POSTED:
The bill was designed to help police find more than 100,000 such sex
offenders by creating the first national online listing
available to the public and searchable by ZIP code. It also called for
harsh federal punishment for sexually assaulting children, including the
possibility of the death penalty when a victim is murdered. It also increases
minimum sentences for those who travel between states.
The Senate approved the
measure on a voice vote. The House is to consider it next week, and President
George W. Bush is expected to sign the bill into law.
"Sex offenders have run rampant in this country and now Congress
and the people are ready to respond with legislation that will curtail the
ability of sex offenders to operate freely," said Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah., who authored the legislation with Sen.
Byron Dorgan, D-N.D.
"We track library books better than we track sex offenders. This
evens the score," said Rep. Mark Foley,
R-Fla., a sponsor in the House.
Debate was tearful from the
start as the Senate considered the bill named for Adam Walsh, the murdered son
of "
"This has to be
bittersweet for him," said Sen. Joe Biden,
D-Del., choking up as he made a rare reference to his infant daughter Amy,
killed in a 1972 car crash.
Child advocates have called the bill the most sweeping sex offender
legislation to target pedophiles in years. It would:
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