Call & Times

Mass. registry lacks info on 1,700 sex offenders

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BOSTON ( AP) — The Massachuse­tts Sex Offender Registry has lost track of more than 1,700 convicted sex offenders, according to a state audit released on Wednesday.

The report from the office of Auditor Suzanne Bump concluded that the registry lacks adequate policies and procedures to ensure that sex offenders are promptly classified. As a result, the public has no way to know if some potentiall­y dangerous sex offenders live in their communitie­s, while the risk that those individual­s will commit new crimes increases, Bump said.

As of February, the registry did not have current addresses for 1,769 people who were convicted of sex crimes between October 1996 and January 2017, and have either been released from prison or are on parole, according to the audit. Of that total, the registry has yet to classify the threat level of 936 individual­s, including more than 300 that had committed sex crimes against children.

State law requires convicted sex offenders to register with the sex offender board and update their informatio­n annually, including any changes to their address. The board then classifies them as Level 1, Level 2 or Level 3. Level 2 and Level 3 offenders are considered to be most at risk of reoffendin­g.

Bump called the findings "disturbing."

"What we found was an agency that really wasn't able to meet its mission of properly classifyin­g or tracking individual­s who were supposed to be registered sex offenders," said the Democrat. "That left police officers, the public and past victims without the knowledge ... as to the whereabout­s of Level 2 and Level 3 sex offenders."

Failure to register or report changes in address can result in arrest and imprisonme­nt.

Felix Browne, a spokesman for the state's Executive Office of Public Safety, said while the registry is responsibl­e for classifyin­g sex offenders, it lacks the authority to track down people who fail to register or notify law enforcemen­t of any move.

The registry currently has records on nearly 22,000 "active" sex offenders, according to the report. About 13,000 of those were believed to be living in Massachuse­tts, while the rest had either moved out of state, been deported or returned to prison.

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