National Sex Offender Registry and Criminal Background Checks

Sex Offender Check – Overview of the Sex Offender Registry system and why you should include an SOR check when you do a criminal background check…

How the United States Sex Offender Registry System works…
Sex offender registration (as pertaining to the United States) is a system that allows each state to keep track of the residence and activities of sex offenders living in their respective state.  Every convicted sex offender must register with the state that they reside in.  In the United States, all 50 states have passed laws requiring sex offenders, especially child sex offenders, to register with the police.  Each offender needs to report where they live when they are convicted of a sex crime and when they leave prison.  Each state compiles, updates, and maintains their own sex offender registry.  There is a sex offender registry maintained by each state in the country, there is not a federal/national source for this information, although there is a place to go online provided by the federal government to access state sex offender registries.

National Sex Offender Public Registry (NSOPR)
The United States Department of Justice maintains the National Sex Offender Public Registry (NSOPR) Website, even though this branch of the federal government does not maintain any of the sex offender records or registries.  This means that your search results performed on this site are limited to what each individual state provides. Information is hosted by each state, not by the federal government.  The NSOPR website is managed and owned by the US Dept. of Justice and simply accesses each state’s independent sex offender registry, making those records available to the general public through the NSOPR website whose address is: www.nsopr.gov .  Since the information source is each individual state, that makes each state responsible for its own registry and for determining what level of sex offenders they want to include in their database registry.  For this reason, the type of information included in each state’s registry may differ from other states, but all of them usually include high-risk sexual offenders/predators.  For your convenience, we provide all 50 of the current sex offender registry descriptions as outlined by each US State below on this page and also give you the link to the live pages that can get updated any time any day.

Purpose of Sex Offender Registration
Sex Offender Registration and Community Notification provides the public with automated access to information about offenders who are required to register with the Department of Corrections. Registration serves as a means for monitoring and tracking an offender’s whereabouts, providing access to the Registry information for law enforcement agencies, victims, public/private organizations and the general public is intended to promote public safety and help detect and prevent crime.  This registry is made available through the Internet with the intent to better assist the public in preventing and protecting against the commission of future criminal sexual acts by convicted sex offenders.

Individual state sex offender registration and notification programs are designed in general, to safeguard communities where previously convicted sex offenders now reside. This generally includes offenders who have been convicted of a felony level criminal offense against a minor or any sexually violent offense against another person.  The registry is there to store information about persons convicted of offenses involving sexual molestation, sexual exploitation of children/minors, and persons convicted of rape and rape-like offenses regardless of the age of the victim.  Unfortunately, not all state web sites provide for public disclosure of information about all sex-offenders who reside, work, or attend school in that particular state. For example, one state may limit public disclosure over its web site of information concerning offenders who have been determined to be high-risk, while another state may provide for wider disclosure of offender information but make no representation as to risk level of specific offenders.

How did the current US Sex Offender Registry System come into being?

Timeline & History of the Jacob Wetterling Act – and the subsequent evolution of the sex offender registry system as provided by the US Department of Justice whose online address is: www.usdoj.gov

1994
The Jacob Wetterling Crimes against Children and Sexually Violent Offender Registration Act is passed as part of the Federal Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994. This law requires states to implement a sex offender and crimes against children registry. This puts the responsibility on the states and gives birth to the National Sex Offender Public Registry.

1996
Megan’s Law amends/updates the Jacob Wetterling Act. It requires states to establish a community notification system in addition to maintaining an offender database registry.  Now states have to notify communities when a sexual predator moves in nearby, it is no longer enough to just maintain a database of offenders, the state’s now have to notify their residents of potential threats by sex offenders moving in their neighborhood.

Megan’s Law, the federal version, was enacted on May 17th, 1996. Megan’s Law mandates that every state develop a working procedure for notifying its residents of sex offenders residing there. Each state differs on how they report the information, but the National Alert Registry and Independent Data Providers have combined all of the state’s information in to one simple repository.

