead-of-2018-election/
Rolando Cano and L. Leon Savage, both 41, are running to unseat Vinatieri.
Cano said he would push for more social services to help the homeless. Savage said he wants to see the city to do more to keep sex offenders out.
Friday, January 24, 2020
Utah bill targeting Catholic confessions will violate separation of church and state
Well, it is Utah, so of course, it is a religion-related law.
But someone is confused, it is supposed to be the Mormon state, not the MORON state.
https://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/critics-utah-bill-on-confession-would-criminalize-priests-not-counter-sex-abuse-81402
Critics: Utah bill on confession would criminalize priests, not counter sex abuse
By Kevin J. Jones
Salt Lake City, Utah, Jan 16, 2020 / 03:01 pm (CNA).- A Utah legislator’s proposal to remove protections for priests and other clergy who hear confessions of the sexual abuse of minors has drawn significant criticism from Catholics and other commentators.
“The motivation for the bill is understandable, to uncover and stop the abuse of children, but H.B. 90 will not have this intended effect,” said Jean Hill, director of the Diocese of Salt Lake City’s Peace and Justice Commission.
Removing the clergy exemption would be “making it a crime for the priest to maintain the Seal of Confession,” Hill said in a column for the Jan. 17, 2020 edition of the Intermountain Catholic, the diocesan newspaper. The proposal “could permanently destroy the relationship between our priests and ourselves in the confessional, without furthering the stated goal of the legislation.”
The proposed legislation “places a Catholic priest in the untenable position of violating state law and facing criminal penalties, or violating canon law and facing excommunication,” Hill added.
“For a Catholic priest, revealing the contents of a person’s confession is a mortal sin and grounds for automatic excommunication,” she said. “In the past, priests have been tortured and given their lives rather than break their solemn vow to protect the Seal of Confession. This isn’t just a convenient means of maintaining confidentiality, it is a sacred duty and thus critical to the free exercise of our religion.”
Under Utah law, certain professionals must report allegations of child abuse to authorities. These professionals include clergy, teachers, medical professionals, and law enforcement. At present state law exempts clergy if a perpetrator confesses directly to a religious leader and cannot report “without the consent of the individual making the confession.”
The bill's sponsor, Rep. Angela Romero, D-Salt Lake City, was raised Catholic. She said she “understands our sacraments and it’s not my intent to go against them,” the Deseret News reports. She said her bill doesn’t target any religion specifically.
“This isn’t about the Catholic Church,” she said. “This is about religious institutions ensuring that people aren’t hiding under the guise of confession to get away with hurting children... Because the trauma they experience from sexual assault doesn’t just impact them, it impacts the entire community, it impacts our families. For me, that’s more important than protecting a perpetrator who will likely hurt other children.”
The legislation could affect the confidentiality of confessions to clergy in the predominant religious group in Utah, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, informally known as Mormons. The Mormon church, whose global headquarters is in Salt Lake City, has not taken a position on the legislation, the Deseret News reports. It has faced criticisms and lawsuits for various leaders’ handling of sexual abuse of minors.
A woman in Oregon is suing the Mormon church for more than $10 million, after her husband was arrested for child sex abuse. He had confessed to his bishop, following the religion's doctrine, and believed the converation to be confidential. The clergyman reported the acts to law enforcement. The lawsuit claims the religion violated a privileged conversation between clergy and a member of the community.
Hill noted that Catholics are not alone “in viewing the private disclosure of wrongdoing as a path to God.” She cited the Orthodox Churches' use of the sacrament of confession, and wrote that the Church of England also “recognizes the inviolability of an act of confession.”
She added that the Mormon church “views confidential admissions of wrongdoing as an essential part of the repentance process,” and that the Presbyterian Church USA and Baptist and Lutheran ecclesial communities “all recognize the pastoral imperative of confidentiality when congregants seek counseling and care from their spiritual leaders.”
House Speaker Brad Wilson, R-Kaysville, does not support the bill.
“I have serious concerns about this bill and the effects it could have on religious leaders as well as their ability to counsel members of their congregation,” he said in an email to the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights. “I do not support this bill in its current form, and unless significant changes are made to ensure the protection of religious liberties, I will be voting against this bill.”
Wilson had received hundreds of emails critical of the bill. CNA sought comment from Wilson but legislative staff said he had nothing to add at present.
The House Speaker’s opposition to the bill could prevent it from a committee hearing. Romero said she looked forward to discussing the bill with the speaker.
“I’m hoping my colleagues will give this bill a fair hearing and they understand why this is an important piece of policy,” Romero said. “I hope we can follow the lead of other states who have placed the best interests of children over religious institutions.”
Several groups are calling for an end to the exemption, including the Truth and Transparency Foundation, which runs the controversial site MormonLeaks. The site publishes internal LDS documents relating to budgets, international relations and responses to sex abuse, among other topics.
The group said the exemption is “an affront to the safety and well-being of abuse survivors” that “provides an environment where predators are enabled,” it said in a November 2018 email to state legislators.
Sam Young, a former LDS bishop who founded the group Protect Every Child, is also in favor of eliminating the exemption.
Young, who lives in Texas, was excommunicated from the religion after he advocated for an end to the practice of leaders having one-on-one interviews with children that sometimes included sexually explicit questions, the Salt Lake Tribune reports.
Mandatory reporting exemptions for clergy have been removed by North Carolina, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, Texas, and West Virginia, the Deseret News reports. A California proposal to remove these exemptions was pulled from consideration.
