COLUMBIA, S.C. - The state Supreme Court will
hear arguments Tuesday on whether juvenile sex offenders should be
listed on the state sex offender registry.
The case involves a Richland County boy whose lawyers say forcing
him to register as a sex offender for life violates his
constitutional rights because it will remain on his record well into
adulthood.
The boy, called "Ronnie A" in court papers, pleaded guilty in
Family Court two years ago when he was 9 years old to first-degree
criminal sexual conduct with a minor in an incident involving his
then 6-year-old sister.
He was placed on two years of probation.
The state Attorney General's Office wants the boy to be put on
the registry because he was expelled from school for inappropriate
sexual behavior with a teacher, "touching little girls, and things
of that nature," according to court papers.
The state also plans to argue that the boy probably will not be
stigmatized because names of offenders on the registry who are under
12 are kept secret from the public in most cases.
The State Law Enforcement Division maintains the sex offender
registry, which started in 1994 and became public in 1999.
SLED officials said 207 juvenile offenders are not named in the
public registry.
The names of children who committed their offense under age 12
are kept off the public list, as well as offenders between ages 12
and 16 who commit less serious offenses such as indecent
exposure.
Those names are kept on a separate list available only to victims
or witnesses in their case, schools, day-care centers and businesses
or organizations that primarily serve children, women or vulnerable
adults, according to SLED.
According to their custom, the justices are expected to issue
their ruling at a later date.
Information from: The
State