On Friday July 29, 1994, 7-year old Megan Nicole Kanka disappeared. With the promise of a puppy, her neighbor, Jesse Timmendequas, lured her into his home where he raped, strangled and suffocated her. Her body was stuffed into a plastic toy chest and dumped in a nearby park. Megan had been killed by a two-time registered sex offender who lived across the street from the Kanka home and was sharing his house with two other convicted sex offenders, he met in prison.

This brutal attack is what prompted the first local state legislation and what is attributed for the federal involvement in creating the law now referred to as Megan’s Law. This legislation was a landmark event and was a great move toward securing the protection of our children.

Because of the publicity in the wake of Megan Kanka’s murder, most states now require that citizens be notified in advance if a sex offender plans to move into their neighborhood.

Court Outcome of Trial
Defendant: Jesse Timmendequas
Crimes Charged: Murder, kidnapping, rape, sodomy
Chief Defense Lawyers: Barbara R. Lependorf, Roy B. Greenman
Chief Prosecutors: Kathyrn Flicker, Lewis Korngut
Judge: Andrew J. Smithson
Place: Trenton, New Jersey
Date of Trial: May 5-June 20, 1997
Verdict: Guilty
Sentence: Death

The Pam Lychner Sexual Offender Tracking and Identification Act of 1996 becomes an amendment to the Wetterling Act. It requires lifetime registration for recidivists and offenders who commit certain aggravated offenses.

1998
Provisions contained in Section 115 of the General Provisions of Title I of the Commerce, Justice, and State, the Judiciary, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act (CJSA) amend the requirements of the Wetterling Act to include heightened registration requirements for sexually violent offenders, registration of federal and military offenders, registration of nonresident workers and students, and participation in the National Sex Offender Registry (NSOR).

2000
The Campus Sex Crimes Prevention Act amends the Wetterling Act, requiring offenders to report information regarding any enrollment or employment at an institution of higher education and to provide this information to a law enforcement agency whose jurisdiction includes the institution.

The Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act became law in 2007. This law implements new uniform requirements for sex offender registration across the states. Highlights of the law are a new national sex offender registry, standardized registration requirements for the states, and new and enhanced criminal offenses related to sex offenders. Since its enactment, the Adam Walsh Act (AWA) has come under intense grassroots scrutiny for its far-reaching scope and breadth. Even before any state adopted AWA, several sex offenders were prosecuted under its regulations. This has resulted in one life sentence for failure to register, due to the offender being homeless and unable to register a physical address.[1]

2003
President Bush signs the PROTECT Act that expanded the use of Amber Alerts, making grants available to all 50 States so law enforcement can quickly alert the public about missing children and their abductors.

Amber Alert:  Broadcast Emergency Response Program visit:  www.amberalert.gov/

The AMBER Alert Program is a voluntary partnership between law-enforcement agencies, broadcasters, transportation agencies, and the wireless industry, to activate an urgent bulletin in the most serious child-abduction cases. The goal of an AMBER Alert is to instantly galvanize the entire community to assist in the search for and the safe recovery of the child.

2006
President Bush Signed The Adam Walsh Child Protection And Safety Act Of 2006, which strengthens Federal laws to protect our children from sexual and other violent crimes, prevent child pornography, and make the USA and the Internet safer for our sons and daughters.

By enacting this law, the US Government is sending a clear message across the country that those who prey on our children will be caught, prosecuted, and punished to the fullest extent of the law.

How the Adam Walsh Child Protection And Safety Act Of 2006 Builds On Previous Legislation:

First off, it expands The National Sex Offender Registry. The bill integrates the information in State sex offender registry systems and ensures that law enforcement has access to the same information across the United States, helping prevent sex offenders from evading detection by moving from State to State. Data drawn from this comprehensive registry will be made available to the public so parents have the information they need to help protect their children from sex offenders.

Strengthening Federal Penalties For Crimes Against Children. The bill imposes tough mandatory minimum penalties for the most serious crimes against children and increases penalties for crimes such as sex trafficking of children and child prostitution. It also provides grants to States to help them institutionalize sex offenders who have shown they cannot change their behavior and are about to be released from prison.