Eric Kniffin, a Colorado lawyer and First Amendment attorney who followed the bill in California, told the Salt Lake Tribune that such proposals to remove clergy exemptions would “damage religious liberties.” He cited the Catholic prohibition on clergy revealing anything said in confession on pain of excommunication.
In Kniffin’s view, protecting clergy exemptions may provide greater benefits in the effort to address sexual abuse.
“The confessional is not just a black hole,” he said. “If a priest hears something in confession, they may urge the person to get help, talk to police or say ‘talk to me outside of the confessional’.”
Like Kniffin, Hill suggested removing legal protections for clergy would be counter-productive.
“There is no evidence that forcing priests to disclose cases of abuse learned of in the confessional would have prevented a single case of child abuse,” she said in her Intermountain Catholic column. “On the other hand, there is every reason to believe the elimination of the privilege would mean that perpetrators would simply not bring it to confession.”
The knowledge that confession is “a sacred conversation with God” would encourage Catholics to seek to make amends to both society and their victims. A priest who hears a criminal’s confession can encourage the penitent to self-report to law enforcement or to seek counseling, or can offer to accompany him or her to report their crime.
“H.B. 90 is a bad law that does nothing to protect children and undermines the very real possibility that a sex offender might repent,” she said.
While legislative counsel that reviewed Romero’s bill said it did not violate any religious freedom, Hill invoked the 1980 U.S. Supreme Court decision Trammel v. United States, which cited the longstanding precedent of protecting confessions to clergy in its ruling on whether spouses enjoy privileges to refuse to testify against a spouse.
“The priest-penitent privilege recognizes the human need to disclose to a spiritual counselor, in total and absolute confidence, what are believed to be flawed acts or thoughts and to receive priestly consolation and guidance in return,” that decision said.
Hill told the Deseret News that the bill is “trying to regulate a sacrament of our religion in a way that we believe violates our free exercise rights.”
The Apostolic Penitentiary reaffirmed the inviolability of the seal of confession in a July 1, 2019 note signed by its head, Cardinal Mauro Piacenza.
“Should the trust in the seal fail, the faithful would be discouraged from accessing the sacrament of Reconciliation, and this, obviously, with serious harm to souls,” Piacenza wrote. Defending this seal, he added, “can never constitute some form of connivance with evil,” but represents “the only true antidote to evil that threatens man and the whole world.”
Some court rulings have indicated that legal protections apply not only to religious groups with a formal confession rite.
Earlier this month, the Montana Supreme Court overturned a $35 million sex abuse judgement against the Jehovah's Witnesses on the grounds that a lower court wrongly ruled that the elders involved in hearing abuse allegations did not enjoy religious confidentiality protections guaranteed by state law.
Monday, January 20, 2020
If at first you don't suceed: GA poised to pass same bad lifetime GPS law that was declared unconstitutional in their on Supreme Court
Georgia's lifetime GPS monitoring bill was struck down, but it isn't stopping Jawja from trying again.
You can find a copy of Ga HB 720 HERE.
https://www.law.com/dailyreportonline/2020/01/17/new-legislation-would-allow-lifelong-gps-monitoring-of-sex-offenders/
New Legislation Would Allow Lifelong GPS Monitoring of Sex Offenders
The bill comes after the Georgia Supreme Court last year ruled that forcing individuals who had served their sentences to submit to lifetime monitoring was unconstitutional.
By Greg Land | January 17, 2020 at 06:36 PM
When the Georgia Supreme Court declared unconstitutional a law allowing convicted sex offenders to be ordered to wear GPS ankle monitors for the rest of their lives after release from prison, several justices offered a concurring opinion saying the Legislature could write a law requiring such monitoring that would pass constitutional muster.
New legislation dropped on the first day of the General Assembly aims to do just that.
Anyone convicted of a sexual offense under current Georgia law must already serve a split sentence including prison time and at least one year of probation.
House Bill 720 stipulates that a judge may order probation for life and that it may include electronic monitoring.
The bill notes that it is intended to “provide a response to Park v. State,” the March 2019 opinion deeming statutory lifetime monitoring after an offender has served his court-ordered sentence constituted a “lifelong search” in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
The unanimous opinion authored by Chief Justice Harold Melton rejected the state’s arguments that convicted sex offenders who served their sentences had a “diminished expectation of privacy” subjecting them to searches other citizens must not endure.
“We find such searches to be patently unreasonable,” Melton wrote, deeming the statute “unconstitutional on its face to the extent that it authorizes such searches of individuals … who are no longer serving any part of their sentences in order to find evidence of possible criminal conduct.”
A separate concurrence penned by Justice Keith Blackwell, joined by Justices Michael Boggs, Charles Bethel and Augusta Circuit Superior Court Judge J. Wade Padgett, sitting by appointment, said they agreed with the majority.
“I write separately, however, to emphasize that our decision today does not foreclose other means by which the General Assembly might put the same policy into practice,” Blackwell wrote.
The opinion centered on the law’s subsection requiring “some sexual offenders to submit to electronic monitoring even after they have completed the service of their sentences,” he wrote. “But nothing in our decision today precludes the General Assembly from authorizing life sentences for the worst sexual offenders, and nothing in our decision prevents the General Assembly from requiring a sentencing court in the worst cases to require GPS monitoring as a condition of permitting a sexual offender to serve part of a life sentence on probation.”
