Florida Senate - 2026                                    SB 1332
       
       
        
       By Senator Martin
       
       
       
       
       
       33-00689D-26                                          20261332__
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to career offender registration;
    3         amending s. 322.141, F.S.; requiring a certain driver
    4         license or identification marking for a career
    5         offender; requiring a career offender to report to the
    6         Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles in a
    7         certain month to obtain an updated or renewed driver
    8         license or identification card; amending s. 775.261,
    9         F.S.; providing and revising definitions; providing
   10         that if a sanction is not imposed upon a career
   11         offender, such offender is deemed to have been
   12         released upon conviction; requiring a career offender
   13         to report in person at the sheriff’s office for
   14         initial registration; revising the time of such
   15         report; revising information and documentation
   16         required upon initial registration; specifying that
   17         information and documents are provided to the
   18         Department of Law Enforcement through the sheriff’s
   19         office; specifying the manner in which changes to a
   20         career offender’s information must be reported;
   21         requiring certain career offenders to report to the
   22         Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles and
   23         obtain a driver license or identification card
   24         containing a required marking within a certain period
   25         of time; revising the information and documentation
   26         certain career offenders must provide to the
   27         Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles when
   28         reporting; requiring a career offender to report
   29         changes to any information provided upon initial
   30         registration within certain periods of time; requiring
   31         the custodian of a jail to notify the Department of
   32         Law Enforcement within a certain period of time if
   33         such custodian has a career offender in his or her
   34         custody and upon release of such offender; requiring
   35         such custodian to take a digitized photograph of the
   36         career offender and provide it to the Department of
   37         Law Enforcement; requiring the custodian to notify the
   38         Department of Law Enforcement if a career offender
   39         escapes or dies; specifying the procedure for a career
   40         offender to establish a residence after initial
   41         registration; requiring the Department of Highway
   42         Safety and Motor Vehicles to forward photographs and
   43         certain information to the Department of Law
   44         Enforcement and the Department of Corrections;
   45         authorizing the Department of Highway Safety and Motor
   46         Vehicles to release certain images to the Department
   47         of Law Enforcement for purposes of public
   48         notification; requiring that certain career offenders
   49         report changes to certain information to the sheriff’s
   50         office within a certain period of time; requiring a
   51         career offender to report an in-state travel residence
   52         within a certain period of time; requiring a career
   53         offender who vacates a residence and does not
   54         establish another residence to report certain
   55         information in person within a certain period of time;
   56         requiring a career offender who remains at an address
   57         that such offender previously reported he or she was
   58         vacating to report such information in person within a
   59         certain period of time; requiring the sheriff’s office
   60         to report such information to the Department of Law
   61         Enforcement; removing a provision relating to the
   62         registration of a career offender at an office of the
   63         Department of Law Enforcement; revising procedures for
   64         establishing a residence outside this state; requiring
   65         a career offender to report previously unknown travel
   66         in person to the sheriff’s office as soon as possible
   67         before departure; revising the entities to which the
   68         career offender must provide certain residence
   69         information; requiring annual reregistration of career
   70         offenders during a certain month; specifying
   71         information that a career offender must provide upon
   72         reregistration; requiring the sheriff’s office to
   73         electronically submit to and update with the
   74         Department of Law Enforcement such information within
   75         a specified timeframe; requiring certain governmental
   76         entities to verify certain career offender information
   77         at least once per year; requiring local law
   78         enforcement agencies to report to the Department of
   79         Law Enforcement failure by a career offender to comply
   80         with registration requirements; providing that certain
   81         career offenders shall be considered for removal of
   82         registration requirements in certain circumstances;
   83         revising the location in which a career offender may
   84         petition for such removal; requiring notice to the
   85         Department of Law Enforcement of such petition within
   86         a certain time period; authorizing the Department of
   87         Law Enforcement to present evidence in opposition to
   88         removal; revising the circumstances in which a sheriff
   89         or chief of police may notify the community of the
   90         presence of a career offender; prohibiting the
   91         Department of Law Enforcement from publicly displaying
   92         information about a vehicle owned by a person who is
   93         not required to register as a career offender;
   94         revising the manner in which career offender addresses
   95         are verified and reported by law enforcement agencies;
   96         expanding circumstances under which a failure to
   97         report can result in a criminal offense; providing
   98         that a career offender commits a separate offense for
   99         each failure to register or report a piece of
  100         information; expanding the jurisdictions in which a
  101         career offender may be prosecuted for an act or
  102         omission; specifying what events constitute actual
  103         notice of the duty to register; providing that the
  104         failure to immediately register upon the occurrence of
  105         such events is grounds for a subsequent charge of
  106         failure to register; restricting a career offender
  107         from claiming a lack of notice as a defense in certain
  108         circumstances; enhancing the penalty for assisting in
  109         career offender noncompliance; amending s. 944.608,
  110         F.S.; defining terms; requiring certain career
  111         offenders under the supervision of the Department of
  112         Corrections to provide certain information after
  113         sentencing; requiring the Department of Corrections to
  114         report to the Department of Law Enforcement any
  115         failure of a career offender to comply with
  116         registration requirements; requiring a career offender
  117         to report to the sheriff’s office any vehicle changes
  118         within a certain period of time; revising the
  119         information the Department of Corrections is required
  120         to provide to the Department of Law Enforcement
  121         relating to career offenders; requiring the custodian
  122         of a jail to notify the Department of Law Enforcement
  123         within a certain period of time if such custodian has
  124         a career offender in his or her custody and upon
  125         release of such offender; requiring such custodian to
  126         take a digitized photograph of the career offender and
  127         provide it to the Department of Law Enforcement;
  128         providing that a federal agency responsible for
  129         supervising a career offender may forward certain
  130         information about the offender to the Department of
  131         Law Enforcement; providing that such federal agency
  132         may indicate whether use of the information is
  133         restricted to law enforcement purposes only or may be
  134         used for purposes of public notification; requiring a
  135         certain driver license or identification marking for a
  136         career offender who is under supervision but is not
  137         incarcerated; expanding the jurisdictions in which a
  138         career offender may be prosecuted for an act or
  139         omission; specifying what events constitute actual
  140         notice of the duty to register; providing that the
  141         failure to immediately register upon the occurrence of
  142         such events is grounds for a subsequent charge of
  143         failure to register; restricting a career offender
  144         from claiming a lack of notice as a defense in certain
  145         circumstances; creating offenses and penalties for
  146         assisting in career offender noncompliance with
  147         provisions relating to notification to the Department
  148         of Law Enforcement; specifying that such offenses and
  149         penalties do not apply if a career offender is
  150         incarcerated in or is in the custody of certain
  151         facilities; requiring annual reregistration of career
  152         offenders during a certain month; specifying
  153         information that a career offender must provide upon
  154         reregistration; providing penalties; requiring the
  155         sheriff’s office to electronically submit to and
  156         update with the Department of Law Enforcement such
  157         information within a specified timeframe; amending s.
  158         944.609, F.S.; defining terms; providing legislative
  159         findings; specifying information the Department of
  160         Corrections must provide upon release of a career
  161         offender within a certain period of time; requiring
  162         the Department of Corrections or any law enforcement
  163         agency to notify the community of the presence of a
  164         sexual predator in the community when a career
  165         offender who is also designated as a sexual predator
  166         is in such community; providing an effective date.
  167          
  168  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
  169  
  170         Section 1. Subsections (3) and (4) of section 322.141,
  171  Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  172         322.141 Color or markings of certain licenses or
  173  identification cards.—
  174         (3) All licenses for the operation of motor vehicles or
  175  identification cards originally issued or reissued by the
  176  department to persons who are designated as sexual predators
  177  under s. 775.21 or subject to registration as sexual offenders
  178  under s. 943.0435 or s. 944.607, or who have a similar
  179  designation or are subject to a similar registration under the
  180  laws of another jurisdiction, or who are designated as career
  181  offenders under s. 775.261 or s. 944.608, shall have on the
  182  front of the license or identification card the following:
  183         (a) For a person designated as a sexual predator under s.
  184  775.21 or who has a similar designation under the laws of
  185  another jurisdiction, the marking “SEXUAL PREDATOR.”
