A new state law forcing sexual predators to wear tracking devices for the rest of their lives is unconstitutional, according to three University of Wisconsin-Madison law professors.
The measure violates privacy rights and amounts to punishment and warrantless surveillance when applied to offenders who aren’t on parole or government supervision, the professors said in a letter sent to Corrections Secretary Matthew Frank on Feb. 3.
“A clearer example of governmental intrusion into personal privacy is difficult to imagine,” wrote law professors Walter Dickey, Byron Lichstein and Meredith Ross.