HB 720 is sponsored by freshman Rep. Steven Sainz, R-Woodbine, but is co-sponsored by veteran lawmakers including House Judiciary Committee Chairman Barry Fleming, R-Harlem; and Non-Civil Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Efstration, R-Dacula.
Among its provisions is that when a court imposes statutory probation for a felony sexual offense, “such probation in the court’s discretion may be for life.”
There are several provisions that such individuals must follow as part of that probation, including that they wear a “device capable of tracking the location of the probationer by means including electronic surveillance or global positioning satellite systems” and that they pay monitoring fees “set by regulation of the Board of Community Supervision.”
The Daily Report was unable to reach Sainz for comment Friday.
The defense lawyer who successfully challenged the monitoring statute at the high court dismissed the legislation as a “shortsighted and unacceptable fix to the previously shortsighted and unacceptable legislation the bill seeks to replace. “
“The authors of this bill clearly read a portion of Justice Blackwell’s concurrence in Park then stopped without finishing, and it will have consequences going forward,” Yurachek said.
In addition to ignoring what Yurachek said were “serious Constitutional defects” in the state’s current sex offender statute, “it also creates an unwieldy system where every single individual convicted of a felony sex offense will be subject to GPS monitoring for some period of time,” said Yurachek via email.
“By failing to put real considered thought into the matter and instead seeking the quickest and most Draconian solution, the legislature invites more successful challenges to its lazily composed bill while not doing anything to protect the people who elected them,” he said.
You can find a copy of Ga HB 720 HERE.
https://www.law.com/dailyreportonline/2020/01/17/new-legislation-would-allow-lifelong-gps-monitoring-of-sex-offenders/
New Legislation Would Allow Lifelong GPS Monitoring of Sex Offenders
The bill comes after the Georgia Supreme Court last year ruled that forcing individuals who had served their sentences to submit to lifetime monitoring was unconstitutional.
By Greg Land | January 17, 2020 at 06:36 PM
When the Georgia Supreme Court declared unconstitutional a law allowing convicted sex offenders to be ordered to wear GPS ankle monitors for the rest of their lives after release from prison, several justices offered a concurring opinion saying the Legislature could write a law requiring such monitoring that would pass constitutional muster.
New legislation dropped on the first day of the General Assembly aims to do just that.
Anyone convicted of a sexual offense under current Georgia law must already serve a split sentence including prison time and at least one year of probation.
House Bill 720 stipulates that a judge may order probation for life and that it may include electronic monitoring.
The bill notes that it is intended to “provide a response to Park v. State,” the March 2019 opinion deeming statutory lifetime monitoring after an offender has served his court-ordered sentence constituted a “lifelong search” in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
The unanimous opinion authored by Chief Justice Harold Melton rejected the state’s arguments that convicted sex offenders who served their sentences had a “diminished expectation of privacy” subjecting them to searches other citizens must not endure.
“We find such searches to be patently unreasonable,” Melton wrote, deeming the statute “unconstitutional on its face to the extent that it authorizes such searches of individuals … who are no longer serving any part of their sentences in order to find evidence of possible criminal conduct.”
A separate concurrence penned by Justice Keith Blackwell, joined by Justices Michael Boggs, Charles Bethel and Augusta Circuit Superior Court Judge J. Wade Padgett, sitting by appointment, said they agreed with the majority.
“I write separately, however, to emphasize that our decision today does not foreclose other means by which the General Assembly might put the same policy into practice,” Blackwell wrote.
The opinion centered on the law’s subsection requiring “some sexual offenders to submit to electronic monitoring even after they have completed the service of their sentences,” he wrote. “But nothing in our decision today precludes the General Assembly from authorizing life sentences for the worst sexual offenders, and nothing in our decision prevents the General Assembly from requiring a sentencing court in the worst cases to require GPS monitoring as a condition of permitting a sexual offender to serve part of a life sentence on probation.”
HB 720 is sponsored by freshman Rep. Steven Sainz, R-Woodbine, but is co-sponsored by veteran lawmakers including House Judiciary Committee Chairman Barry Fleming, R-Harlem; and Non-Civil Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Efstration, R-Dacula.
Among its provisions is that when a court imposes statutory probation for a felony sexual offense, “such probation in the court’s discretion may be for life.”
There are several provisions that such individuals must follow as part of that probation, including that they wear a “device capable of tracking the location of the probationer by means including electronic surveillance or global positioning satellite systems” and that they pay monitoring fees “set by regulation of the Board of Community Supervision.”
The Daily Report was unable to reach Sainz for comment Friday.
The defense lawyer who successfully challenged the monitoring statute at the high court dismissed the legislation as a “shortsighted and unacceptable fix to the previously shortsighted and unacceptable legislation the bill seeks to replace. “
“The authors of this bill clearly read a portion of Justice Blackwell’s concurrence in Park then stopped without finishing, and it will have consequences going forward,” Yurachek said.
In addition to ignoring what Yurachek said were “serious Constitutional defects” in the state’s current sex offender statute, “it also creates an unwieldy system where every single individual convicted of a felony sex offense will be subject to GPS monitoring for some period of time,” said Yurachek via email.
“By failing to put real considered thought into the matter and instead seeking the quickest and most Draconian solution, the legislature invites more successful challenges to its lazily composed bill while not doing anything to protect the people who elected them,” he said.