Making It Harder For Sex Predators To Reach Our Children On The Internet. The bill authorizes new regional Internet Crimes Against Children Taskforces that will provide funding and training to help State and local law enforcement combat crimes involving the sexual exploitation of minors on the Internet.

Creating A New National Child Abuse Registry And Requiring Investigators To Do Background Checks Of Adoptive And Foster Parents Before They Are Approved To Take Custody Of A Child. By giving child protective service professionals in all 50 States access to this critical information, it will improve their ability to investigate child abuse cases and help ensure that vulnerable children are not put into situations of abuse or neglect.  The original source of the text above is from:  www.whitehouse.gov

Recidivism (as pertaining to sex offenders) – Is the habitual/chronic relapse of a person whose criminal behavioral patterns remain unchanged, making them prime candidates for repeating the same sexually violent crime they committed in the past.  These predators have shown the public that their behavior is predictable and so is their tendency to commit the same crime they previously committed.  It is these types of offenders that the national sex offender registration system aims to thwart by preventing past predators from striking again.

Recidivism of Sex Offenders Released from Prison
Below is a study conducted by the U.S. Dept. of Justice – Bureau of Justice Statistics. The Justice Department followed roughly 10,000 male sex offenders for three years after they were released from prison in 1994.   Out of this pool of offenders, almost half of them were convicted child molesters.  This study gives huge insight as to the conduct of convicted sex offenders who were discharged from prison and provides a compelling look into their behavior following their release from prison and their conduct over the next three years in a free society.

This study concluded with the following statistics:

  • Within 3 years following their release, 5.3% of sex offenders (men who had committed rape or sexual assault) were re-arrested for another sex crime.
  • The total pool of discharged sex offenders on average only served 3 & 1/2 years of their 8-year sentence.
  • Released sex offenders were 4-times more likely to be re-arrested for a sex crime when compared to non-sex-offenders released from state prisons.

Above Research Study Source is from the U.S. Dept. of Justice – Bureau of Justice Statistics: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/

If you would like to perform a criminal background check online, we have identified the following sites that include a free national sex offender check every time you perform an instant criminal background check.

www.CriminalBackgroundRecords.com

www.TenantScreeningUSA.com

 

Current Sex Offender Registry (SOR) Search Descriptions by state:
Remember….  The SOR descriptions for each state get periodically updated, so for updates and current information regarding each states Sex Offender Registry descriptions, please visit The United States National Sex Offender Public Registry website provided by the Department of Justice (DOJ) at:  http://www.nsopr.gov/
On this site you can view the most current sex offender descriptions provided from each state.

Alabama Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, address, and crime committed.  The Alabama Registry also makes individuals convicted of certain sex offenses who were released after June 30, 1998 to register. Sex Offenders must register for 25 years, and repeat offenders must register for life. Based upon community risk this registry may include some juvenile records.

Alaska Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, age, physical description, address, crime, crime conviction date, and court location. Individuals convicted of certain sex offenses who were incarcerated, on probation, on parole or convicted on or after July 1, 1984 must register. First-time offenders must register for 15 years, second-time offenders register for life.

Arizona Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, age, physical description, address, risk level, crime and crime location.  Individuals convicted of certain sex offenses who were released from incarceration or supervision on or after June 1, 1996 or were sentenced on or after this date must register.

Arkansas Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, age, physical description, address, risk level, crime and crime location.  Individuals who were convicted, incarcerated, on probation or on parole on August 1, 1997 or later must register. Stalking in Arkansas is also an offense that must be registered. Sex offenders must register for fifteen years, while sexually violent predators must register for twenty years.

California Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Individuals convicted of certain sex offenses since 1947 must register.

Colorado Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, physical description, address, crime, and crime location.  Individuals convicted of certain sex offenses on or after July 1, 1994 must register. Depending on the severity of the original offense, registrants are required to be registered for 5, 10 or 20 years, more years for the more severe crime.

Connecticut Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, physical description, address, crime and crime location. Individuals convicted of certain sex offenses who were released into the community on or after October 1, 1998 must register.  Sex offenders must register for 10 years, and sexually violent offenders must register for life.

