Should Sex Offenders Be Barred from Kid-Friendly Churches?
North Carolina is a proud member of the so-called Bible Belt of states that take their religion seriously. So some eyebrows were raised when James Nichols was arrested for attending church.
His offense? Nichols, a convicted sex offender, had chosen to worship at a church that has a nursery where kids play while their parents pray. Now Nichols, 31, who only recently got out of prison, is fighting back, challenging the legality of a new law that took effect in December prohibiting registered sex offenders from coming within 300 ft. — nearly a football field’s length — of any facility devoted to the use, care or supervision of minors.
As more states have adopted laws regulating where sex offenders can go, it was only a matter of time before the noble goal of protecting children butted heads with the sacrosanct First Amendment right to worship where and when you choose. Which takes precedence?
“This law makes it illegal to do things that are not wrong, like go to church,” says Glen Gerding, Nichols’ attorney. “When does the state stop interfering with a church’s business? Will pastors be charged as an accessory for letting a known sex offender sit in a front-row pew and worship?”
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