Sunday, January 19, 2020
North Korealina just sent a registered citizen to prison for staying at a local hurricane shelter
North Carolina is one of the worst states in America, so this story doesn't surprise me.
https://www.cbs17.com/news/nc-sex-offender-convicted-of-being-at-middle-school-shelter-after-hurricane-florence/
NC sex offender convicted of being at middle school shelter after Hurricane Florence
NEWS
by: Fantasia Harvey
Posted: Jan 17, 2020 / 11:26 AM EST / Updated: Jan 17, 2020 / 11:26 AM EST
(NC Sex Offender Registry)
BEAUFORT, N.C. (WNCT) – A sex offender has been convicted in a Carteret County trial of being at a school serving as a shelter in the days after Hurricane Florence.
District Attorney Scott Thomas announced 52-year-old Jerry Lee Faircloth of Newport was convicted following a jury trial of being a sex offender unlawfully on-premises.
Faircloth was convicted in 2008 of crime against nature and sexual battery stemming from an October 2006 offense.
North Carolina law states sex offenders are barred from being on premises of any place that is primarily for the use, care, or supervision of minors, including schools, children’s museums, child care centers, nurseries, and playgrounds.
Immediately following Hurricane Florence, Carteret County Probation Officers went through the county, looking for any probationers who had been displaced by the storm.
One of the places they went to was the Newport Middle School, which was designated as one of two storm shelters in the area.
An officer recognized Faircloth, as he had supervised him on probation previously, and believed he was a sex offender.
The officer in charge of the sex offender registry confirmed that Faircloth was a sex offender, so the officers returned, with a Carteret County Sheriff’s Office deputy, and found Faircloth standing by the front entrance of the school.
The officers told him to leave, as he was in violation of the sex offender laws by being on the premises of the school.
Although the defendant claimed to have been visiting a family member who was in mental distress, the officers spoke with the family member, who showed no signs of distress in their presence.
Carteret County Deputy Sheriff Harold Pendergrass obtained a warrant charging Faircloth with Being a Sex Offender Unlawfully on Certain Premises.
The jury found Faircloth to be guilty of the charge against him.
Faircloth then pleaded guilty to the status of a habitual felon, having at least three separate felony convictions on his record.
Resident Superior Court Judge Josh Willey then sentenced Faircloth to a prison term of 84 to 113 months in prison.
The prosecution was aided greatly by an official from the Carteret County Department of Social Services, who explained in detail the records kept of people who stayed in the school, the absence of records allowing Faircloth on the premises, and the rules of the shelter operation.
Thursday, January 16, 2020
Mike Gauntner of WFMJ thinks that people care about an arrest for speeding is important because the one arrested was a registrant
TMI, Mike.
https://www.wfmj.com/story/41565615/columbiana-man-clocked-driving-91-mph-in-washingtonville-charged-with-child-endangering
Sex offender clocked driving 91 mph in Washingtonville with teens
A Columbiana man who is a registered sex offender is due in court Thursday to answer claims that he drove 91 miles an hour through the small community of Washingtonville with a car full of juveniles.
Wednesday, January 15th 2020, 8:37 AM EST by Mike Gauntner
Updated: Wednesday, January 15th 2020, 9:14 AM EST
A Columbiana man who is a registered sex offender is due in court Thursday to answer claims that he drove 91 miles an hour through the small community of Washingtonville with a car full of juveniles.
A Washingtonville police officer says radar showed 26-year-old Antonio DeLeon driving a Cadillac CTS 56 miles per hour over the 35 mph speed limit on State Route 14 Saturday night.
When DeLeon was pulled over, he told the officer he thought he was still on the 55 mph portion of Route 14 outside the village.
Inside DeLeon's car were four teenagers; a boy and a girl, both 14, as well as a 15-year-old girl, and a 16-year-old boy.
According to state records, DeLeon was sentenced to one-and-a-half years in prison and declared to be a Tier One Sex Offender after being convicted of unlawful sexual conduct with a minor in Cuyahoga County. Those records say the victims were two 14-year-old girls.
DeLeon was arrested and booked into the Mahoning County Jail on charges of child endangering, speeding, and reckless operation.
Washingtonville Police tell 21 News that DeLeon's sex offender information will be presented to the court when he appears on Thursday.
https://www.wfmj.com/story/41565615/columbiana-man-clocked-driving-91-mph-in-washingtonville-charged-with-child-endangering
Sex offender clocked driving 91 mph in Washingtonville with teens
A Columbiana man who is a registered sex offender is due in court Thursday to answer claims that he drove 91 miles an hour through the small community of Washingtonville with a car full of juveniles.
Wednesday, January 15th 2020, 8:37 AM EST by Mike Gauntner
Updated: Wednesday, January 15th 2020, 9:14 AM EST
A Columbiana man who is a registered sex offender is due in court Thursday to answer claims that he drove 91 miles an hour through the small community of Washingtonville with a car full of juveniles.
A Washingtonville police officer says radar showed 26-year-old Antonio DeLeon driving a Cadillac CTS 56 miles per hour over the 35 mph speed limit on State Route 14 Saturday night.
When DeLeon was pulled over, he told the officer he thought he was still on the 55 mph portion of Route 14 outside the village.
Inside DeLeon's car were four teenagers; a boy and a girl, both 14, as well as a 15-year-old girl, and a 16-year-old boy.
According to state records, DeLeon was sentenced to one-and-a-half years in prison and declared to be a Tier One Sex Offender after being convicted of unlawful sexual conduct with a minor in Cuyahoga County. Those records say the victims were two 14-year-old girls.
