The Naturist Action
Committee is working to reverse this travesty and prevent additional states
from adding themselves to the list. Recent legislative efforts have been made
in Washington (1999 and 2000) and Nebraska (1999 and 2000) to make mere
nudity an offense requiring sex offender registration. In both states, NAC
played a prominent role in defeating the legislation.
The move to place more
people on state sex offender lists is a result of qualifications the U.S.
government has placed on states that wish to receive Byrne Grant funding for
state and local law enforcement efforts. To be qualified to receive millions
of dollars in federal money, states are required to implement registration
schemes for so-called “sexual predators.” The penalty for failure to
establish such a list is a loss of funds on which the states have come to be
totally dependent.
The impetus for all this
comes from the federal Jacob Wetterling Crimes
Against Children and Sexually Violent Offender Registration Act of 1994,
(PL103-322) and the “Megan's Law” amendment to it (PL104-145, 1997). Jacob Wetterling and Megan Kanka
were children who were killed by recidivist sex offenders.
At
least a dozen acts of Congress and countless pieces of state legislation have
made clarifications and revisions to the Jacob Wetterling Act and Megan's
Law. However, there has never been anything in the federal legislation that
specifically requires those who have been convicted for mere nudity to be
included by the states as “sexual predators.” That fact hasn't prevented a
handful of state lawmakers from threatening their colleagues with a loss of
federal funding if they do not place skinny-dippers on their state's list. A
head count of “predators” is submitted each year to the federal
bureaucracy for approval. Increased counts, bloated by adding hapless nude
sunbathers, help establish that the state is serious about complying.
Skinny-dipping
and nude sunbathing are not the activities of predators. With
significant and increasing nationwide participation by average citizens and
overwhelming acceptance by Americans, nude recreation deserves better than
having its participants criminalized as sex criminals. Nor is simple
non-sexual nudity the ‘first step toward becoming a sexual predator,” as some
lawmakers have characterized it. While having little to do with reality, such
statements reveal volumes about the persons making them.
NAC anticipates
further attempts by state legislators to force skinny-dippers onto the list
of sex offenders who must register. Watch for NAC Action Alerts, Advisories
and Updates on this topic.
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