LOSING TRACK: Homeless offenders create gaps in Wisconsin’s GPS monitoring system

Ten percent of offenders scramble to find places to plug in bracelets, some cut them off, and local laws make it hard for released sex offenders to find housing

By RILEY VETTERKIND

Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism

Michael walked out of the Oshkosh Correctional Institution in April 2017 at age 60 with $140 to his name, a record as a sex offender and a GPS monitoring bracelet strapped to his ankle.

Michael, who requested that only his middle name be used to avoid public attention, was convicted of two child sex crimes, the most recent in 2006, for which he spent 10 years in prison. Upon release, he traveled to Vernon County, where he had committed his most recent sex crime, and stayed in a Westby motel while he searched for permanent housing. His probation officer gave him a few months to find a place.

 


Clockwise from top left, Sylvester Jackson, Don Mulder, Ventae Parrow, Brian Anthony, Matthew Schechter and Glenn Davis are some of the 11 registered sex offenders in a pending case against a 2,000-foot residency restriction in the city of Milwaukee, where countless sex offenders, many on GPS monitoring, are homeless. The parties are working on a settlement after the city significantly rewrote its residency requirements. (Wisconsin Department of Corrections)

The housing search ended in failure. Michael, who is disabled and relies on Social Security, was unable to navigate the process with residency restrictions and landlords leery of renting to sex offenders.

His search was further complicated by Wisconsin’s requirement that he reside at least initially in Vernon County, where he was convicted, along with DOC rules of supervision that attempt to prevent serious sex offenders from living too close to one another.

He continued his search, but came up empty handed, and so like many sex offenders, he became homeless.


Judge Alice Batchelder, a member of the 6th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, struck down Michigan’s retroactive application of several restrictions for sex offenders on the basis that they violated the Constitution’s ban on retroactive punishment. She also took broad aim at residency restrictions and the state’s sex offender registry. “It consigns them to years, if not a lifetime, of existence on the margins, not only of society, but often … from their own families, with whom, due to school zone restrictions, they may not even live.” (6th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals via WikiSource)

“I had to borrow a tent from my sister, go down to a campsite and live in a tent,” Michael told a reporter for the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism, adding in a later interview. “This is all happening so fast for me. I can’t imagine being homeless at my age.”

Michael spent the summer and early fall of 2017 at a $10-per-night campsite at the Vernon County Fairgrounds learning to manage his new transient existence. A couple of times a day, he plugged his GPS monitor into an outlet meant for trailer hookups. He said wearing the bracelet is “shameful, and it does hurt my ankle.”

Ten percent of monitored offenders homeless

DOC data show that of the 1,258 offenders on GPS monitoring in January, 131 had no permanent place to live. This means about one in 10 offenders may not have regular or easy access to an outlet to charge a monitoring device. A DOC spokesman said agents typically allow homeless offenders to charge their bracelets in parole offices.

DOC records show some homeless offenders avoid this logistical challenge by absconding — removing their bracelets or letting them run out of power — which completely defeats the purpose of GPS monitoring.

Michael’s struggle to find housing illustrates a problem that is widespread in Wisconsin communities, where dozens of sex offenders are homeless due in part to ordinances restricting where they can live.

DOC officials have acknowledged that highly restrictive municipal residency ordinances in more than 150 Wisconsin communities such as Green Bay and until recently, Milwaukee, are contributing to the problem, according to emails obtained by the Center under the public records law. These local laws prevent sex offenders from residing too closely to places including parks, schools and day-care centers, leaving virtually nowhere for them to live.

Green Bay’s requirement that offenders live at least 1,500 feet away from schools, parks and day-care centers means offenders are banned from nearly the entire city, although they have the opportunity to appeal in front of a board.

 


Green Bay, like more than 150 other municipalities in Wisconsin, maintains residency restrictions for sex offenders. Green Bay’s ordinance requires that convicted sex offenders live at least 1,500 feet away from schools, day-care centers, parks or licensed entertainment facilities. As the red shading in the photo indicates, such restrictions have left most of the city off-limits for sex offenders to live. (City of Green Bay)

 

In a recent ruling from the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin, a judge essentially struck down the village of Pleasant Prairie’s 3,000-foot buffer zone as being too restrictive, saying 90 percent of the village was off-limits to child sex offenders and the remaining land was largely nonresidential.

Some municipalities have pre-empted legal action. Waukesha and New Berlin, for example, reduced child safety zones from 1,500 to 500 feet.

The attorneys in the Pleasant Prairie case, Mark Weinberg and Adele Nicholas, are also representing 11 registered sex offenders in a case that ended the 2,000-foot residency restriction in the city of Milwaukee, where sex offenders, some on GPS monitoring, are homeless.

On Tuesday, the Milwaukee Common Council approved a settlement in the case after the city significantly rewrote its residency requirements. The $74,400 deal awards $2,000 to each of the 11 offenders who brought the lawsuit, up to $36,762 to repay previous judgments paid by offenders found to have violated the ordinance, plus $52,400 for attorneys’ fees and costs.

The plaintiffs in the Milwaukee case are sex offenders who are either homeless or attempting to move. Sylvester Jackson, a 51-year-old homeless offender, stated in an affidavit that he has tried for years to obtain housing but to no success. A diabetic, Jackson often sleeps in a broken-down car, which poses a threat to his health because he has no refrigerator to keep healthy food or a plug-in for his breathing machine for sleep apnea.
Another offender, 35-year-old Chris Bills, wanted to move out of the three-bedroom townhouse he shared with seven others, but was unable to find another option due to the residency restrictions and the complication of wanting to stay in the area so his autistic son could attend his special school.