DeLeon was arrested and booked into the Mahoning County Jail on charges of child endangering, speeding, and reckless operation.
Washingtonville Police tell 21 News that DeLeon's sex offender information will be presented to the court when he appears on Thursday.
Tuesday, January 14, 2020
Jamie Shannon of Richland Center WI starts online petition to keep a registrant from moving in next door to her
This is Jamie Shannon (misspelled by WKOW). She started a Change.org petition to drive a registrant out of her community. Someone should drive this fat cow to Jenny Craig.
UPDATE: Unsurprisingly, she succeeded in forcing this man out of her neighborhood.
https://wkow.com/2020/01/13/richland-center-woman-starts-petition-to-prevent-sex-offender-from-moving-in-next-door/
Richland Center woman starts petition to prevent sex offender from moving in next door
January 13, 2020
10:58 pm
Michelle Alfini
RICHLAND CENTER (WKOW) -- A Richland County mother was in for a shock when she learned a registered sex offender with a history of violent convictions would be moving in next door in a matter of days. In response, she called the Department of Corrections, garnered community opposition, and now she said she's prepared to fight for her home.
When she moved just outside of town, Jamie Shannon hoped she would find a safe home for her three children.
"That's one of the reasons we moved to the country, security and no neighbors," she said.
Then Shannon learned the long-vacant house next door would see a new tenant.
"I was notified on Tuesday of last week by the Sheriff's Department that there was a violent registered sex offender moving in less than 100 ft. from my house," she said.
Richard Sugden, 64, has spent decades in prison for convictions related to rape and child abduction.
The Department of Corrections (D.O.C.) released him in June of 2019 to Ashland County. Now it is working to move him to Richland County, the place where he committed his offenses.
"I don't understand how a repeat sexual predator gets out and gets placed next to literally the type of people he preyed on," Shannon said.
Once Sugden is placed, he will be under Department of Health Services (DHS) supervision. The agency could not comment on his specific case but Elizabeth Goodsitt, a DHS spokeswoman, explained the state program in an email.
"The first year of supervised release is akin to house arrest and the client receives more privileges only if they demonstrate the willingness to follow supervised release rules," she said.
Goodsitt said not all sex offenders face that level of supervision once they're released.
"There are tens of thousands of convicted sex offenders living across the state," she said. "As of December 10, 2019, there are 64 people living on supervised release."
For Shannon, it's not enough.
"That doesn't make me feel safe," she said. "Being six miles from town, what's the police department's response time going to be."
In response, Shannon started a petition asking the D.O.C. to consider another home for Sugden.
"I only have 200 Facebook friends and I only expected it to go that far," she said.
Instead, in less than a week, it garnered more than 3,700 signatures. She believes that's made an impact.
The D.O.C. has delayed Sugden's placement and scheduled a conference for Tuesday at 3:00 p.m. at the Richland County Courthouse to discuss the opposition.
"[I'm just hoping to see] the community coming together and saying this isn't right," Shannon said.
She hopes many of those who signed the petition will join her on Tuesday, rallying for Sugden to find freedom somewhere else.
Otherwise, Shannon said her family will likely feel like prisoners upon his release.
"As a mom, I cannot put my kids in that position," she said. "It's really sad that we'd be forced out of our home."
the fliers are not supposed to be used to harass registrants. |
Friday, January 10, 2020
Dumb quote from airheaded blonde FloriDUH State Senator but not from the airhead we're thinking of
Sometimes it is easy to forget that Lauren Book is not the only dumb blond on the FloriDUH Senate. FloriDUH State Senator Linda Stewart is proof older doesn't mean wiser.
https://www.wftv.com/news/local/seminole-county/man-accused-exposing-himself-girl-winter-springs-facing-charges/CZTDQYSD7NAHBOI7RAGDOBBXCQ/
Exerpt from: Man accused of exposing himself to girl in Winter Springs facing charges
Jeff Levkulich and Adam Poulisse
Updated: January 7, 2020
...Sen. Linda Stewart plans to introduce two bills to make lewd acts against children a felony.
One of the bills, if passed, would make committing lewd and lascivious behavior a third-degree felony, with penalties of up to five years in prison and thousands of dollars in fined.
The other bill would close a loophole regarding lewd and lascivious behavior that 9 Investigates first brought to Stewart’s attention last year.
“It’s a no-brainer, the State’s Attorney’s Office and the Sheriff’s Office and the city officers all are in favor of that because we are very limited to what we can and cannot do with this behavior," Stewart said.
She said “The problem that we have with the offenders is that they are going to offend again.
“We already know they need medical help. They need mental help and they are not going to get it if it’s a revolving door,” she said.
Thursday, January 9, 2020
NY Gov. Andrew Cuomo recycles last year's bad ideas. Well, the Shiitakes Awards can do the same
Gov Cuomo, shown here flashing White Power, or possibly flicking away the two brain cells he once rubbed together. |
It is nice to know that New York State has solved all their real problems like government corruption so Cuomo makes this his keynote issue in the State of the State address.
https://queenseagle.com/all/cuomo-subway-sex-offender-ban
Cuomo proposes transit ban for subway sex offenders
January 08, 2020
Kevin P. Coughlin/Office of Governor Andrew Cuomo, Flickr
KEVIN P. COUGHLIN/OFFICE OF GOVERNOR ANDREW CUOMO, FLICKR
By David Brand
Gov. Andrew Cuomo formally proposed banning certain sex offenders from the subway system during his annual State of the State Address Wednesday.