  186         (b) For a person subject to registration as a sexual
  187  offender under s. 943.0435 or s. 944.607, or subject to a
  188  similar registration under the laws of another jurisdiction, the
  189  marking “943.0435, F.S.”
  190         (c)For a person designated as a career offender under s.
  191  775.261 or s. 944.608, the marking “775.261, F.S.”
  192         (4)(a) Unless previously secured or updated, each sexual
  193  offender and sexual predator shall report to the department
  194  during the month of his or her reregistration as required under
  195  s. 775.21(8), s. 943.0435(14), or s. 944.607(13) in order to
  196  obtain an updated or renewed driver license or identification
  197  card as required by subsection (3).
  198         (b)Unless previously secured or updated as required by
  199  subsection (3), each career offender shall report to the
  200  department during the month of his or her birth in order to
  201  obtain an updated or renewed driver license or identification
  202  card as required by subsection (3).
  203         Section 2. Section 775.261, Florida Statutes, is amended to
  204  read:
  205         775.261 The Florida Career Offender Registration Act.—
  206         (1) SHORT TITLE.—This section may be cited as “The Florida
  207  Career Offender Registration Act.”
  208         (2) DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section, the term:
  209         (a) “Career offender” means any person who is designated as
  210  a habitual violent felony offender, a violent career criminal,
  211  or a three-time violent felony offender under s. 775.084 or as a
  212  prison releasee reoffender under s. 775.082(9).
  213         (b) “Chief of police” means the chief law enforcement
  214  officer of a municipality.
  215         (c) “Community” means any county where the career offender
  216  lives or otherwise establishes or maintains a permanent,
  217  temporary, or transient permanent residence.
  218         (d) “Department” means the Department of Law Enforcement.
  219         (e) “Entering the county” includes being discharged from a
  220  correctional facility, jail, or secure treatment facility within
  221  the county or being under supervision within the county with a
  222  career-offender designation as specified in paragraph (a).
  223         (f) “Permanent residence” means a place where the career
  224  offender abides, lodges, or resides for 3 14 or more consecutive
  225  days that is the person’s home or other place where the person
  226  primarily lives. For the purpose of calculating a permanent
  227  residence under this paragraph, the first day that a career
  228  offender abides, lodges, or resides at a place is excluded and
  229  each subsequent day is counted. A day includes any part of a
  230  calendar day.
  231         (g)“Professional license” means the document of
  232  authorization or certification issued by an agency of this state
  233  for a regulatory purpose, or by any similar agency in another
  234  jurisdiction for a regulatory purpose, to a person to engage in
  235  an occupation or to carry out a trade or business.
  236         (h)1.(g) “Temporary residence” means:
  237         1. a place where the career offender abides, lodges, or
  238  resides, including, but not limited to, vacation, business, or
  239  personal travel destinations in or out of this state, for 3 a
  240  period of 14 or more days in the aggregate during any calendar
  241  year that and which is not the person’s career offender’s
  242  permanent or transient residence. The term includes an in-state
  243  travel residence. address;
  244         2. For a career offender whose permanent residence is not
  245  in this state, the term also includes a place where the career
  246  offender is employed, practices a vocation, or is enrolled as a
  247  student for any period of time in this state. For the purpose of
  248  calculating a temporary residence under this paragraph, the
  249  first day that a career offender abides, lodges, or resides at a
  250  place is excluded and each subsequent day is counted. A day
  251  includes any part of a calendar day.; or
  252         2.The term includes an “in-state travel residence,” which
  253  means a temporary residence in this state established by a
  254  person who already has an existing permanent, temporary, or
  255  transient residence in this state.
  256         3.A place where the career offender routinely abides,
  257  lodges, or resides for a period of 4 or more consecutive or
  258  nonconsecutive days in any month and which is not the career
  259  offender’s permanent residence, including any out-of-state
  260  address.
  261         (i)“Transient residence” means a county where the career
  262  offender lives, remains, or is located for the purpose of
  263  abiding, lodging, or residing for a period of 3 or more days in
  264  the aggregate during a calendar year that is not the person’s
  265  permanent or temporary residence. The term includes, but is not
  266  limited to, a place where the career offender sleeps or seeks
  267  shelter and a location that has no specific street address. For
  268  the purpose of calculating a day under this paragraph, the first
  269  day that a career offender lives, remains, or is located in a
  270  county for the purpose of abiding, lodging, or residing is
  271  excluded and each subsequent day is counted. A day includes any
  272  part of a calendar day.
  273         (j)“Vehicles owned” means any motor vehicle as defined in
  274  s. 320.01 which is registered, coregistered, leased, titled, or
  275  rented by a career offender; a rented vehicle that a career
  276  offender is authorized to drive; or a vehicle for which a career
  277  offender is insured as a driver. The term also includes any
  278  motor vehicle as defined in s. 320.01 which is registered,
  279  coregistered, leased, titled, or rented by a person or persons
  280  residing at a career offender’s permanent residence for 5 or
  281  more consecutive days.
  282         (3) CRITERIA FOR REGISTRATION AS A CAREER OFFENDER.—
  283         (a) A career offender released on or after July 1, 2002,
  284  from a sanction imposed in this state must register as required
  285  under this section subsection (4) and is subject to community
  286  and public notification as provided under subsection (11) (5).
  287  If no sanction is imposed, the person is deemed to be released
  288  upon conviction. For purposes of this section, a sanction
  289  imposed in this state means includes, but is not limited to, a
  290  fine, probation, community control, parole, conditional release,
  291  control release, or incarceration in a state prison, federal
  292  prison, contractor-operated correctional facility, or local
  293  detention facility, and:
  294         1. The career offender has not received a pardon for any
  295  felony or other qualified offense that is necessary for the
  296  operation of this paragraph; or
  297         2. A conviction of a felony or other qualified offense
  298  necessary to the operation of this paragraph has not been set
  299  aside in any postconviction proceeding.
  300         (b) This section does not apply to any person who has been
  301  designated as a sexual predator and who is required to register
  302  under s. 775.21 or who is required to register as a sexual
  303  offender under s. 943.0435 or s. 944.607. However, if a person
  304  is no longer required to register as a sexual predator under s.
  305  775.21 or as a sexual offender under s. 943.0435 or s. 944.607,
  306  the person must register as a career offender under this section
  307  if the person is otherwise designated as a career offender as
  308  provided in this section.
  309         (c) A person subject to registration as a career offender
  310  is not subject to registration as a convicted felon under s.
  311  775.13. However, if the person is no longer required to register
  312  as a career offender under this section, the person must
  313  register under s. 775.13 if required to do so under that
  314  section.
  315         (d) If a career offender is not sentenced to a term of
  316  imprisonment, the clerk of the court shall ensure that the
  317  career offender’s fingerprints are taken and forwarded to the
  318  department within 48 hours after the court renders its finding
  319  that an offender is a career offender. The fingerprints shall be
  320  clearly marked, “Career Offender Registration.”
  321         (4) INITIAL REGISTRATION.—Upon initial registration, a
  322  career offender shall:
  323         (a) Report in person at A career offender must register
  324  with the department by providing the following information to
  325  the department, or to the sheriff’s office:
  326         1. In the county in which the career offender establishes
  327  or maintains a permanent, or temporary, or transient residence,
  328  within 48 hours 2 working days after:
  329         a. Establishing a permanent, or temporary, or transient
  330  residence in this state; or
  331         b.Within 2 working days after Being released from the
  332  custody, control, or supervision of the Department of
  333  Corrections or from the custody of a contractor-operated
  334  correctional facility or local detention facility; or:
  335         2.In the county where he or she was convicted within 48
  336  hours after being convicted for a qualifying offense for
  337  registration under this section if the offender is not in the
  338  custody or control of, or under the supervision of, the
  339  Department of Corrections, or is not in the custody of a
  340  contractor-operated correctional facility or local detention
  341  facility.
