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Does anyone know about Texas laws and regulations regarding sexual offenders?

I already asked this quesiton on another area in answers, but I figured I might go to people in various ones to hopefully find someone who knows about this.

Is anyone familiar with deferred adjudication and the Texas regulations for sexual predators?
I was raped by someone a while back, and while I was not able to get a conviction in my case, he was convicted of sexual assult with another person. He threatened to hurt me and track me down a long time ago, but I have still been fearful of him. Throughout the past several years, since he was convicted and forced to register with the sexual predators database for the other case, I have been looking him up periodically and making sure that he is still in the city I left. Well, alot of weird stuff has been going on around my husband and myself,
(such as notes appearing with weird cryptic messages written on them), so I looked on the database and HE’S NOT LISTED ANYMORE. He had deferred adjudication as part of his probation, but previous to these things happening, I had looked on there and his location was in a jail in Dallas about a month ago, and now, there is no record of him. Does anyone know whether he was wiped off of the database because of possible death, (not like that would bother me), or because he might have been found not guilty in an appeal, or if deferred adjudication would have taken his name off as soon as he completed his probation?
Please, no smartelic answers. I cannot find any information about this and I’m not familiar enough with laws about this subject.
jslinder: thank you, but it wasn’t my case that was actually brought to a prosecution. With me, they refused to prosecute, but I found out later that he had done this to an 18 year old male, and was releived that at least he got caught and was being treated the way he deserved, but if he got off for it again, that just means justice doesn’t work at all.

If as a condition of his probation his registry requirement was cleared, then yes, that is possible. An appeal would do it too, deceased are usually marked that way for a while.

As a former victim, you should be able to contact the prosecutors office that handled your case to get an updated status.

  1. jslinderml
    April 8th, 2011 at 12:52 | #1

    If as a condition of his probation his registry requirement was cleared, then yes, that is possible. An appeal would do it too, deceased are usually marked that way for a while.

    As a former victim, you should be able to contact the prosecutors office that handled your case to get an updated status.

    References :

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