Cuomo had discussed the sex-offender ban multiple times last year, and he again described the concept as he listed several major transit infrastructure projects that he would like the state to pursue.
“Subway cars should not be feeding grounds for predators,” Cuomo said. People should be able to take public transportation “without being harassed, without being molested and without being groped,” he said.
The proposal would prevent “high-risk” sex offenders from using the subway system for up to three years, according to the governor’s office. The state would also establish a new law for transit-related sex crimes and would enable judges to ban convicted defendants from using MTA transportation. Convicted offenders who violate their suspension could be charged with a transit trespass misdemeanor, the governor’s office said.
The Legal Aid Society has already pledged to fight the proposal in court if it became law, stating that the legislation would restrict “access to jobs, critical services, educational opportunities and treatment programs” for people convicted of sex crimes.
“We question the constitutionality of this misguided proposal and we are prepared to challenge it in court should it become law,” the public defender organization said in a statement.
https://www.localsyr.com/news/ny-capitol-news/state-of-the-state-sexual-predators-and-social-media/
State of the State: Sexual Predators and Social Media
Michael Prentice
Posted: Jan 8, 2020 / 10:07 PM EST / Updated: Jan 8, 2020 / 10:07 PM EST
In this Tuesday, Oct. 8, 2019, photo a woman types on a keyboard in New York. Cybersecurity researchers say a coordinated cyberespionage campaign has targeted U.N. relief agencies, the International Red Cross and other non-governmental organizations groups for the past 10 months. The California cybersecurity outfit Lookout says the campaign, which uses phishing to harvest passwords from mobile phones and computers, is still active. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane)
ALBANY, N.Y. (NEWS10) – As a part of the 2020 State of the State address, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo proposed legislation to prevent sexual predators from using new social media.
The new legislation would force sexual predators to disclose their screen names for each social media account or dating/gaming app they are on to the Division of Criminal Justice Services.
Current laws only require sex offenders to register and keep up to date all current email accounts, screen names and any other internet identifiers with the state Division of Criminal Justice Services.
DCJS will send their list to any provider that the offender discloses, and the provider will be required to review this data, develop policies on how to use it, and release this policy publicly to their users.
The new legislation would also make it a crime for convicted sex offenders to misrepresent themselves online.
Tuesday, January 7, 2020
Aaron Savage lives up to his last name by threatening village councilman over registrant at Xmas Parade
I experienced a fire last year, so obviously I hold firefighters in high regard. But not all firefighters are heroes. This guy is anything but.
https://www.lenconnect.com/news/20200106/clayton-village-council-meeting-attendees-support-santa
Clayton Village Council meeting attendees support Santa
Man in final year on sex offender registry portrayed Santa Claus in village Christmas celebration
By Dmitriy Shapiro
Daily Telegram Staff Writer
Posted Jan 6, 2020 at 11:26 PM
Updated Jan 6, 2020 at 11:26 PM
CLAYTON — In a well attended Clayton Village Council meeting Monday, Clayton residents and council members expressed support for village streets commissioner John Ernest Lee, who became embroiled in controversy for appearing as Santa Claus in the village’s Christmas parade, despite being a registered sex offender.
Lee was convicted of fourth degree criminal sexual conduct in 1995, at age 23, requiring him to register as a Tier 2 sex offender for 25 years.
According to records from Lee’s appeal, which was denied by the Michigan Court of Appeals, the complainant accused Lee of grabbing her from behind, touching her breasts over her clothing and lowering his hands to unbutton her pants until she broke free.
Near the close of the meeting, village President Mark Jeffrey read a statement, backing the board’s decision to have Lee, 47, dress as Santa while riding on a village fire truck driven by Clayton Assistant Fire Chief Joe Garrow, then receiving children at the fire department’s building, giving them presents.
“When you hear this story on the news or read it online, it sounds bad. If you’re not from the village or you don’t know the people that sit on this board, it sounds horrible. But if you live here and you know the board, you see the good that they do and the good that John does, it doesn’t seem that bad,” Jeffrey said. ”... Most of us that live here know the story and many of us were here when it happened. They put him on the list and he was to stay on that list for 25 years. This November he gets off the list. Over the last 24 years the council’s felt that he has earned our trust. ... John is not a sexual predator. He’s a public servant, a father and a friend.”
Jeffrey’s statement received applause from the majority of the audience.
Prior to his statement, Jeffrey nominated Lee to serve as street commissioner for 2020, which was unanimously approved by a board vote.
Aaron Savage, a firefighter who brought the issue to light, spoke at a public comment session following Jeffrey’s statement, accusing the board of not doing its due diligence when deciding to appoint Lee as Santa Claus.
“This isn’t about John. It has been spun about John. This is directly to you the council. This is a gross misconduct to allow anybody ... on an offender list, to be ... dressed as a Santa, and ... placed into a fire department,” Savage said. “You say that it sounds bad, because if you go anywhere else, it is bad. Nobody in the general public outside of this area would agree with this.”
Savage’s statement was met with disbelief from audience and board members.
Board member Stephen DeLine II, a fire board liaison, responded to Savage’s claims by accusing Savage and another firefighter of dragging Lee’s name through the mud by bringing publicity to the situation. DeLine claimed that Savage had been at the fire board meeting when it discussed appointing Lee, but did not raise the issue at the meeting.