  342         (b)1. Provide his or her name;, social security number;,
  343  age, race; sex;, gender, date of birth;, height;, weight;, hair
  344  and eye color; tattoos or other identifying marks; fingerprints;
  345  palm prints;, photograph;, employment information, including
  346  occupation, business name, employment address, and telephone
  347  number; address of permanent or legal residence and address of
  348  any current temporary residence, within the state or out of
  349  state, including a rural route address and or a post office box;
  350  if he or she has no permanent or temporary address, any
  351  transient residence within this state; address, location or
  352  description, and dates of any current or known future temporary
  353  residence within this state or out of state; the make, model,
  354  color, vehicle identification number (VIN), and license tag
  355  number of all vehicles owned; all home telephone numbers and
  356  cellular telephone numbers;, date and place of any employment,
  357  date and place of each conviction;, fingerprints, and a brief
  358  description of the crime or crimes committed by the career
  359  offender. A career offender may not provide a post office box
  360  may not be provided in lieu of a physical residential address.
  361  The career offender shall also produce his or her passport, if
  362  he or she has a passport, and, if he or she is an alien, shall
  363  produce or provide information about documents establishing his
  364  or her immigration status. The career offender shall also
  365  provide information about any professional licenses he or she
  366  has.
  367         2. If the career offender’s place of residence is a motor
  368  vehicle, trailer, mobile home, or manufactured home, as those
  369  terms are defined in chapter 320, the career offender shall also
  370  provide to the department through the sheriff’s office written
  371  notice of the vehicle identification number (VIN); the license
  372  tag number; the registration number; and a description,
  373  including color scheme, of the motor vehicle, trailer, mobile
  374  home, or manufactured home. If a career offender’s place of
  375  residence is a vessel, live-aboard vessel, or houseboat, as
  376  those terms are defined in chapter 327, the career offender
  377  shall also provide to the department through the sheriff’s
  378  office written notice of the hull identification number; the
  379  manufacturer’s serial number; the name of the vessel, live
  380  aboard vessel, or houseboat; the registration number of the
  381  vessel, live-aboard vessel, or houseboat; and a description,
  382  including color scheme, of the vessel, live-aboard vessel, or
  383  houseboat.
  384         3.Any change in any of the information required to be
  385  provided pursuant to this paragraph, including, but not limited
  386  to, any change in the career offender’s permanent, temporary, or
  387  transient residence; name; home telephone numbers and cellular
  388  telephone numbers; employment information; and vehicles owned
  389  after the career offender reports in person at the sheriff’s
  390  office must be reported in the manner provided in subsections
  391  (5)-(8).
  392         (c)2.Provide any other information determined necessary by
  393  the department, including criminal and corrections records;
  394  nonprivileged personnel and treatment records; and evidentiary
  395  genetic markers, when available. When
  396         (b)If a career offender registers with the sheriff’s
  397  office, the sheriff shall take a photograph, and a set of
  398  fingerprints, and palm prints of the career offender and forward
  399  the photographs, and fingerprints, and palm prints to the
  400  department, along with the information that the career offender
  401  is required to provide pursuant to this section. The sheriff
  402  shall promptly provide to the department the information
  403  received from the career offender.
  404         (d)(c) Within 48 hours 2 working days after the report
  405  registration required under this subsection paragraph (a), a
  406  career offender who is not incarcerated and who resides in the
  407  community, including a career offender under the supervision of
  408  the Department of Corrections pursuant to s. 944.608, shall
  409  report register in person at a driver license office of the
  410  Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, unless a driver
  411  license or identification card that complies with s. 322.141(3)
  412  was previously secured or updated under s. 944.608 and shall
  413  present proof of registration. At the driver license office, the
  414  career offender shall:
  415         1. If otherwise qualified, secure a Florida driver license,
  416  renew a Florida driver license, or secure an identification
  417  card. The career offender shall identify himself or herself as a
  418  career offender who is required to comply with this section and
  419  shall provide proof that the career offender reported as
  420  required in this subsection. The career offender shall provide
  421  any of the information specified in this subsection, if
  422  requested. The career offender shall submit to the taking of a
  423  photograph for use in issuing a driver license, renewed license,
  424  or identification card, and for use by the department in
  425  maintaining current records of career offenders, provide his or
  426  her place of permanent or temporary residence, including a rural
  427  route address or a post office box, and submit to the taking of
  428  a photograph for use in issuing a driver license, renewed
  429  license, or identification card, and for use by the department
  430  in maintaining current records of career offenders. The career
  431  offender may not provide a post office box in lieu of a physical
  432  residential address. If the career offender’s place of residence
  433  is a motor vehicle, trailer, mobile home, or manufactured home,
  434  as defined in chapter 320, the career offender shall also
  435  provide to the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles
  436  the vehicle identification number; the license tag number; the
  437  motor vehicle registration number; and a description, including
  438  color scheme, of the motor vehicle, trailer, mobile home, or
  439  manufactured home. If a career offender’s place of residence is
  440  a vessel, live-aboard vessel, or houseboat, as defined in
  441  chapter 327, the career offender shall also provide to the
  442  Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles the hull
  443  identification number; the manufacturer’s serial number; the
  444  name of the vessel, live-aboard vessel, or houseboat; the
  445  registration number; and a description, including color scheme,
  446  of the vessel, live-aboard vessel, or houseboat.
  447         2. Pay the costs assessed by the Department of Highway
  448  Safety and Motor Vehicles for issuing or renewing a driver
  449  license or identification card as required by this section. The
  450  driver license or identification card issued must be in
  451  compliance with s. 322.141(3).
  452         3. Provide, upon request, any additional information
  453  necessary to confirm the identity of the career offender,
  454  including a set of fingerprints.
  455         (5)MAINTAINING REGISTRATION.—
  456         (a)(d) Each time a career offender’s driver license or
  457  identification card is subject to renewal, and, without regard
  458  to the status of the career offender’s driver license or
  459  identification card, within 48 hours 2 working days after any
  460  change of the career offender’s residence or change in the
  461  career offender’s name by reason of marriage or other legal
  462  process, the career offender must report in person to a driver
  463  license office, and shall be subject to the requirements
  464  specified in paragraph (4)(d) (c). The Department of Highway
  465  Safety and Motor Vehicles shall forward to the department and to
  466  the Department of Corrections all photographs and information
  467  provided by career offenders. Notwithstanding the restrictions
  468  set forth in s. 322.142, the Department of Highway Safety and
  469  Motor Vehicles may release a reproduction of a color-photograph
  470  or digital-image license to the department for purposes of
  471  public notification of career offenders as provided in this
  472  section and ss. 775.26 and 944.609. A career offender who is
  473  unable to secure or update a driver license or an identification
  474  card with the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles as
  475  provided in paragraph (4)(d) and this subsection shall report
  476  any change in the career offender’s name by reason of marriage
  477  or other legal process within 48 hours after the change in
  478  person to the sheriff’s office in the county where the career
  479  offender resides or is located. The reporting requirements under
  480  this paragraph do not negate the requirement for a career
  481  offender to obtain a Florida driver license or an identification
  482  card as required in this section.
  483         (b)A career offender shall report in person to the
  484  sheriff’s office within 48 hours after any change in vehicles
  485  owned to report those vehicle information changes.
  486         (c)A career offender shall register all changes to his or
  487  her home telephone numbers and cellular telephone numbers,
  488  including added and deleted numbers, and all changes to
  489  employment information, including the creation of a new business
  490  if self-employed, in person at the sheriff’s office, or in
  491  person at the Department of Corrections if the career offender
  492  is in the custody or control, or under the supervision, of the
  493  Department of Corrections. All changes required to be reported
  494  under this paragraph must be reported within 48 hours after the
  495  change.
  496         (d)If the career offender is in the custody of a local
  497  jail, the custodian of the local jail shall notify the
  498  department within 3 business days after intake of the career
  499  offender for any reason and upon release. The custodian of the
  500  local jail shall also take a digitized photograph of the career
  501  offender while the career offender remains in custody and shall
  502  provide the digitized photograph to the department. The
  503  custodian shall notify the department if the career offender
  504  escapes from custody or dies.