Delaware Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, physical description, address and crime.

Florida Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, physical description, date added, criminal offense, crime location, and address. Predators whose offenses occurred on or after October 1, 1993 that resulted in a conviction (as well as offenders who were released from incarceration, probation or parole on or after October 1, 1993) must register. Offenders must register for 20 years.  Sexual predators must register indefinitely unless otherwise directed by a court. Predators are forbidden from working with minors in both professional and volunteer settings.

Georgia Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, year of birth, physical description, address, registration date, conviction date, crime and county name.  Any convicted sex offender who was released from prison, probation or parole after July 1, 1996 must register. Sex offenders are required to register for 10 years. Sexual Predators register for life.

Hawaii Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, year of birth, physical description, address, registration date, and crime.  The registry includes sex offenders who were registered under the state’s prior county-level program. Registry records prior to 1997 are incomplete. Offenders must register for life.

Idaho Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, physical description, address, crime, and crime location.  Individuals who were incarcerated, on probation or on parole as of July 1, 1993, or convicted after this date must register. Registrants who have been arrest free for 10 years are eligible to apply for relief from registration. Juvenile offenders between the ages of 14 and 17 are required to register.

Illinois Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, physical description, address, and victim age range.  Individuals convicted of certain sex crimes who were released from prison, probation or parole within the last 10 years must register. Offenders must register for 10 years, sexual predators for life. Failure of an offender to properly register may result in an additional 10 years of registration.

Indiana Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, age, physical description, address, date of registration, county of registration and charge(s).  Offenders convicted of certain sex offenses who were released, on probation or parole since 1989 must register. Offenders convicted since June 30, 1994 must register locally. Sex offenders register for 10 years and sexual predators for life.

Iowa Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Individuals convicted of certain sex offenses who were convicted, incarcerated, or on probation or parole on or after July 1, 1995 must register. Offenders are required to register for 10 years, sexual predators for life. Failure to register is grounds for automatic revocation of probation or parole.

Kansas Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Offenders who committed certain sex offenses after April 14, 1994 must register. Offenders must register for 10 years, but can apply to the court for release from registration prior to this, in which case the court must hold a hearing to determine whether the offender is rehabilitated.

Kentucky Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, physical description, date of birth, address, registration length, crime and crime location.  Individuals convicted of certain sex offenses who were released from incarceration on or after January 15, 1999 must register. Offenders must register for at least 10 years. Offender addresses are updated every 90 days.

Louisiana Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, alias, address, crime and crime location.  Individuals convicted of certain sex offenses on or after July 1, 1997 must register. Offenders must register annually for 10 years. Sexually violent predators must register every 90 days for life.

Maine Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, physical description, address, crime and crime location. All persons sentenced on or after June 30, 1992 of Gross Sexual Assault when the victim is under 16 years of age must register, along with persons sentenced after September 18, 1999 for any one of a number of sex-related or violent crimes. Offenders sentenced between 6/30/92 and 9/17/99 must register for 15 years. Offenders sentenced after 9/17/99 must register for 10 years. Sexually violent predators must register every 90 days for life.

Maryland Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, address and crime.  Persons convicted after October 1, 1995 of certain sex offenses against children or after October 1, 1997 for certain sex offenses against adults must register. Sex Offenders must register for 10 years.  Sexually violent predators must register for life, or until relieved of the duty by a court. Persons convicted of serious crimes before October 1, 1995 will have no record.

Massachusetts Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, physical description, address, crime and crime location.

Michigan Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Persons who were convicted, or were on parole or probation or incarcerated on or after October 1, 1995 must register. First-time offenders must register for 25 years. Repeat offenders must register for life.

Minnesota Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, alias, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  This is not a notification state, only level 3 offenders are in the database.

Mississippi Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Individuals convicted of certain sex offenses as of July 1, 1995 must register.  Offenders must register for 15 years, at which time they can apply to the courts for relief from registration.

