Terms Used In Kansas Statutes 22-4911

  • Employment: means any full-time, part-time, transient, day-labor employment or volunteer work, with or without compensation, for three or more consecutive days or parts of days, or for 10 or more nonconsecutive days in a period of 30 consecutive days. See Kansas Statutes 22-4902
  • Offender: means :

    (1) A sex offender;

    (2) a violent offender;

    (3) a drug offender;

    (4) any person who has been required to register under out-of-state law or is otherwise required to be registered; and

    (5) any person required by court order to register for an offense not otherwise required as provided in the Kansas offender registration act. See Kansas Statutes 22-4902

  • Registering law enforcement agency: means the sheriff's office or tribal police department responsible for registering an offender. See Kansas Statutes 22-4902
  • Sex offender: includes any person who:

    (1) On or after April 14, 1994, is convicted of any sexually violent crime;

    (2) on or after July 1, 2002, is adjudicated as a juvenile offender for an act which, if committed by an adult, would constitute the commission of a sexually violent crime, unless the court, on the record, finds that the act involved non-forcible sexual conduct, the victim was at least 14 years of age and the offender was not more than four years older than the victim;

    (3) has been determined to be a sexually violent predator;

    (4) on or after July 1, 1997, is convicted of any of the following crimes when one of the parties involved is less than 18 years of age:

    (A) Adultery, as defined in Kan. See Kansas Statutes 22-4902

  • State: when applied to the different parts of the United States, includes the District of Columbia and the territories. See Kansas Statutes 77-201

Nothing in the Kansas offender registration act shall create a cause of action against the state or an employee of the state acting within the scope of the employee’s employment as a result of requiring an offender to register or an offender’s failure to register. This includes, but is not limited to, the person or persons assigned to a registering law enforcement agency to register offenders, and the person or persons assigned to enter all offender information required by the national crime information center into the national sex offender registry system.