  505         (6)ESTABLISHING A RESIDENCE WITHIN THIS STATE AFTER
  506  INITIAL REGISTRATION.—
  507         (a)Each time a career offender’s driver license or
  508  identification card is subject to renewal, and, without regard
  509  to the status of the career offender’s driver license or
  510  identification card, within 48 hours after any change in the
  511  career offender’s permanent, temporary, or transient residence,
  512  the career offender must report in person to a driver license
  513  office and shall be subject to the requirements specified in
  514  paragraph (4)(d). The Department of Highway Safety and Motor
  515  Vehicles shall forward to the department and to the Department
  516  of Corrections all photographs and information provided by
  517  career offenders. Notwithstanding the restrictions set forth in
  518  s. 322.142, the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles
  519  may release a reproduction of a color-photograph or digital
  520  image license to the department for purposes of public
  521  notification of career offenders as provided in this section and
  522  ss. 775.26 and 944.609. A career offender who is unable to
  523  secure or update a driver license or an identification card with
  524  the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles as provided
  525  in paragraph (4)(d) and this subsection shall report any change
  526  in the career offender’s permanent, temporary, or transient
  527  residence within 48 hours after the change in person to the
  528  sheriff’s office in the county where the career offender resides
  529  or is located. The reporting requirements under this paragraph
  530  do not negate the requirement for a career offender to obtain a
  531  Florida driver license or an identification card as required in
  532  this section. This paragraph does not apply to an in-state
  533  travel residence.
  534         (b)A career offender shall report an in-state travel
  535  residence within 48 hours after establishing the residence. The
  536  report shall be made in person at the sheriff’s office in the
  537  county in which the career offender is located, or in person at
  538  the Department of Corrections if the career offender is in the
  539  custody or control, or under the supervision of, the Department
  540  of Corrections.
  541         (c)A career offender who vacates a permanent, temporary,
  542  or transient residence and fails to establish or maintain
  543  another permanent, temporary, or transient residence shall,
  544  within 48 hours after vacating the permanent, temporary, or
  545  transient residence, report in person to the sheriff’s office of
  546  the county in which he or she is located. The career offender
  547  shall specify the date upon which he or she intends to or did
  548  vacate such residence. The career offender must provide or
  549  update all of the registration information required under
  550  paragraph (4)(b). The career offender must provide an address
  551  for the residence or other place where he or she is or will be
  552  located during the time in which he or she fails to establish or
  553  maintain a permanent, temporary, or transient residence.
  554         (d)A career offender who remains at a permanent,
  555  temporary, or transient residence after reporting his or her
  556  intent to vacate such residence shall, within 48 hours after the
  557  date upon which the career offender indicated he or she would or
  558  did vacate such residence, report in person to the agency to
  559  which he or she reported pursuant to paragraph (c) for the
  560  purpose of reporting his or her address at such residence. When
  561  the sheriff receives the report, the sheriff shall promptly
  562  provide the information to the department. An offender who makes
  563  a report as required under paragraph (c) but fails to make a
  564  report as required under this paragraph commits a felony of the
  565  second degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083,
  566  or s. 775.084.
  567         (7)ESTABLISHING A NON-FLORIDA RESIDENCE.—
  568         (e)If the career offender registers at an office of the
  569  department, the department must notify the sheriff and, if
  570  applicable, the police chief of the municipality, where the
  571  career offender maintains a residence within 48 hours after the
  572  career offender registers with the department.
  573         (a)(f) A career offender who intends to establish a
  574  permanent, temporary, or transient residence in another state or
  575  jurisdiction other than the State of Florida shall report in
  576  person to the sheriff of the county of current residence at
  577  least 48 hours or the department within 2 working days before
  578  the date he or she intends to leave this state to establish
  579  residence in another state or jurisdiction other than the State
  580  of Florida. Any travel that is not known by the career offender
  581  48 hours before he or she intends to establish a residence in
  582  another state or jurisdiction must be reported in person to the
  583  sheriff’s office as soon as possible before departure. If the
  584  career offender is under the supervision of the Department of
  585  Corrections, the career offender shall notify the supervising
  586  probation officer of his or her intent to transfer supervision,
  587  satisfy all transfer requirements pursuant to the Interstate
  588  Compact for Supervision of Adult Offenders, as provided in s.
  589  949.07, and abide by the decision of the receiving jurisdiction
  590  to accept or deny transfer. The career offender must provide to
  591  the sheriff or department the address, municipality, county, and
  592  state or jurisdiction of intended residence. The sheriff shall
  593  promptly provide to the department the information received from
  594  the career offender. The failure of a career offender to provide
  595  his or her intended place of residence is punishable as provided
  596  in subsection (13) (8).
  597         (b)(g) A career offender who indicates his or her intent to
  598  establish a permanent, temporary, or transient residence reside
  599  in another a state or jurisdiction other than the State of
  600  Florida and later decides to remain in this state shall, within
  601  48 hours 2 working days after the date upon which the career
  602  offender indicated he or she would leave this state, report in
  603  person to the sheriff’s office sheriff or the department,
  604  whichever agency is the agency to which the career offender
  605  reported the intended change of permanent, temporary, or
  606  transient residence and report, of his or her intent to remain
  607  in this state. If the sheriff is notified by the career offender
  608  that he or she intends to remain in this state, The sheriff
  609  shall promptly report this information to the department. A
  610  career offender who reports his or her intent to establish a
  611  permanent, temporary, or transient residence reside in another a
  612  state or jurisdiction other than the State of Florida, but who
  613  remains in this state without reporting to the sheriff or the
  614  department in the manner required by this paragraph, commits a
  615  felony of the second degree, punishable as provided in s.
  616  775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084.
  617         (8)ANNUAL REREGISTRATION REQUIREMENT.—
  618         (a)A career offender must report in person each year
  619  during the month of the career offender’s birthday to the
  620  sheriff’s office in the county in which he or she maintains a
  621  permanent, temporary, or transient residence or is otherwise
  622  located to reregister.
  623         (b)The sheriff’s office may determine the appropriate
  624  times and days for reporting by the career offender, which must
  625  be consistent with the reporting requirements of this
  626  subsection. Reregistration must include any changes to the
  627  following information:
  628         1.Name; social security number; race; sex; date of birth;
  629  height; weight; hair and eye color; tattoos or other identifying
  630  marks; fingerprints; palm prints; photograph; employment
  631  information, including occupation, business name, employment
  632  address, and telephone number; address of permanent residence
  633  and address of any current temporary residence, within the state
  634  or out of state, including a rural route address and a post
  635  office box; if he or she has no permanent or temporary address,
  636  any transient residence within this state; address, location or
  637  description, and dates of any current or known future temporary
  638  residence within the state or out of state; the make, model,
  639  color, vehicle identification number (VIN), and license tag
  640  number of all vehicles owned; and all home telephone numbers and
  641  cellular telephone numbers. A post office box may not be
  642  provided in lieu of a physical residential address. The career
  643  offender shall also produce his or her passport, if he or she
  644  has a passport, and, if he or she is an alien, shall produce or
  645  provide information about documents establishing his or her
  646  immigration status. The career offender shall also provide
  647  information about any professional licenses he or she has.
  648         2.If the career offender’s place of residence is a motor
  649  vehicle, trailer, mobile home, or manufactured home, as those
  650  terms are defined in chapter 320, the career offender shall also
  651  provide the vehicle identification number (VIN); the license tag
  652  number; the registration number; and a description, including
  653  color scheme, of the motor vehicle, trailer, mobile home, or
  654  manufactured home. If the career offender’s place of residence
  655  is a vessel, live-aboard vessel, or houseboat, as those terms
  656  are defined in chapter 327, the career offender shall also
  657  provide the hull identification number; the manufacturer’s
  658  serial number; the name of the vessel, live-aboard vessel, or
  659  houseboat; the registration number of the vessel, live-aboard
  660  vessel, or houseboat; and a description, including color scheme,
  661  of the vessel, live-aboard vessel, or houseboat.
  662         (c)The sheriff’s office shall electronically submit to and
  663  update with the department, in a manner prescribed by the
  664  department, all such information provided by the career offender
  665  within 2 business days after the career offender provides it to
  666  the sheriff’s office.
  667         (9)VERIFICATION.—County and local law enforcement
  668  agencies, in conjunction with the department, shall verify the
  669  addresses of career offenders who are not under the care,
  670  custody, control, or supervision of the Department of
  671  Corrections at least one time per calendar year, and may verify
  672  the addresses of career offenders who are under the care,
  673  custody, control, or supervision of the Department of
  674  Corrections. Local law enforcement agencies shall report to the
  675  department any failure by a career offender to comply with
  676  registration requirements.
