«««FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE August 14, 2006, 2:30 pm«««
Temporary Restraining Order filed to stop
Law
Enforcement from Arresting
Bulloch County Residents
ATLANTA , GEORGIA,
August 14, 2006 – Attorneys from the Southern Center for Human Rights
(SCHR) and the American Civil Liberties Union of Georgia have filed another
challenge to HB 1059, Georgia’s sex offender legislation passed in 2006 by
the General Assembly. Today, attorneys have asked the Court for a Temporary
Restraining Order to stop the Bulloch County Sheriff from illegally evicting
people from their homes for living too close to a school bus stop.
The School Board of
Bulloch County, Georgia voted last Thursday evening to designate
approximately 1,700 bus stops throughout the county. Prior to the school
board meeting, in anticipation of such a decision, Bulloch County Sheriff
Lynn M. Anderson sent written notice to all registered sex offenders
informing them that bus stops would be designated on August 10 and that the
bus stop provision would be subsequently enforced. This enforcement will
mean the immediate forced eviction or arrest of at least 30 people on the
sex offender registry in Bulloch County.
One person facing
eviction is Paul Stewart, an elderly man with severe heart problems that
have resulted in 15 heart attacks. Mr. Stewart struggles with numerous
other medical issues and his health will be dramatically compromised if he
is forced from his home as a result of the enforcement of the school bus
stop provision of HB 1059.
Bulloch County is the
second county in Georgia to officially designate the school bus stops. Last
month, Columbia County designated bus stops and began enforcing the law, but
U. S. District Judge Clarence Cooper issued an order banning Columbia County
deputies from enforcing the law.
“As the Court found in
issuing its initial TRO, forcing sex offenders from their homes could harm
public safety by making offenders harder to monitor,” states Sarah Geraghty,
lead counsel from SCHR. “The balance of interests and public policy
considerations weigh heavily in favor of granting a TRO to prevent
plaintiffs from becoming homeless while the constitutionality of HB 1059 is
being considered.”
Testimony from law
enforcement, treatment providers, and the state's own expert at a July 11
hearing established that residency restrictions such as the 1000 foot bus
stop restriction makes the public less safe by destabilizing people
on the registry and forcing them underground. There is nothing within HB
1059 that provides for exceptions to forcible displacement of people who are
elderly or infirmed or who were convicted as teenagers for having consensual
sex with other teenagers.
HB 1059 does not
require school boards to designate bus stops. “Local School Boards should
table any vote on bus stops until the General Assembly meets again and has
the chance to fix HB 1059’s problems.” states Lisa Kung, Director of SCHR.
“If school boards pass resolutions designating school bus stops like
Columbia and Bulloch counties did, we will take them to court because their
actions result in families being evicted from their homes. The evictions are
unnecessary and unconstitutional.”
Click here
for the Brief
The original complaint can be
viewed here.
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Return to
SCHR's Litigation Challenging HB1059: Georgia's Sex
Offender Law