Pesky little suckers. Not letting me litigate the issue of an unconstitutional imposition of lifetime community parole.
About a week after he was released, I got a call from his parole officer. "He has absconded," she told me. "He is in violation of his parole."
I haven't heard from him since his release. To my knowledge, he hasn't turned up yet.
I wish him well.
* * *
Post Script. What this means is that if he does turn up, I'll have another issue to litigate. He was already violated once. Another violation would place him in jail for six months instead of thirty days. And so the issue the next time around will be appealing the first violation as unconstitutional on the basis that the only basis for the purported violation the first time around was his homelessness.
2 comments:
It's funny how you call him "my sex offender." Like if you have your very own personal sex offender!
Well, apparently no one else is claiming him, thus resulting in his initial homelessness. Right?
Oh wait, I forgot, the state reserves the right to house and claim sex offenders "for the good of the community." Those pesky civil rights.
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