Missouri Sex Offender Registry Description
This sex offender search includes only persons who have been convicted of, found guilty of or plead guilty to committing or attempting to commit sexual offenses. Offenders required to register for crimes of kidnapping, felonious restraint or child abuse may not be listed. Results show offender name, address, offense, count, and county.  Any person convicted of a felony sexual assault of child kidnapping since July 1, 1979 must register. Both sexual offenders and sexual predators must register for life. Offenders must verify their address every 90 days.

Montana Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, address, offense, offense date, county and aliases.  Persons convicted, incarcerated or on probation or parole for certain sex offenses on or after July 1, 1989, or for certain violent offenses after October 1, 1995 must register. Offenders are required to register for life, but certain offenders can petition the courts for relief after 10 years if they do not have a second conviction.

Nebraska Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, physical description, address, crime and crime location. Offenders who were convicted after January 1, 1997, or were incarcerated, or on probation or parole as of this date must register. Offenders must register for 10 years. Sexually violent offenders must register for 10 years and can apply for relief from registration.

Nevada Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Persons convicted of any one of 20 sex-related crimes since July 1, 1956 must register. Registration is for life, although after 15 years offenders can apply for removal from the registry.

New Hampshire Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, alias, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Any offender convicted of certain sex offenses who, depending on the crime was incarcerated, on parole, probation or convicted on or after January 1, 1988 or January 1, 1996 must register. Offenders must register for 10 years. Sexual predators must register for life.

New Jersey Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Any person convicted since October 31, 1994 of certain sex offenses or any person diagnosed since 1976 as being a “repetitive and compulsive” offender must register. Offenders must register annually for 15 years, at which time they can apply for relief from registration.

New Mexico Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Any offender who was convicted of certain sex offenses after July 1, 1999 must register. Persons convicted before this date are not in the registry.

New York Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Offenders who were convicted, on probation, or on parole on or after January 21, 1996 must register.  Level 1 and level 2 offenders must register for 10 years; level 3 must register for life.

North Carolina Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Persons convicted on or after January 1, 1996 of certain sex offenses and/or child kidnapping, abduction or felonious restraint when the perpetrator is not the child’s parent must register. Offenders must register for 10 years, sexual predators for life, but can apply for relief from registration after 10 years. Persons convicted before this date are not in the registry.

North Dakota Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Offenders convicted on or after August 1, 1985 must register. Offenders must register for 10 years. The non-registrant list consists of names extracted from the state’s Criminal Record History System. Address information on offenders may be out of date as registration is not required. Out of state offenders who move to North Dakota will not be found in the registry.

Ohio Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Any offender who was incarcerated as of July 1, 1997, or who was convicted on or after July 1, 1997, or who was required to register under the prior sex offender registration law must register. Sexual predators must register for life. Habitual offenders for 20 years: all others for 10 years.

Oklahoma Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Offenders who were convicted on or after November 1, 1989 must register as sex offenders. An offender who receives a second conviction after November 1, 1997 is designated as a sexual predator. Sex offenders must register for 10 years, sexual predators for life.

Oregon Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Offenders who were incarcerated or convicted on or after October 3, 1989 for certain sex offenses must register. All offenders must register for life.  Although after 10 years they can apply for relief from registration.

Pennsylvania Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, age, physical description, address, risk level, crime and crime location.  Offenders who were convicted, incarcerated, on probation or on parole on or after January 21, 1996 must register. Offenders must register for 10 years. Sexual predators must register for life, unless relieved of the duty by the court.

Rhode Island Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, age, physical description, address, crime, crime conviction date.  Individuals convicted of certain sex crimes who were convicted or incarcerated on or after July 1, 1992 must register. Also includes persons who committed additional Megan’s Law offenses, such as child kidnapping by a non-parent, when the crime was committed on or after July 24, 1996. Offenders must register for 10 years. Sexual predators must register for life.

South Carolina Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, age, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Any person convicted or released from prison after January 1, 1995 for certain sex offenses must register, this includes juvenile offenders as young as 12 years of age. Offenders must register for life.