  677         (h)1.The department shall maintain online computer access
  678  to the current information regarding each registered career
  679  offender. The department must maintain hotline access so that
  680  state, local, and federal law enforcement agencies may obtain
  681  instantaneous locator file and criminal characteristics
  682  information on release and registration of career offenders for
  683  purposes of monitoring, tracking, and prosecution. The
  684  photograph and fingerprints need not be stored in a computerized
  685  format.
  686         2.The department’s career offender registration list,
  687  containing the information described in subparagraph (a)1., is a
  688  public record. The department may disseminate this public
  689  information by any means deemed appropriate, including operating
  690  a toll-free telephone number for this purpose. When the
  691  department provides information regarding a career offender to
  692  the public, department personnel must advise the person making
  693  the inquiry that positive identification of a person believed to
  694  be a career offender cannot be established unless a fingerprint
  695  comparison is made, and that it is illegal to use public
  696  information regarding a career offender to facilitate the
  697  commission of a crime.
  698         3.The department shall adopt guidelines as necessary
  699  regarding the registration of a career offender and the
  700  dissemination of information regarding a career offender as
  701  required by this section.
  702         (10)(i)RELIEF FROM REGISTRATION.—A career offender must
  703  maintain registration with the department for the duration of
  704  his or her life, unless the career offender has received a full
  705  pardon or has had a conviction set aside in a postconviction
  706  proceeding for any offense or offenses that meet meets the
  707  criteria for classifying the person as a career offender for
  708  purposes of registration. However, a registered career offender
  709  shall be considered for removal of the requirement to register
  710  as a career offender only if he or she who has been lawfully
  711  released from confinement, supervision, or sanction, whichever
  712  is later, for at least 20 years and has not been arrested for
  713  any felony or misdemeanor offense since release.
  714         (a)If the career offender meets the criteria in this
  715  subsection, the career offender may, for the purpose of removing
  716  the requirement for registration as a career offender, petition
  717  the criminal division of the circuit court of the circuit in
  718  which the registered career offender designation initially
  719  occurred resides for the purpose of removing the requirement for
  720  registration as a career offender.
  721         (b) The court may grant or deny such relief if the
  722  registered career offender demonstrates to the court that he or
  723  she has not been arrested for any crime since release and the
  724  court is otherwise satisfied that the registered career offender
  725  is not a current or potential threat to public safety. The
  726  department and the state attorney in the circuit in which the
  727  petition is filed must be given notice of the petition at least
  728  3 weeks before the hearing on the matter. The department and the
  729  state attorney may present evidence in opposition to the
  730  requested relief or may otherwise demonstrate the reasons why
  731  the petition should be denied. If the court denies the petition,
  732  the court may set a future date at which the registered career
  733  offender may again petition the court for relief, subject to the
  734  standards for relief provided in this subsection paragraph.
  735         (c) The department shall remove a person from
  736  classification as a career offender for purposes of registration
  737  if the person provides to the department a certified copy of the
  738  court’s written findings or order that indicates that the person
  739  is no longer required to comply with the requirements for
  740  registration as a career offender.
  741         (11)(5) COMMUNITY AND PUBLIC NOTIFICATION.—
  742         (a) Law enforcement agencies may inform the community and
  743  the public of the presence of a career offender in the
  744  community. Upon notification of the presence of a career
  745  offender, the sheriff of the county or the chief of police of
  746  the municipality where the career offender establishes or
  747  maintains a permanent, or temporary, or transient residence may
  748  notify the community and the public of the presence of the
  749  career offender in a manner deemed appropriate by the sheriff or
  750  the chief of police.
  751         (b) The sheriff or the police chief may coordinate the
  752  community and public notification efforts with the department.
  753  Statewide notification to the public is authorized, as deemed
  754  appropriate by local law enforcement personnel and the
  755  department.
  756         (c)1.The department is responsible for the online
  757  maintenance of the current information regarding each career
  758  offender. The department must maintain hotline access for state,
  759  local, and federal law enforcement agencies to obtain
  760  instantaneous locator file and criminal characteristics
  761  information on release and registration of career offenders for
  762  the purposes of monitoring, tracking, and prosecution. The
  763  photograph and fingerprints need not be stored in a computerized
  764  format.
  765         2.The department’s career offender registration list is a
  766  public record. The department may disseminate this public
  767  information by any means deemed appropriate, including operating
  768  a toll-free telephone number for this purpose. When the
  769  department provides information regarding a career offender to
  770  the public, department personnel must advise the person making
  771  the inquiry that positive identification of a person believed to
  772  be a career offender cannot be established unless a fingerprint
  773  comparison is made, and that it is illegal to use public
  774  information regarding a career offender to facilitate the
  775  commission of a crime.
  776         3.The department shall adopt guidelines as necessary
  777  regarding the registration of a career offender and the
  778  dissemination of information regarding a career offender as
  779  required by this section. However, the department may not
  780  display on or disseminate through the Internet public registry
  781  maintained by the department any information regarding a vehicle
  782  that is owned by a person who is not required to register as a
  783  career offender.
  784         (6)VERIFICATION.—The department and the Department of
  785  Corrections shall implement a system for verifying the addresses
  786  of career offenders. The sheriff of each county shall annually
  787  verify the addresses of career offenders who are not under the
  788  care, custody, control, or supervision of the Department of
  789  Corrections. The sheriff shall promptly provide the address
  790  verification information to the department in an electronic
  791  format. The address verification information must include the
  792  verifying person’s name, agency, and phone number, the date of
  793  verification, and the method of verification, and must specify
  794  whether the address information was verified as correct,
  795  incorrect, or unconfirmed.
  796         (12)(7) IMMUNITY.—The department, the Department of Highway
  797  Safety and Motor Vehicles, the Department of Corrections, any
  798  law enforcement agency in this state, and the personnel of those
  799  departments; an elected or appointed official, public employee,
  800  or school administrator; or an employee, agency, or any
  801  individual or entity acting at the request or upon the direction
  802  of any law enforcement agency is immune from civil liability for
  803  damages for good faith compliance with the requirements of this
  804  section or for the release of information under this section and
  805  shall be presumed to have acted in good faith in compiling,
  806  recording, reporting, or releasing the information. The
  807  presumption of good faith is not overcome if a technical or
  808  clerical error is made by the department, the Department of
  809  Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, the Department of
  810  Corrections, the personnel of those departments, or any
  811  individual or entity acting at the request or upon the direction
  812  of any of those departments in compiling or providing
  813  information, or if information is incomplete or incorrect
  814  because a career offender fails to report or falsely reports his
  815  or her current place of permanent, or temporary, or transient
  816  residence.
  817         (13)(8) PENALTIES.—
  818         (a) Except as otherwise specifically provided, a career
  819  offender who fails to register; who fails, after registration,
  820  to maintain, acquire, or renew a driver license or an
  821  identification card; who fails to provide required location
  822  information or change-of-name information; who fails to provide
  823  all home telephone numbers and cellular telephone numbers; who
  824  fails to report any changes to employment information, including
  825  the addition of new employment, termination of existing
  826  employment, and changes to the occupation, business name,
  827  employment address, and telephone number of previously reported
  828  employment; who fails to report any changes to vehicles owned,
  829  including the addition of new vehicles and changes to the make,
  830  model, color, vehicle identification number (VIN), and license
  831  tag numbers of previously reported vehicles; who fails to make a
  832  required report in connection with vacating a permanent
  833  residence; who fails to reregister as required; who fails to
  834  respond to any address verification correspondence from the
  835  department or from county or local law enforcement agencies
  836  within 3 weeks after the date of the correspondence; who
  837  knowingly provides false registration information by act or
  838  omission; or who otherwise fails, by act or omission, to comply
  839  with the requirements of this section, commits a felony of the
  840  third degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083,
  841  or s. 775.084. Each instance of failure to register or report
  842  changes to the required information specified in this paragraph
  843  constitutes a separate offense.