Savage denied that the issue was brought up at a fire board meeting.
DeLine’s earlier reading of minutes from the Dec. 19 fire board meeting did not include mention of the department’s Christmas festivities.
Board member Cathy Brown asked Savage why he did not say anything during the previous year when she recalled telling him who was in the Santa Claus suit.
Savage also denied speaking to Brown the previous year, instead he argued he spoke with a different board member.
DeLine continued, accusing Savage of threatening to kill him when he went to the fire station Friday.
“You flew off the handle and had to be held back by three other people. Threatened myself, threatened to kill me multiple times,” DeLine said. “And you threatened to kill every single one of these council members sitting at this table that made the decision to put John Lee on the fire truck as Santa Claus.”
Clayton Fire Chief Steve Nichelson, who attended the meeting, nodded his head in agreement to DeLine’s accusations.
Savage denied that he made any threats, saying that he had evidence to prove it but would not go into detail into the nature of the evidence, saying that he may need it in the future.
At the request of the council, the meeting was attended by two deputies from the Lenawee County Sheriff’s Office to ensure tensions didn’t escalate.
Lee said after the meeting adjourned that he was thankful for the support he was receiving from the meeting attendees and that he had put the conviction long behind him.
“You would probably have a hard time getting any one of these people in here to agree or disagree that I was wrongly done and accused to start with in this manner,” Lee said. “As you’ve heard numerous times throughout this, this is a 24-year-old deal. How long do you be crucified for something?”
Lee, who also served as a firefighter from the early 1990s to early 2000s, said that after serving his probation, his restrictions included that he could not loiter or live within 1,000 feet of a school.
Clayton resident Chris Timmerman said he believed Lee was a good man.
“They’re rochambeauing him ... ,” Timmerman said. “It’s driving us all apart from each other. We should be a community.”
Saturday, January 4, 2020
Tennessee once again follows Alabama's bad example by introducing a mandatory chemical castration
Tennessee has a bad habit of copying Alabama's bad ideas. First, Tennessee passed a law like Alabama's that bars many registered persons from living with their own children. Now, Tennessee is trying to pass their own version of Alabama's mandatory chemical castration law. Tennes-SEE, Tennes-DO?
(By the way, Alabama's chemical castration bill is among the finalists for the 2019 Shiitake awards, so if you haven't voted yet, CLICK HERE)
HOUSE BILL 1585
By Griffey
AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 39 and Title 40, relative to certain sexual offenders.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF TENNESSEE:SECTION 1. Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 39, Chapter 13, Part 5, is amended by adding the following as a new section:
(a) As used in this section:(1) "Chemical castration treatment" means receiving medication,including, but not limited to, medroxyprogesterone acetate treatment or the chemical equivalent, that, among other things, reduces, inhibits, or blocks the production of testosterone, hormones, or other chemicals in a person's body; and(2) "Sexual offense involving a person under thirteen (13) years of age"means a sexual offense, as described in § 40-39-202, that is committed against a person who is less than thirteen (13) years of age.
(b) If a person convicted of a sexual offense involving a person under thirteen(13) years of age will become eligible for parole for the offense, the sentencing court shall order the person to undergo chemical castration treatment, in addition to any other punishment prescribed for the offense, as a condition of parole. The person may elect to stop receiving the treatment at any time and shall not be forced to receive the treatment;however, such refusal constitutes a violation of the person's parole and the person shall be immediately remanded to the custody of the department of correction for the remainder of the person's sentence.
(c) A person required to undergo chemical castration treatment shall begin the treatment not less than one (1) month prior to being released from custody of the department of correction and shall continue receiving treatment until the sentencing court determines the treatment is no longer necessary. The department of health shall administer the treatment.
(d)(1) The person shall pay for all of the costs associated with the chemical castration treatment. The cost of the treatment is in addition to any fine, court costs, restitution, or costs of supervision. A person may not be denied parole based solely on the person's inability to pay for the costs associated with the treatment required by this section.(2) If a person required by this section to receive chemical castration treatment, upon application, claims indigency, the person must be brought before a court of competent jurisdiction for a determination of indigency. In the event that a court determines the person to be indigent, the court shall not waive any fees or costs unless the person proves to the reasonable satisfaction of the court that the person is not capable of paying the fees or costs within the reasonably foreseeable future. In the event the person is determined to be indigent, the court may conduct a periodic review of the person's indigent status, upon motion of the district attorney general, to determine if the person is no longer indigent.
(e) In addition to any condition of parole imposed under subsection (b), as a condition of parole, a person released on parole subject to the requirements of this section shall authorize the department of health to share with the board of parole all medical records relating to the person's chemical castration treatment.
(f) Prior to the administration of any chemical castration treatment, a medical professional shall inform the person of the effect of the treatment and any side effects that may result from the treatment. The person must sign a written acknowledgment of receipt of the information.
(g) Only a bona fide employee of the department of health may administer the treatment.
(By the way, Alabama's chemical castration bill is among the finalists for the 2019 Shiitake awards, so if you haven't voted yet, CLICK HERE)
HOUSE BILL 1585
By Griffey
AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 39 and Title 40, relative to certain sexual offenders.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF TENNESSEE:SECTION 1. Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 39, Chapter 13, Part 5, is amended by adding the following as a new section:
(a) As used in this section:(1) "Chemical castration treatment" means receiving medication,including, but not limited to, medroxyprogesterone acetate treatment or the chemical equivalent, that, among other things, reduces, inhibits, or blocks the production of testosterone, hormones, or other chemicals in a person's body; and(2) "Sexual offense involving a person under thirteen (13) years of age"means a sexual offense, as described in § 40-39-202, that is committed against a person who is less than thirteen (13) years of age.