Chris Bills, 35, is among the 11 sex offenders who sued Milwaukee, Wis., over its residency restrictions, prompting the city to suspend most of its ordinance. Bills says he has been trying to move out of a three-bedroom residence he shares with seven others but could not find housing because of residency restrictions that make it impossible for him to find a home near where his autistic son attends school. (Wisconsin Sex Offender Registry)

Other plaintiffs stated that they investigated each address Milwaukee deemed compliant, but that none of them was available to rent. One such location ended up being the Milwaukee airport.

Months after the plaintiffs’ motion seeking an immediate halt to the law, Milwaukee’s city council in September voted to repeal the city’s sex offender “buffer zone,” doing so without Mayor Tom Barrett’s signature.

The move let sex offenders essentially live anywhere in the city, although it did leave in place a requirement that offenders must return to the county where they committed their offense upon release. The 2015 state law that maintains a 1,500-foot buffer zone for a specific category of offenders deemed sexually violent also remains in effect.

The two attorneys argue that such residency restrictions and “original domicile” clauses, which make it unlawful for a sex offender to live in a city unless he committed his crime there, are unconstitutional. They argue the laws invoke retroactive punishment and that the “original domicile” requirement makes a distinction among offenders that is “not rationally related to a legitimate state interest.”

“There’s just no evidence to support the (claim) that these laws are making communities safer, preventing crime or protecting anyone from crime,” Nicholas said. “This law just makes people homeless.”

Federal courts are beginning to agree. In August 2016, the 6th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals struck down Michigan’s application of several restrictions for sex offenders on the basis that they violated the Constitution’s ban on retroactive punishment.

The provisions include having sex offenders’ names on a registry, prohibiting sex offenders from living, working or “loitering” within 1,000 feet of a school, and requiring them to notify law enforcement in person when they update personal information.

 

Michigan’s sex offender registration law “brands registrants as moral lepers solely on the basis of a prior conviction,” wrote Alice Batchelder, one of the judges for the case. “It consigns them to years, if not a lifetime, of existence on the margins, not only of society, but often … from their own families, with whom, due to school zone restrictions, they may not even live.”

Batchelder also challenged Michigan’s contention that its sex offender laws deter recidivism, which is commonly believed to be “frightening and high.” She cited studies that suggest sex offenders are actually less likely to recidivate than other criminals, and that sex offender registries and their accompanying restrictions make it “hard for registrants to get and keep a job, find housing and reintegrate into their communities.”

Batchelder emphasized that Michigan could provide no evidence that the difficulties its sex offender restrictions imposed had any positive outcomes.

In Wisconsin, most municipal restrictions on sex offenders remain in place.

 GPS, laws add hurdles to reintegration

Mike Nellis, the editor of the Journal of Offender Monitoring, views GPS as a tool for rehabilitation when used correctly. He argues that allowing sex offenders to be homeless would be “anathema” in Europe.

“If you’re allowing people on GPS to be homeless, you’re not doing all you can even to get the best out of GPS,” Nellis said. “Because without accommodation, how can people reintegrate in society? … How can you get a job?”

In Florida, where prohibitive residency restrictions have led to homelessness among sex offenders, some seek refuge in an isolated community in South Florida called Miracle Village, which is home to more than 100 people, most of them sex offenders.

Dick Witherow, an evangelical Christian pastor, told Politico Magazine that he founded the village in 2009 because of how the public views sex offenders as “modern-day lepers.”

The village is a home for people such as Douglas Ryan, who lived in the woods to satisfy the 2,500-foot requirement. He now does occasional groundskeeping for the village, according to the article published in December.

 


In Florida, where prohibitive residency restrictions have led to homelessness among sex offenders, some seek refuge in an isolated community in South Florida called Miracle Village, which is home to more than 100 people, most of them sex offenders. The group of houses is outside of Pahokee, in rural Palm Beach County, and is surrounded by sugar cane fields. (Google Earth Pro)

 

In Wisconsin, Michael eventually managed to establish a more permanent residence. He found a friend in Kendall in neighboring Monroe County who agreed to let him move into his house beginning in October. He asked that his photo and location not be disclosed.

Like some other sex offenders, Michael encountered difficulties with GPS monitoring, spending the weekend of Oct. 21 in jail for an unspecified probation violation. 

“I just got done working (outdoors) all day long,” he recalled. “I got done showering, I was getting ready to relax and watch some TV, and the cops came.”

He sat in jail throughout the weekend until his probation officer returned to work on Monday.

“I was scared,” Michael said of the arrest. “I didn’t know what happened … And then I started thinking, ‘Well, this is what I’m in for for the rest of my life.’ ”

He later learned his arrest was triggered by a 10-minute visit to his sister’s house in Wilton. Unknown to Michael, a church nearby houses a day-care center, which is one of his “exclusion zones.” His probation officer then created a “safe zone” around his sister’s house, preventing at least one future arrest.

“As far as the GPS goes, I think it’s ridiculous. I think it’s overkill. I did 10 years, I’ve got 15 on paper (probation),” he said. “What more do they need? Why is the bracelet necessary?”

The nonprofit Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism (www.WisconsinWatch.org) collaborates with Wisconsin Public Radio, Wisconsin Public Television, other news media and the UW-Madison School of Journalism and Mass Communication. All works created, published, posted or disseminated by the Center do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of UW-Madison or any of its affiliates.

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