  844         (b)A career offender who commits any act or omission in
  845  violation of this section, s. 944.608, or s. 944.609 may be
  846  prosecuted for the act or omission in the county in which the
  847  act or omission was committed, in the county of the last
  848  registered address of the career offender, in the county in
  849  which the conviction occurred for the offense or offenses that
  850  meet the criteria for designating a person as a career offender,
  851  in the county in which he or she was designated a career
  852  offender, in the county where the career offender was released
  853  from incarceration, or in the county of the intended address of
  854  the career offender as reported by the offender before his or
  855  her release from incarceration.
  856         (c)An arrest on charges of failure to register when the
  857  career offender has been provided and advised of his or her
  858  statutory obligations to register under this section, the
  859  service of an information or a complaint for a violation of this
  860  section, or an arraignment on charges for a violation of this
  861  section constitutes actual notice of the duty to register. A
  862  career offender’s failure to register immediately as required by
  863  this section following such arrest, service, or arraignment
  864  constitutes grounds for a subsequent charge of failure to
  865  register. A career offender charged with the crime of failure to
  866  register who asserts, or intends to assert, a lack of notice of
  867  the duty to register as a defense to a charge of failure to
  868  register shall immediately register as required by this section.
  869  A career offender who is charged with a subsequent failure to
  870  register may not assert the defense of a lack of notice of the
  871  duty to register. Registration following such arrest, service,
  872  or arraignment is not a defense and does not relieve the career
  873  offender of criminal liability for the failure to register.
  874         (d)(b) Any person who misuses public records information
  875  concerning a career offender, as defined in this section, or a
  876  career offender, as defined in s. 944.608 or s. 944.609, to
  877  secure a payment from such career offender; who knowingly
  878  distributes or publishes false information concerning such a
  879  career offender which the person misrepresents as being public
  880  records information; or who materially alters public records
  881  information with the intent to misrepresent the information,
  882  including documents, summaries of public records information
  883  provided by law enforcement agencies, or public records
  884  information displayed by law enforcement agencies on websites or
  885  provided through other means of communication, commits a
  886  misdemeanor of the first degree, punishable as provided in s.
  887  775.082 or s. 775.083.
  888         (9)PROSECUTIONS FOR ACTS OR OMISSIONS.—A career offender
  889  who commits any act or omission in violation of this section, s.
  890  944.608, or s. 944.609 may be prosecuted for the act or omission
  891  in the county in which the act or omission was committed, the
  892  county of the last registered address of the career offender,
  893  the county in which the conviction occurred for the offense or
  894  offenses that meet the criteria for designating a person as a
  895  career offender, or in the county in which he or she was
  896  designated a career offender.
  897         (14)(10)PENALTIES FOR ASSISTING IN CAREER OFFENDER
  898  NONCOMPLIANCE.—Any It is a misdemeanor of the first degree,
  899  punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083, for a person
  900  who has reason to believe that a career offender is not
  901  complying, or has not complied, with the requirements of this
  902  section and who, with the intent to assist the career offender
  903  in eluding a law enforcement agency that is seeking to find the
  904  career offender to question the career offender about, or to
  905  arrest the career offender for, his or her noncompliance with
  906  the requirements of this section, to:
  907         (a) Withholds Withhold information from, or does not fail
  908  to notify, the law enforcement agency about the career
  909  offender’s noncompliance with the requirements of this section
  910  and, if known, the whereabouts of the career offender;
  911         (b) Harbors Harbor or attempts attempt to harbor, or
  912  assists assist another person in harboring or attempting to
  913  harbor, the career offender;
  914         (c) Conceals Conceal or attempts attempt to conceal, or
  915  assists assist another person in concealing or attempting to
  916  conceal, the career offender; or
  917         (d) Provides Provide information to the law enforcement
  918  agency regarding the career offender which the person knows to
  919  be false information,
  920  
  921  commits a felony of the third degree, punishable as provided in
  922  s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084.
  923         Section 3. Section 944.608, Florida Statutes, is amended to
  924  read:
  925         944.608 Notification to Department of Law Enforcement of
  926  information on career offenders.—
  927         (1) As used in this section, the term:
  928         (a) “Career offender” means a person who is in the custody
  929  or control of, or under the supervision of, the department or is
  930  in the custody or control of, or under the supervision of, a
  931  contractor-operated correctional facility, and who is designated
  932  as a habitual violent felony offender, a violent career
  933  criminal, or a three-time violent felony offender under s.
  934  775.084 or as a prison releasee reoffender under s. 775.082(9).
  935         (b)“Permanent residence,” “temporary residence,” and
  936  “transient residence” have the same meaning as provided in s.
  937  775.261.
  938         (c)“Professional license” has the same meaning as provided
  939  in s. 775.261.
  940         (d) “Vehicles owned” has the same meaning as provided in s.
  941  775.261.
  942         (2) If a career offender is not sentenced to a term of
  943  imprisonment, the clerk of the court shall ensure that the
  944  career offender’s fingerprints are taken and forwarded to the
  945  Department of Law Enforcement within 48 hours after the court
  946  sentences the career offender. The fingerprints shall be clearly
  947  marked “Career Offender Registration.”
  948         (3) A career offender, as described in this section, who is
  949  under the supervision of the department but is not incarcerated
  950  must register with the department within 3 business days after
  951  sentencing and provide information as required by this
  952  subsection.
  953         (a)The career offender shall provide his or her name; date
  954  of birth; social security number; race; sex gender; date of
  955  birth; height; weight; hair and eye color; tattoos or other
  956  identifying marks; employment information required to be
  957  provided pursuant to s. 775.261; and permanent or legal
  958  residence and address of temporary residence within the state or
  959  out of state while the career offender is under supervision in
  960  this state, including any rural route address and a or post
  961  office box; if no permanent or temporary address, any transient
  962  residence within this state; and address, location or
  963  description, and dates of any current or known future temporary
  964  residence within this state or out of state; the make, model,
  965  color, vehicle identification number (VIN), and license tag
  966  number of all vehicles owned; and all home telephone numbers and
  967  cellular telephone numbers required to be provided pursuant to
  968  s. 775.261. The career offender shall also produce his or her
  969  passport, if he or she has a passport, and, if he or she is an
  970  alien, shall produce or provide information about documents
  971  establishing his or her immigration status. The career offender
  972  shall also provide information about any professional licenses
  973  he or she has. The department shall verify the address of each
  974  career offender in the manner described in s. 775.261. The
  975  department shall report to the Department of Law Enforcement any
  976  failure by a career offender to comply with any registration
  977  requirements.
  978         (b)A career offender shall report in person to the
  979  sheriff’s office within 48 hours after any change in vehicles
  980  owned to report those vehicle information changes.
  981         (4) In addition to notification and transmittal
  982  requirements imposed by any other provision of law, the
  983  department shall compile information on any career offender and
  984  provide the information to the Department of Law Enforcement.
  985  The information shall be made available electronically to the
  986  Department of Law Enforcement as soon as this information is in
  987  the department’s database and must be in a format that is
  988  compatible with the requirements of the Florida Crime
  989  Information Center.
  990         (5) The information provided to the Department of Law
  991  Enforcement must include:
  992         (a) The information obtained from the career offender under
  993  subsection (3);
  994         (b) The career offender’s most current address and place of
  995  permanent, and temporary, or transient residence or residences
  996  within the state or out of state, the address, location or
  997  description, and dates of any known future temporary residence
  998  within this state or out of state while the career offender is
  999  under supervision in this state, including the name of the
 1000  county or municipality in which the career offender permanently
 1001  or temporarily resides and, if known, the intended place of
 1002  permanent, or temporary, or transient residence or residences
 1003  and the address, location or description, and dates of any
 1004  current or known future temporary residence within this state or
 1005  out of state upon satisfaction of all sanctions;
 1006         (c) The legal status of the career offender and the
 1007  scheduled termination date of that legal status;
 1008         (d) The location of, and local telephone number for, any
 1009  Department of Corrections’ office that is responsible for
 1010  supervising the career offender; and
 1011         (e) A digitized photograph of the career offender, which
 1012  must have been taken within 60 days before the career offender
 1013  is released from the custody of the department or a contractor
 1014  operated correctional facility or within 60 days after the onset
 1015  of the department’s supervision of any career offender who is on
 1016  probation, community control, conditional release, parole,
 1017  provisional release, or control release. If the career offender
 1018  is in the custody or control of, or under the supervision of, a
 1019  contractor-operated correctional facility, the facility shall
 1020  take a digitized photograph of the career offender within the
 1021  time period provided in this paragraph and shall provide the
 1022  photograph to the department.
