The city council finds that sex offenders who are required to
register as sexual predators under V.T.C.A., Code of Criminal Procedure,
ch. 62, present an extreme threat to the health, safety, and welfare
of children. It is the intent of this article to serve the city's
compelling interest to promote, protect and improve the health, safety,
and welfare of the citizens of the city by creating areas around locations
where children regularly congregate in concentrated numbers wherein
certain registered sex offenders and sexual predators are prohibited
from loitering or prohibited from establishing temporary or permanent
residency.
(Ordinance 1243 adopted 1/18/2024)
For the purpose of this article the following definitions shall
apply unless the context clearly indicates or requires a different
meaning.
Child.
Any person under the age of 17 years of age.
Child safety zone.
Premises where children commonly gather in the City of Coleman
city limits, and includes:
(1)
Any school whether public, private, or religiously affiliated;
and
(2)
Public parks or playgrounds; public libraries; amusement arcades;
video arcades; indoor and outdoor amusement centers; amusement parks,
carnivals, circuses, fairs or fairgrounds; public, commercial or semi-public
swimming pools; child care facility; public or private youth sports
athletic fields; crisis centers or shelters; skate parks or rinks;
public or private youth centers; movie theaters; bowling alleys; scouting
facilities; any public or private group, location or activity that
regularly provides athletic, civic or cultural activities that includes
as participants or recipients persons who are under the age of 17,
including, but not limited to, safe trick or treat, vacation bible
schools and other public events held primarily for the benefit of
children; or offices for child protective services, as those terms
may be defined in Texas Health and Safety Code section 481.134, as
amended, and/or chapter 42 of the Texas Human Resources Code, as amended.
Database.
The Texas Department of Public Safety's Sex Offender
Database pursuant to the Sex Offender Registration and Notification
Act, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, chapter 62, or the sex offender
registration files maintained by the sex offender registration officer
of the city police department.
Loitering.
Standing, sitting idly, whether or not the person is in a
vehicle or remaining in or around an area.
Permanent residence.
A place where the person lives, abides, lodges, or resides
for fourteen (14) or more consecutive days.
Public park or playground.
One of the following:
(1)
Any land, including improvements to the land, that is administered,
operated, or managed by the city for the use of the public as a recreational
area.
(2)
City recreational areas include, but are not limited to, conservation
areas, jogging trails, hiking trails, bicycle trails, recreational
centers, waterparks, swimming pools, football fields, soccer fields
or baseball fields.
Public way.
Any place to which the public, or a substantial group of
the public, has access and includes, but is not limited to, streets,
shopping centers, parking lots, transportation facilities, restaurants,
shops, and similar areas that are open to the use of the public.
Sex offender.
An individual who has been convicted of or placed on deferred
adjudication for a sexual offense involving a person under 17 years
of age for which the individual is required to register as a sex offender
under V.T.C.A., Code of Criminal Procedure, ch. 62.
Temporary residence.
A place where a person abides, lodges, or resides for a period
of fourteen (14) or more days in the aggregate, during any calendar
year and which is not the person's permanent address, or a place
where the person routinely abides, lodges, or resides for a period
of four (4) or more consecutive or nonconsecutive days in any month
and which is not the person's permanent residence.
(Ordinance 1243 adopted 1/18/2024)
(a)
It is an offense for a sex offender to establish a permanent
residence or temporary residence within 1,000 feet of a child safety
zone.
(b)
It is an offense for a sex offender to knowingly enter a child
safety zone.
(c)
It is an offense for a sex offender to knowingly loiter on a
public way within 300 feet of a child safety zone.
(d)
A sex offender shall not, on each October 30th and 31st, or
any other date set by the city for trick-or-treaters, between the
hours of 4:00 p.m. and 11:00 p.m., leave an exterior porch light on
or otherwise invite trick-or-treaters to solicit the premises.
(Ordinance 1243 adopted 1/18/2024)
(a)
It shall be prima facie evidence that this article applies to
such a person if that person's record appears in/on the database
and the database indicates that the victim was less than 17 years
of age.
(b)
The distance of 300 feet from a child safety zone shall be measured
on a straight line from the closest boundary of the child safety zone.
(c)
The distance of 1,000 feet from a child safety zone shall be
measured on a straight line from the closest boundary line of the
sex offender's residence to the child safety zone.
(d)
In the case of multiple residences on one property, measurement
shall be made from the nearest property line of the residences to
the nearest property line of the child safety zone.
(e)
In cases of a dispute over measured distances, it shall be incumbent
upon the person(s) challenging the measurement to prove otherwise.
(f)
A map depicting the prohibited areas shall be created by the
city and maintained by the city police department. The city shall
review the map annually for changes. Said map will be available to
the public at the city police department or available on the city
website or the city police department website.
(Ordinance 1243 adopted 1/18/2024)
The following shall be exceptions and/or affirmative defenses
to prosecution for violation of this article:
(1)
The person required to register in/on the database established
the permanent residence or temporary residence and residency has been
consistently maintained and the person has complied with all sex offender
registration laws of the state, prior to the date of the adoption
of this article.
(2)
The child safety zone, as specified herein, within 1,000 feet
of the permanent or temporary residence of the sex offender required
to register in/on the database was opened or established after the
person established the permanent or temporary residence and complied
with all sex offender registration laws of the state.
(3)
The information in/on the database is incorrect, and, if corrected,
this article would not apply to the person who was erroneously listed
in/on the database.
(4)
The person required to register in/on the database was a minor
when he or she committed the offense requiring such registration and
was not convicted as an adult.
(5)
The person required to register is required to serve a sentence
at a jail, prison, juvenile facility, or other correctional institution
located within 1,000 feet of the child safety zone.
(6)
The person required to register is under 18 years of age or
a ward under a guardianship, who resides with a parent or guardian.
(7)
The person required to register has been exempted by a court
order from registration as a sex offender under V.T.C.A., Code of
Criminal Procedure, ch. 62.
(8)
The person required to register has had the offense for which
the sex offender registration was required, reversed on appeal, or
pardoned.
(9)
The person's duty to register in/on the database has expired.
(10)
Nothing in this article shall require any person to sell or
otherwise dispose of any real estate or home acquired or owned prior
to the conviction of the person as a sex offender.
(11)
The person is otherwise preempted from this section by state
law.
(12)
It is an affirmative defense to prosecution of an offense under
this article that the sex offender was in, on, or within a specified
distance of a child safety zone for a legitimate purpose, including
transportation of a child that the sex offender is legally permitted
to be with, transportation to and from work, and other work-related
purposes.
(Ordinance 1243 adopted 1/18/2024)
A person who fails to comply with any requirement of this article
commits a class C misdemeanor punishable by a fine not less than two
hundred and fifty dollars ($250.00) and not more than five hundred
dollars ($500.00); except that:
(1)
Proof of a culpable mental state is expressly not required for
a conviction of an offense under this article, unless specifically
required in this article or state law.
(2)
Each violation is considered a separate offense.
(3)
Each day that a violation occurs is a separate offense.
(4)
In addition to the penalties described above, the city may pursue
other remedies that the city may have under state or federal law.
(Ordinance 1243 adopted 1/18/2024)