Virginia law allows some individuals on the Virginia Sex Offender Registry to be removed from the registry. Below you will find the eligibility requirements and how the removal process and works in Virginia.
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Virginia has roughly 26,000 people on the sex offender registry. The vast majority of these people are low level offenders who have never and likely will never reoffend. For these people, Virginia provides a pathway to petition the court to come off the registry after a certain amount of time has passed. If you are also need of solution for sex offender register removal case, get the legal add from an experienced criminal defense lawyer.
Virginia Code § 9.1-910 details who can and who cannot be removed from the registry. People convicted of a sexually violent offense can never be removed from the registry. This includes rape, forcible sodomy, sexual penetration with an object, and abduction for an immoral purpose. Virginia law also excludes people who have the following from coming off the registry:
Virginia law allows Tier I and Tier II to be removed from the registry; however, Tier II offenders must wait longer. Virginia law allows people convicted of a Tier I offense to petition the court to be removed from the registry 15 years after the initial registration date or, if later, the date of conviction for a violation of § 18.2-472.1. Virginia Code § 18.2.472.1 generally concerns registry violations.
For Tier II offenders, one must wait at least 25 years from the date of initial registration or, if later, the date of his last conviction for a violation of § 18.2-472.1 or any felony.
In addition, an individual on the registry cannot file a petition for removal until all counseling, treatment, and restitution has been paid completed.
Eligible individuals on Virginia’s sex offender registry can file a petition in the circuit court where the conviction occurred or where he resides, requesting that his name be removed from the registry. The circuit court will obtain the individual’s criminal history from the registry and then hold an evidentiary hearing on the matter.
The individual, and any interested persons, can call witnesses and introduce evidence at the hearing. The Commonwealth is also made a party to the petition and can either consent to the petition or argue why it has objections to the individual being removed. To come off the registry, the judge must be satisfied that the person does not pose a risk to public safety.
If the judge orders that the individual be removed from the registry, the State Police will remove the person and his identifying information from the registry. It should be noted that this removal only applies to Virginia. If a person moves out of Virginia or travels outside of Virginia, he will be subject to that State’s laws, which may still require registration.
While each case is different, there are a number of things that you can do to increase the odds of being removed:
There have not been many appellate court cases interpreting Virginia’s removal law. In Tuthill v. Commonwealth, 75 Va. App. 550 (2022), the Court found that a Tier I defendant was ineligible for removal where he was convicted of two offenses that stemmed from a single five-minute episode. And in Esposito v. Virginia State Police, 74 Va. App. 130 (2022), the Court ruled that the police cannot remove someone’s name from the registry without an order from a circuit court after a petition and hearing.
Johnson/Citronberg has offices in Alexandria and Charlottesville, and we represent clients across Virginia. If you are looking for a compassionate, experienced, results-driven lawyer, give us a call at 855-959-4003.