RELIEF FROM MICHIGAN\u2019S SEX OFFENDER REGISTRY<\/b>\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Being registered as a sex offender was not considered punishment. But the 2011 version of SORA found to be punishment, for some. And 2021 version of SORA is now considered punishment for \u201cnon-sex offenses.\u201d To start, Michigan\u2019s SORA makes no distinction between what happened during the commission of the crime or the individual risk of the offender. Instead, registration is based exclusively on the underlying conviction itself. MCL 28.721a (requiring a person who has committed \u201can offense covered by [SORA]\u201d to register). Mr. Lymon, for example, was convicted of (among other things) the unlawful imprisonment of two minors. But the two \u201cminors\u201d were his own children who happened to be present while Mr. Lymon confronted his wife about extramarital affairs at gunpoint. There was absolutely no sexual component to the crime. Yet unlawful imprisonment of a minor was a listed offense under SORA, and so he was registered as a sex offender. The same is true for many other individuals in Michigan who are forced to register as \u201csex\u00a0offenders\u201d based entirely on the fact that their \u201coffense [was] covered by [SORA].\u201d That ends now.<\/p>\n Relief from SORA is available for \u201cnon-sex offense\u201d registrants (by application). Michigan\u2019s ACLU continues its federal litigation against SORA on behalf of \u201cnon-sex offense\u201d registrants, but also many others.
\n<\/b>For years Michigan\u2019s sex offender registry act (SORA) was considered by courts not to impose a \u201cpunishment.\u201d In other words, if your criminal conviction happened to also require registration under SORA, that consequence didn\u2019t really \u201cpunish\u201d you; it was just a \u201ccivil remedy\u201d imposed by the state. That view has begun to change\u2014significantly and rapidly in Michigan.<\/p>\n
\n<\/b>Just last year, our Supreme Court decided Betts<\/i>[1] which found that retroactive application of the 2011 version of SORA was, in fact, punishment. The Court found that some of the 2011 changes to SORA violated the Constitutions\u2019 prohibitions against cruel and\/or unusual punishment[2]. This was good news for some. In particular, those individuals who were registered before the 2011 changes. Betts <\/i>offered some relief[3].<\/p>\n
\n<\/b>Most recently, in June 2022, our Court of Appeals in Lymon<\/i>[4] concluded that even the newest, 2021 version of SORA (passed largely in response to the changing legal landscape), was punishment for individuals who were registered on the basis of a \u201cnon-sex offense\u201d conviction. What does that mean?\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n
\n<\/b>Lymon <\/i>is an important development for anyone who finds themself registered today under SORA on the basis of a non-sex offense conviction. Because the law now says that sex offender registration is cruel or unusual when applied to individuals convicted of crimes that lack a sexual component and are not sexual in nature[5]. As a result, any person who finds themself registered only the basis of their \u201cnon-sex offense\u201dconviction can (and should) now petition the court where the conviction occurred for immediate removal from the registry[6].<\/p>\n
\n<\/b>The recent developments in the way Michigan courts have begun to treat SORA registration (as punishment) is largely based on a series of federal suits brought by the ACLU on behalf of unnamed registrants (\u201cDoes\u201d). Starting in Does I <\/i>(the first round of litigation), in 2016 a federal court in the eastern district of Michigan found portions of Michigan\u2019s SORA unconstitutional. Does II <\/i>followed. Does III <\/i>is now being litigated on behalf of several subclasses of Does<\/em>. One of those subclasses includes: a \u2018\u201cnon-sex-offense subclass,\u201d defined as members of the primary class who are or will be subject to registration for an offense without a sexual component\u2026\u201d\u2019 Sound familiar? Without addressing how Lymon<\/i> impacts Does III<\/i>, there are still a number of other subclasses for which the ACLU seeks relief.<\/p>\n