Sexual Predator Civil Commitment ACT: Kansas v. Crane, 534 U.S. 407

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SEXUAL PREDATOR CIVIL COMMITMENT ACT

Click to v. Crane, 534 U.S. style Kansas edit Master subtitle 407

(2002) and Selig v. Young, 531 U.S. 250 (2001) GROUP 5: Operation order

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Example One: Kansas v. Crane, 534 U.S. 407 (2002) The defendant cannot control his dangerous
behavioreven if (as provided by Kansas law) problems of emotional, and not volitional, capacity prove the source of behavior warranting commitment. (the trial court had made no such finding)

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Example Two: Selig v. Young, 531 U.S. 250 (2001)


Commitment

was challenged in state court, arguing that the conditions of his commitment were punitive and that he was, in effect, serving a second criminal sentence. Court dismissed the challenge to the law as the act in question was entirely 'civil'

the

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Why did the Court decide in these cases that the sexual predator civil commitment laws are constitutional?
Example One
The

required standard of proof had to be sufficient to make the distinction between a dangerous sexual offender whose serious mental illness or abnormality, made him eligible for civil commitment from the "dangerous but typical recidivist" offender convicted in an ordinary criminal case.

Example Two
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Differences in the legislation


Civil

commitment laws allow a judge or jury to determine whether a sex offender who appears to meet the definition of a sexually violent predator should be released to the community following their confinement period or whether they should be placed in a secure DSHS-operated facility for control, care, and treatment.

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HISTORY
Following two violent sexual assault cases in the 1980s, a special task force was created to examine various aspects of Washington law that permitted the release of dangerous sex offenders. The Community Protection Act of 1990 was subsequently passed. THE END

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Works cited

Department of Correction Washington State. Civil Commitment of Sexual


Predators.2012. web. 29 March 2012.

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