New Use for GPS: Tracking Rapists
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, July 13, 2004
NASHVILLE, Tenn. Seven contractors have expressed
interest in the state's $2.5 million pilot project that would use a
global positioning system, or GPS, to keep track of violent sex
offenders that have been paroled.
The tracking technology was first used in Florida in late 1990s
to keep track of released felons, and some cities and counties in
other states use GPS for similar uses.
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Tennessee's project will not be used statewide for at least a
year after it begins early in 2005. It will be focused in Memphis
and Nashville and other parts of the state's three grand divisions.
"Basically, we want to have a good mix between urban and rural
areas," said state Rep. Rob Briley, D-Nashville, chief House
sponsor of legislation creating the pilot program.
The state Board of Probation and Parole will decide where to use
the pilot program.
Initially, about half of the state's 1,200 registered sex
offenders will be fitted with bracelets that will be tracked
constantly by a GPS monitored by law enforcement.
"You all are the first in the nation to do this," Mandy
Wettstein of General Dynamics, one of the potential bidders on the
project, told a news reporter. "The country will be watching to
see how successful this sex offender tracking program is."
Tennessee is expected to award the contract by the end of the
year.
The system would let law enforcement build maps with "zones of
exclusion" for the sex offenders, such as playgrounds, schools,
day-care centers or the homes of victims. It also would allow
probation officers to determine whether the felons they are
supervising are going to work during the day, going home at night
and staying away from restricted areas.
Removing, vandalizing or tampering with a bracelet carries a
mandatory jail sentence of 180 days for the first offense. Second
and subsequent offenses are a felony and could result in immediate
revocation of probation or parole.
The Legislature appropriated money for the system earlier this
year, and lawmakers are hoping for a large return on the
expense.
"If you can put people back out into the community and have a
pretty high degree of assurance that he is not going to re-offend,
then you can take them out of the prison system, make sure they are
working, and they can bear some of the cost of the program,"
Briley said. "It becomes a massive cost-saving tool for the state
in the long run."
The system is Internet-based, so any probation officer or law
enforcement agent with access to the Web can use it. It does
not require constant monitoring, with e-mails alerting officers if
an offender enters an exclusion zone.
The probation board will collect data on the program for a year
before reporting to Gov. Phil Bredesen and the Legislature. If the
program is taken statewide, it could include other types of
offenders such as those convicted of domestic violence or behind in
child support payments.
"It is extremely exciting," said state Sen. Doug Jackson,
D-Dickson, chairman of the Legislature's Corrections Oversight
Committee. "This will give us the opportunity to reduce the demand
for prison beds. By doing that, it will allow us to stiffen
penalties for more serious felons that pose a much greater risk for
the community."
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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