| | 3. Coordinate prevention and education efforts with the goal | of seeking coordinated services to transition at-risk youth to | healthy adulthood; and |
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| | 4. Report findings to the joint standing committees of the | Legislature having jurisdiction over health and human services | and criminal justice and public safety matters no later than | January 30, 2005. |
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| | Sec. C-2. Review and report of registerable sex offenses. The Criminal Law | Advisory Commission, established under the Maine Revised | Statutes, Title 17-A, chapter 55, shall: |
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| | 1. Review the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act | of 1999, as amended, to identify all crimes of gross sexual | assault and unlawful sexual contact that currently do not require | any registration; |
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| | 2. Assess whether the current Maine crimes listed as sex | offenses and sexually violent offenses are appropriate under the | federal guidelines for the Jacob Wetterling Crimes Against | Children and Sexually Violent Offender Registration Act, 42 | United States Code, Section 14071, as amended; and |
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| | 3. Report its findings and any proposed changes to the joint | standing committee of the Legislature having jurisdiction over | criminal justice and public safety matters. |
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| | Sec. C-3. Retroactivity. Those sections of this Act that amend the | Maine Revised Statutes, Title 34-A apply retroactively to June | 30, 1992. |
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| | This bill implements the recommendations of the Commission to | Improve Community Safety and Sex Offender Accountability, which | was created pursuant to Resolve 2003, chapter 75. The commission | was established to provide a legislative forum to review criminal | sentencing laws for sex crimes and to review sex offender | registration and notification laws and policies. The purpose of | this commission's review was to take a thoughtful and | comprehensive look at Maine's sex offender laws and to identify | areas in which immediate legislative and policy change is | necessary to increase community safety. The bill does the | following. |
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| | 1. It raises the classification of sex crimes committed | against children who have not attained 12 years of age. Without | imposing new minimum mandatory sentences, the commission |
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