South Dakota Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, physical description, address, offense, offense date, conviction county, and offense conviction date. This data is limited to the following counties: Brooks, Brown, Clay, Codington, Davidson, Hughes, Lake, Lawrence, Lincoln, Meade, McCook, Minnehaha.  Persons who were convicted of felony sex crimes prior to the new law’s effective date must register. Offenders must register for life. Amendment in 1997 requires some juvenile registration.

Tennessee Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Offenders convicted, incarcerated, on probation or on parole for certain sex offenses on or after January 1, 1995 must register. Offenders must register for life, but after 10 years can apply for relief from registry.

Texas Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Persons, including juveniles, convicted of certain sex offenses who were incarcerated or under supervision on or after September 1, 1997 for crimes committed after September 1, 1970 must register. Offenders must register for 10 years. Sexually violent predators must register for life.

Utah Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, age, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Offenders convicted of certain sex offenses after April 29, 1996 must register. All offenders must register for 10 years. Persons convicted before this date are not in the registry.

Vermont Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, physical description, address, crime and crime location.  Offenders convicted of certain sex offenses who were under the supervision of the Department of Corrections as of July 1, 1996 or were convicted after this date must register. Offenders must register for 10 years, after which they can petition the court for relief from registration.

Virginia Sex Offender Registry Description
This sex offender search includes high-risk offenders. Records reported show the defendant’s name, age, physical description, photo of offender, home address, work address (where available), aliases, date of registration, and conviction information. Adult individuals found within the registry are included solely by virtue of their conviction record and applicable state law. Effective July 1, 2005, juveniles over the age of 13 at the time of offense, who are tried as a juvenile and are adjudicated delinquent, are also included within the registry if the trial court determined that the circumstances of the offense require offender registration and ordered the juvenile to register.

Washington Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, registration date, county registered.  Offenders convicted of certain sex offenses who were in custody, on probation, or parole on or after July 28, 1991 must register. Depending on the level of offense, offenders must register for 10 or 15 years, or until relieved of duty by the court.

Washington DC Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, physical description, address and crime.  DC has not put a working Megan’s Law into effect. August 4, 1999 an emergency legislation passed authorizing sex offender registration and community notification until such time a permanent law could be passed. All registrants are classified as Class A, Class B or Class C. Class A representing the most serious offenses. Offenders are included in the registry solely by virtue of their conviction record. Class A registrants are Lifetime registrants. Class B and C are 10-year registrants.

West Virginia Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, date of birth, registration date, county registered.  Offenders convicted of certain sex offenses retroactive to the effective date of the law must register. Their records go back unlimited. Offenders must register for 10 years. If the victim was a minor, or the offense was violent, or the offender is a repeat offender, registration is for life. The state withholds information on less serious offenders.

Wisconsin Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, address, offense, offense date, county, aliases. All offenders who are convicted of any included offense or whose compliance is mandated by the court, shall be required to register with the Wisconsin Department of Corrections. This includes juveniles, probationers, parolees, adult offenders entering Wisconsin supervision from another state, adult offenders leaving Wisconsin supervision to another state, and persons entering this state under a federal, tribal or military conviction for a sexual offense. People who are convicted of, adjudicated or committed for a violation, solicitation, conspiracy or attempt to commit a violation of any registerable offense on or after 12/25/1993 must register. Registration is also required for people who have been in prison, on probation or parole or in a mental or county correctional institution since 12/25/93 for a registerable offense.

Wyoming Sex Offender Registry Description
Registry contains high-risk sex offenders.  Search results may include offender’s name, Date of birth, registration date, and county registered.  Individuals convicted of certain sex offenses committed after January 1, 1985 must register. A court hearing must take place to designate offender as moderate or high risk. Offenders must register for 10 years. Sexual predators must register for life. Information on low to moderate risk offenders is not widely disseminated.

For updates and current information regarding each states Sex Offender Registry descriptions, please visit The United States National Sex Offender Public Registry website provided by the Department of Justice (DOJ) at:  http://www.nsopr.gov/

If you are looking to run a criminal background check, and want a national sex offender search with it, please visit one of these sites, as their statewide and national criminal background checks include a free national sex offender search.

www.CriminalBackgroundRecords.com

www.TenantScreeningUSA.com