(b) If a person convicted of a sexual offense involving a person under thirteen(13) years of age will become eligible for parole for the offense, the sentencing court shall order the person to undergo chemical castration treatment, in addition to any other punishment prescribed for the offense, as a condition of parole. The person may elect to stop receiving the treatment at any time and shall not be forced to receive the treatment;however, such refusal constitutes a violation of the person's parole and the person shall be immediately remanded to the custody of the department of correction for the remainder of the person's sentence.
(c) A person required to undergo chemical castration treatment shall begin the treatment not less than one (1) month prior to being released from custody of the department of correction and shall continue receiving treatment until the sentencing court determines the treatment is no longer necessary. The department of health shall administer the treatment.
(d)(1) The person shall pay for all of the costs associated with the chemical castration treatment. The cost of the treatment is in addition to any fine, court costs, restitution, or costs of supervision. A person may not be denied parole based solely on the person's inability to pay for the costs associated with the treatment required by this section.(2) If a person required by this section to receive chemical castration treatment, upon application, claims indigency, the person must be brought before a court of competent jurisdiction for a determination of indigency. In the event that a court determines the person to be indigent, the court shall not waive any fees or costs unless the person proves to the reasonable satisfaction of the court that the person is not capable of paying the fees or costs within the reasonably foreseeable future. In the event the person is determined to be indigent, the court may conduct a periodic review of the person's indigent status, upon motion of the district attorney general, to determine if the person is no longer indigent.
(e) In addition to any condition of parole imposed under subsection (b), as a condition of parole, a person released on parole subject to the requirements of this section shall authorize the department of health to share with the board of parole all medical records relating to the person's chemical castration treatment.
(f) Prior to the administration of any chemical castration treatment, a medical professional shall inform the person of the effect of the treatment and any side effects that may result from the treatment. The person must sign a written acknowledgment of receipt of the information.
(g) Only a bona fide employee of the department of health may administer the treatment.
SECTION 2. This act shall take effect July 1, 2020, the public welfare requiring it, and shall apply to offenses committed on or after that date.
Wednesday, January 1, 2020
Minnesota Court rejects civilly committed registrant's bid to change legal name to "Better Off Dead"
It is New years, so you know what that means, time for the annual Shiitake Awards! Click the link to take the survey:
I have been in contact with some folks at the Minnesota Civil Commitment Program (MSOP) and have hosted a blog on behalf of one person currently indefinitely detained for 10 years. Those in the MSOP ("Minnesota State's Other Prison" as it is derisively called on the inside) have tried many ways to share their experiences. This way certainly received some attention. I commend Mr. Better Off Dead for trying this unique protest.
Too bad the courts rejected this form of protest and I thumb my nose to this kangaroo court.
Maybe I'll retire my old "Fallen One" moniker and legally change my name to Derek "F**k-The-Registry" Logue someday.
MN COURT REJECTS CIVILLY COMMITTED SO’S NAME CHANGE TO “BETTER OFF DEAD”
Edited from following source: Rochelle Olson. “Court rejects sex offender's attempted name change to 'Better Off Dead'.” Minneapolis Star-Tribune. 30 Dec. 2019.
A man indefinitely committed as a sexual predator can't rename himself "Better Off Dead" even when he claims he's doing it for religious reasons, the state Court of Appeals ruled Monday.
Hollis John Larson has been committed since 2008 under the MN SO Program (MSOP) that allows for indefinite confinement for predators. Larson "professes a religious belief involving Hinduism, Taoism, Buddhism, and Agnosticism," the court said. His desired name change is "in accordance with that religious belief and to express his freedom of speech."
A three-judge panel of the state Court of Appeals agreed with a lower-court ruling denying the name change in part because "Better Off Dead" is an idiomatic expression, contains no pronouns and is "inherently misleading."
Larson, who represented himself, said the only way for him to "achieve reconciliation with the divine is to escape the cycle of birth, life, death, and rebirth by being and remaining dead," according to the ruling.
The District Court didn't buy it, saying that the name Better Off Dead "has no known connection to any particular religious faith or belief."
Anoka Co. objected to the name change on the grounds that it would be confusing to law enforcement. The District Court, and now the Court of Appeals, agreed with that argument. The courts also said that denying the change wouldn't impinge on Larson's constitutional rights. Larson failed to convince the court that he did not intend to "defraud or mislead," the ruling said.
The inmate stated that every document "created by his current captors" with his new name Better Off Dead would also refer to his old name and wouldn't cause confusion or harm public safety. Anoka Co. countered that the name change would compromise the public's ability to maintain and access his records.
The Court of Appeals also rejected the name change on freedom of speech grounds. Larson claimed that renaming himself Better Off Dead was a "peaceful form of protest against [the government], all these entities that caused me this pain and suffering and leading to my philosophy in life." He argued that the name change would allow him to "officially communicate his life philosophy to society," the ruling said.
The case is an “unpublished opinion.” In the Matter of the Application of: Hollis John Larson for a Change of Name, A18-2153 (MN Ct of App. 30 Dec. 2019)
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