 1023         (6)(a) The department shall notify the Department of Law
 1024  Enforcement if the career offender escapes, absconds, or dies
 1025  while in the custody or control of, or under the supervision of,
 1026  the department.
 1027         (b) If any information provided by the department changes
 1028  during the time the career offender is under the department’s
 1029  custody, control, or supervision, including any change in the
 1030  career offender’s name by reason of marriage or other legal
 1031  process, the department shall, in a timely manner, update the
 1032  information and provide it to the Department of Law Enforcement
 1033  in the manner prescribed in subsection (4).
 1034         (7)If the career offender is in the custody of a local
 1035  jail, the custodian of the local jail shall notify the
 1036  Department of Law Enforcement within 3 business days after
 1037  intake of the offender for any reason and upon release, and
 1038  shall forward the information to the Department of Law
 1039  Enforcement. The custodian of the local jail shall also take a
 1040  digitized photograph of the career offender while the career
 1041  offender remains in custody and shall provide the digitized
 1042  photograph to the Department of Law Enforcement.
 1043         (8)If the career offender is under federal supervision,
 1044  the federal agency responsible for supervising the career
 1045  offender may forward to the Department of Law Enforcement any
 1046  information regarding the career offender which is consistent
 1047  with the information provided by the department under this
 1048  section, and may indicate whether use of the information is
 1049  restricted to law enforcement purposes only or may be used by
 1050  the Department of Law Enforcement for purposes of public
 1051  notification.
 1052         (9)(7) A career offender, as described in this section, who
 1053  is under the supervision of the department but who is not
 1054  incarcerated shall, in addition to the registration requirements
 1055  provided in subsection (3), register and obtain a distinctive
 1056  driver license or identification card in the manner provided in
 1057  s. 775.261 s. 775.261(4)(c), unless the career offender is a
 1058  sexual predator, in which case he or she shall register as
 1059  required under s. 775.21, or is a sexual offender, in which case
 1060  he or she shall register as required in s. 943.0435 or s.
 1061  944.607. A career offender who fails to comply with the
 1062  requirements of s. 775.261 s. 775.261(4) is subject to the
 1063  penalties provided in s. 775.261(13) s. 775.261(8).
 1064         (10)(a)(8) The failure of a career offender to submit to
 1065  the taking of a digitized photograph, or to otherwise comply
 1066  with the requirements of this section, is a felony of the third
 1067  degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s.
 1068  775.084.
 1069         (b)A career offender who commits any act or omission in
 1070  violation of this section may be prosecuted for the act or
 1071  omission in the county in which the act or omission was
 1072  committed, in the county of the last registered address of the
 1073  career offender, in the county in which the conviction occurred
 1074  for the offense or offenses that meet the criteria for
 1075  designating a person as a career offender, in the county in
 1076  which he or she was designated a career offender, in the county
 1077  where the career offender was released from incarceration, or in
 1078  the county of the intended address of the career offender as
 1079  reported by the offender before his or her release from
 1080  incarceration.
 1081         (c)An arrest on charges of failure to register when the
 1082  offender has been provided and advised of his or her statutory
 1083  obligations to register under s. 775.261, the service of an
 1084  information or a complaint for a violation of this section, or
 1085  an arraignment on charges for a violation of this section
 1086  constitutes actual notice of the duty to register. A career
 1087  offender’s failure to register immediately as required by this
 1088  section following such arrest, service, or arraignment
 1089  constitutes grounds for a subsequent charge of failure to
 1090  register. A career offender charged with the crime of failure to
 1091  register who asserts, or intends to assert, a lack of notice of
 1092  the duty to register as a defense to a charge of failure to
 1093  register shall register immediately as required by this section.
 1094  A career offender who is charged with a subsequent failure to
 1095  register may not assert the defense of a lack of notice of the
 1096  duty to register.
 1097         (d)Registration following such arrest, service, or
 1098  arraignment is not a defense and does not relieve the career
 1099  offender of criminal liability for the failure to register.
 1100         (11)(9) The department, the Department of Highway Safety
 1101  and Motor Vehicles, the Department of Law Enforcement, personnel
 1102  of those departments, and any individual or entity acting at the
 1103  request or upon the direction of those departments are immune
 1104  from civil liability for damages for good faith compliance with
 1105  this section, and shall be presumed to have acted in good faith
 1106  in compiling, recording, reporting, or providing information.
 1107  The presumption of good faith is not overcome if technical or
 1108  clerical errors are made by the department, the Department of
 1109  Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, the Department of Law
 1110  Enforcement, personnel of those departments, or any individual
 1111  or entity acting at the request or upon the direction of those
 1112  departments in compiling, recording, reporting, or providing
 1113  information, or, if the information is incomplete or incorrect
 1114  because the information has not been provided by a person or
 1115  agency required to provide the information, or because the
 1116  information was not reported or was falsely reported.
 1117         (12)Any person who has reason to believe that a career
 1118  offender is not complying, or has not complied, with the
 1119  requirements of this section and who, with the intent to assist
 1120  the career offender in eluding a law enforcement agency that is
 1121  seeking to find the career offender to question the career
 1122  offender about, or to arrest the career offender for, his or her
 1123  noncompliance with the requirements of this section:
 1124         (a)Withholds information from, or does not notify, the law
 1125  enforcement agency about the career offender’s noncompliance
 1126  with the requirements of this section, and, if known, the
 1127  whereabouts of the career offender;
 1128         (b)Harbors or attempts to harbor, or assists another
 1129  person in harboring or attempting to harbor, the career
 1130  offender;
 1131         (c)Conceals or attempts to conceal, or assists another
 1132  person in concealing or attempting to conceal, the career
 1133  offender; or
 1134         (d)Provides information to the law enforcement agency
 1135  regarding the career offender which the person knows to be false
 1136  information,
 1137  
 1138  commits a felony of the third degree, punishable as provided in
 1139  s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084. This subsection does not
 1140  apply if the career offender is incarcerated in or is in the
 1141  custody of a state correctional facility, a contractor-operated
 1142  correctional facility, a local jail, or a federal correctional
 1143  facility.
 1144         (13)(a)A career offender must report in person each year
 1145  during the month of the career offender’s birthday to the
 1146  sheriff’s office in the county in which he or she maintains a
 1147  permanent, temporary, or transient residence or is otherwise
 1148  located to reregister.
 1149         (b)The sheriff’s office may determine the appropriate
 1150  times and days for reporting by the career offender, which must
 1151  be consistent with the reporting requirements of this
 1152  subsection. Reregistration must include any changes to the
 1153  following information:
 1154         1. Name; social security number; race; sex; date of birth;
 1155  height; weight; hair and eye color; tattoos or other identifying
 1156  marks; fingerprints; palm prints; photograph; employment
 1157  information required to be provided pursuant to s. 775.261;
 1158  address of permanent residence and address of any current
 1159  temporary residence, within the state or out of state, including
 1160  a rural route address and a post office box; if no permanent or
 1161  temporary address, any transient residence within this state;
 1162  address, location or description, and dates of any current or
 1163  known future temporary residence within the state or out of
 1164  state; the make, model, color, vehicle identification number
 1165  (VIN), and license tag number of all vehicles owned; and all
 1166  home telephone numbers and cellular telephone numbers required
 1167  to be provided pursuant to s. 775.261. A post office box may not
 1168  be provided in lieu of a physical residential address. The
 1169  career offender shall also produce his or her passport, if he or
 1170  she has a passport, and, if he or she is an alien, shall produce
 1171  or provide information about documents establishing his or her
 1172  immigration status. The career offender shall also provide
 1173  information about any professional licenses he or she has.
