(Columbia) June 30, 2005 - Last summer, Tarsha
Perry's 12-year-old daughter was going to camp in
Orangeburg. On a field trip to a local store, Perry says
her little girl was groped by a registered sex offender
who worked at the store, "I just kind of lost it until I
saw her. I can't describe how I was feeling. I was so
hurt and angry."
The man has been charged with assault and battery,
but not yet convicted. He'll likely see some changes
when he re-registers as a sex offender if he is
convicted.
The governor signed into law two bills on Thursday.
Gov. Sanford says one would require sex offenders to not
only report in the county where they live, but also in
counties where they own property or go to school, or
work if that work is near children, "It's about a kid's
ability to go out to the ice cream truck and have a
parent not worry about it."
The other would require all people convicted of a
sexual offense against children to wear an electronic
monitoring device. Only people convicted after the
program starts would be affected.
There's a problem with putting an ankle bracelet
program in place in South Carolina. It could cost
anywhere between $3 and $12 million. State Senator Jake
Knotts (R-Lexington) says there's no money in the budget
and it can't happen until it's funded, "If we can put
them on Martha Stewart, we ought to be able to put them
on people to protect our children."
The funding failed to pass last session, but Senator
Knotts says he'll ask for it again next year. The
governor said he'd support money for the program as
well, if only to give parents like Tarsha peace of mind,
"The one thing that lives with you constantly, you
wonder where that person is at all time and you don't
know."
By Heather
Brown
Posted 7:22pm by BrettWitt