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Sheriff’s Office keeping eye on 89 sex offenders & one predator
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Thanks to an initiative involving Georgia’s sheriffs, 40 sex offenders were arrested and 147 warrants issued across the state during the last week of October for violations of state registration laws. In 2015, the first coordinated effort across the state was launched to conduct residence verifications and compliance checks of registered sex offenders during a specific time period. The coordinated initiative became known as Operation Watchful Eye. Considering the original initiative a success, Georgia’s sheriffs have made it an annual operation and recently conducted Operation Watchful Eye IV, Oct. 25-Nov. 1.
The Office of Sheriff is mandated by law to register sex offenders and to keep the public informed of where registered sex offenders reside, work and attend school. Throughout the year, each sheriff’s office verifies addresses provided by registered sex offenders. While conducting residence verifications, deputies also assure that additional registration requirements are being adhered to.
The Grady County Sheriff’s Office reports it has 89 registered sex offenders and one predator.
Daniel Singletary, an investigator with the Grady Sheriff’s Office, says, “We conducted 98 checks during this period. We have one warrant for registry violation and we have one offender absconded, Charles Charlie Hill, who absconded last year and we have been unable to locate him. He is being sought by our agency and the United States Marshal service.”
Statewide, preliminary reporting by 77 sheriff’s offices reveals 9,178 registered sex offenders, 240 predators and 123 homeless sex offenders are currently living in their counties. During the seven-day operation, 7,535 residence verifications were conducted, 96 new sex offenders moved into the reporting counties, 18 new warrants were issued for violations of the sex offender registry law, 13 warrants were issued for new sex offenses, 48 warrants were issued for residency violations of the sex offender registry and 28 warrants were issued for other miscellaneous new charges. More importantly, it was discovered that 190 sex offenders had absconded from their last known address, which will require the sheriff to work with other supporting agencies and track these individuals down.
The purpose of this statewide effort is to create awareness that sheriffs’ offices work collectively, network and actively engage their office by participating in statewide verification checks and other noncompliant matters. In numerous counties, deputy sheriffs, U.S. Marshals, U.S. Probation officers and Department of Community Supervision probation/parole officers worked together to verify that sex offenders comply with the law.
For more information on the whereabouts of registered sex offenders visit http://gbi.georgia.gov/georgia-sex-offender-registry
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