 1174         2.If the career offender’s place of residence is a motor
 1175  vehicle, trailer, mobile home, or manufactured home, as those
 1176  terms are defined in chapter 320, the career offender shall also
 1177  provide the vehicle identification number (VIN); the license tag
 1178  number; the registration number; and a description, including
 1179  color scheme, of the motor vehicle, trailer, mobile home, or
 1180  manufactured home. If the career offender’s place of residence
 1181  is a vessel, live-aboard vessel, or houseboat, as those terms
 1182  are defined in chapter 327, the career offender shall also
 1183  provide the hull identification number; the manufacturer’s
 1184  serial number; the name of the vessel, live-aboard vessel, or
 1185  houseboat; the registration number of the vessel, live-aboard
 1186  vessel, or houseboat; and a description, including color scheme,
 1187  of the vessel, live-aboard vessel, or houseboat.
 1188         3.Any career offender who fails to report in person as
 1189  required at the sheriff’s office, who fails to respond to any
 1190  address verification correspondence from the department within 3
 1191  weeks after the date of the correspondence, or who knowingly
 1192  provides false registration information by act or omission
 1193  commits a felony of the third degree, punishable as provided in
 1194  s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084.
 1195         (c)The sheriff’s office shall, within 2 working days,
 1196  electronically submit and update all information provided by the
 1197  career offender to the Department of Law Enforcement in a manner
 1198  prescribed by the Department of Law Enforcement.
 1199         Section 4. Section 944.609, Florida Statutes, is amended to
 1200  read:
 1201         944.609 Career offenders; notification upon release.—
 1202         (1) As used in this section, the term:
 1203         (a) “Career offender” means a person who is in the custody
 1204  or control of, or under the supervision of, the department or is
 1205  in the custody or control of, or under the supervision of a
 1206  contractor-operated correctional facility, who is designated as
 1207  a habitual violent felony offender, a violent career criminal,
 1208  or a three-time violent felony offender under s. 775.084 or as a
 1209  prison releasee reoffender under s. 775.082(9).
 1210         (b)“Permanent residence,” “temporary residence,” and
 1211  “transient residence” have the same meaning as provided in s.
 1212  775.261.
 1213         (c)“Professional license” has the same meaning as provided
 1214  in s. 775.261.
 1215         (d)“Vehicles owned” has the same meaning as provided in s.
 1216  775.261.
 1217         (2) The Legislature finds that certain career offenders, by
 1218  virtue of their histories of offenses, present a threat to the
 1219  public and to communities. Career offenders have a reduced
 1220  expectation of privacy because of the public’s interest in
 1221  public safety and in the effective operation of government. The
 1222  Legislature finds that requiring these career offenders to
 1223  register for the purpose of tracking the career offenders and
 1224  providing for notifying the public and a community of the
 1225  presence of a career offender are important aids to law
 1226  enforcement agencies, the public, and communities if the career
 1227  offender engages again in criminal conduct. Registration is
 1228  intended to aid law enforcement agencies in timely apprehending
 1229  a career offender. Registration is not a punishment, but merely
 1230  a status. Notification to the public and communities of the
 1231  presence of a career offender aids the public and communities in
 1232  avoiding being victimized by the career offender. The
 1233  Legislature intends to require the registration of career
 1234  offenders and to authorize law enforcement agencies to notify
 1235  the public and communities of the presence of a career offender.
 1236         (3)(a) The department must provide information regarding
 1237  any career offender who is being released after serving a period
 1238  of incarceration for any offense, as follows:
 1239         1. The department must provide the career offender’s name,
 1240  any change in the career offender’s name by reason of marriage
 1241  or other legal process, and any alias, if known; the
 1242  correctional facility from which the career offender is
 1243  released; the career offender’s social security number, race,
 1244  sex gender, date of birth, height, weight, and hair and eye
 1245  color; tattoos or other identifying marks; address of any
 1246  planned permanent residence or temporary residence, within this
 1247  state or out of state, including a rural route address and a
 1248  post office box; if no permanent or temporary address, any
 1249  transient residence within this state; address, location or
 1250  description, and dates of any current or known future temporary
 1251  residence within this state or out of state; date and county of
 1252  sentence and each crime for which the career offender was
 1253  sentenced; a copy of the career offender’s fingerprints, palm
 1254  prints, and a digitized photograph taken within 60 days before
 1255  release; the date of release of the career offender; employment
 1256  information, if known, required to be provided pursuant to s.
 1257  775.261; all home telephone numbers and cellular telephone
 1258  numbers required to be provided pursuant to s. 775.261;
 1259  information about any professional licenses the career offender
 1260  has, if known; and passport information, if he or she has a
 1261  passport, and, if he or she is an alien, information about the
 1262  documents establishing his or her immigration status and the
 1263  career offender’s intended residence address, if known. The
 1264  department shall notify the Department of Law Enforcement if the
 1265  career offender escapes, absconds, or dies. If the career
 1266  offender is in the custody of a contractor-operated correctional
 1267  facility, the facility shall take the digitized photograph of
 1268  the career offender within 60 days before the career offender’s
 1269  release and provide this photograph to the Department of
 1270  Corrections and also place it in the career offender’s file. If
 1271  the career offender is in the custody of a local jail, the
 1272  custodian of the local jail shall notify the Department of Law
 1273  Enforcement within 3 business days after intake of the offender
 1274  for any reason and upon of the career offender’s release, and
 1275  provide to the Department of Law Enforcement the information
 1276  specified in this paragraph and any information specified in
 1277  subparagraph 2. which the Department of Law Enforcement
 1278  requests.
 1279         2. The department may provide any other information deemed
 1280  necessary, including criminal and corrections records and
 1281  nonprivileged personnel and treatment records, when available.
 1282         (b) The department must provide the information described
 1283  in subparagraph (a)1. to:
 1284         1. The sheriff of the county where the career offender was
 1285  sentenced;
 1286         2. The sheriff of the county and, if applicable, the police
 1287  chief of the municipality, where the career offender plans to
 1288  reside;
 1289         3. The Department of Law Enforcement;
 1290         4. When requested, the victim of the offense, the victim’s
 1291  parent or legal guardian if the victim is a minor, the lawful
 1292  representative of the victim or of the victim’s parent or
 1293  guardian if the victim is a minor, or the next of kin if the
 1294  victim is a homicide victim; and
 1295         5. Any person who requests such information,
 1296  
 1297  either within 6 months prior to the anticipated release of a
 1298  career offender or as soon as possible if a career offender is
 1299  released earlier than anticipated. All such information provided
 1300  to the Department of Law Enforcement must be available
 1301  electronically as soon as the information is in the agency’s
 1302  database and must be in a format that is compatible with the
 1303  requirements of the Florida Crime Information Center.
 1304         (c) Upon request, the department must provide the
 1305  information described in subparagraph (a)2. to:
 1306         1. The sheriff of the county where the career offender was
 1307  sentenced; and
 1308         2. The sheriff of the county and, if applicable, the police
 1309  chief of the municipality, where the career offender plans to
 1310  reside,
 1311  
 1312  either within 6 months prior to the anticipated release of a
 1313  career offender or as soon as possible if a career offender is
 1314  released earlier than anticipated.
 1315         (d) Upon receiving information regarding a career offender
 1316  from the department, the Department of Law Enforcement, the
 1317  sheriff, or the chief of police shall provide the information
 1318  described in subparagraph (a)1. to any individual who requests
 1319  such information and may release the information to the public
 1320  in any manner deemed appropriate, unless the information is
 1321  confidential or exempt from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of
 1322  the State Constitution.
 1323         (4) This section authorizes the department or any law
 1324  enforcement agency to may notify the community and the public of
 1325  a career offender’s presence in the community. However, with
 1326  respect to a career offender who has been found to be a sexual
 1327  predator under s. 775.21, the Department of Law Enforcement or
 1328  any other law enforcement agency must inform the community and
 1329  the public of the sexual predator’s career offender’s presence
 1330  in the community, as provided in s. 775.21.
 1331         (5) An elected or appointed official, public employee,
 1332  school administrator or employee, or agency, or any individual
 1333  or entity acting at the request or upon the direction of any law
 1334  enforcement agency, is immune from civil liability for damages
 1335  resulting from the good faith compliance with the requirements
 1336  of this section or the release of information under this
 1337  section.
 1338         Section 5. This act shall take effect October 1, 2026.