Originally published Wednesday, October 1, 2008 at 12:00 AM
State will put tracking devices on hundreds of violent sex offenders
The state corrections chief announced today that tracking bracelets will be snapped on the ankles of all of the state's most violent sex offenders upon their release from prison.
Seattle Times staff reporter
The state Department of Corrections announced today that all of the state's most violent sex offenders will be required to wear tracking bracelets upon their release from prison.
The move comes a year after corrections officials started testing GPS monitoring bracelets on a handful of Level 3 sex offenders, considered to be the most dangerous and most likely to re-offend.
Two weeks ago, 89 Level 3 offenders across the state were wearing the ankle bracelets. Corrections spokesman Chad Lewis said that today's announcement means that nearly 200 offenders could be on GPS monitoring at any given time.
Starting today, all Level 3 sex offenders will wear GPS tracking bracelets for the first month after their release from prison, according to the Department of Corrections (DOC). Offenders who are homeless, unemployed, or fail to meet the criteria set forth by their community corrections officers may remain in the tracking program beyond one month, DOC officials said.
"We only expand programs that we believe help improve public safety," DOC Secretary Eldon Vail said in a news release. "These GPS locaters give our officers another tool to supervise the highest-risk sex offenders."
Annmarie Aylaward, who oversees the GPS monitoring program for DOC, said they have found that the first 30 days within an offender's release is when they most likely to violate conditions of their supervision.
The tracking program was announced last year after 12-year-old Zina Linnik, of Tacoma, was abducted and killed by convicted sex offender Terapon Adhahn. Adhahn was sentenced to life in prison without parole earlier this year.
Over the past year more than 200 sex offenders have been placed in the GPS monitoring program at one time or another, DOC officials said.
While DOC has seen successes with GPS monitoring, some offenders have discarded or failed to charge the devices that cost $1,500 to replace. If an offender discards or fails to charge the device they will face arrest by DOC.
In addition to the GPS monitoring bracelet, offenders are given a locator box, which tracks the GPS signal and can receive text messages from DOC staff.
Offenders are told to keep the locator box charged. If the battery runs out or the offender strays more than 150 feet from the locator box, the offender's tracking device beeps; community-corrections staff members also receive an e-mail update each day, DOC officials said.
Jennifer Sullivan: 206-464-8294 or jensullivan@seattletimes.com
Information from Seattle Times archives is included in this report
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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