Political Notebook
State Sen.
Jane Orie, R- 40th, this week announced she wants to make Pennsylvania one of the first states to implement the Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act, which establishes federally mandated national standards to strengthen sex offender registration and notification.Congress passed the legislation July 27, the 25th anniversary of the day Adam Walsh was kidnapped. He was later found murdered, and his father John Walsh has led national efforts to strengthen laws relating to child abduction and sexual offenders.Orie has introduced legislation in the state Senate to require Pennsylvania to implement the Adam Walsh law, also known as the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act.States have three years to implement the program with bonus awards made by the Sex Offender Management Assistance program to those that are in compliance by July 27, 2008."The Adam Walsh Act is crucial to protecting our children from predators because it seeks to create a national sex offender registry that will be available on the Internet and have uniform enforcement," Orie said."The act also provides stricter prison sentences for offenders who fail to register and keep their information current."In addition to establishing a national system for the registration of convicted sex offenders, the act:•Requires all jurisdictions to enact criminal penalties for sex offenders who fail to comply with registration requirements.•Requires sex offender to appear in person to verify their registrations.•Imposes a fine and/or jail time up to 20 years for sex offenders who knowingly fail to register.n Makes registration as a sex offender a mandatory condition of probation and supervised