Pennsylvania Rally Marks 30 Years of Failed Sex Offense Policies
HARRISBURG, PA – October 28, 2025 – The Pennsylvania Association for Rational Sexual Offense Laws (PARSOL) Advocates gathered at the Pennsylvania Capitol Rotunda today to mark thirty years since the enactment of Pennsylvania’s Megan’s Law and to call for modernization of the state’s sexual offense laws which were signed into law by then- Governor Tom Ridge on October 21, 1995, launching the PARSOL #StuckIn1995 Campaign.
“Our lives have changed since 1995. You’ll all recognize Microsoft’s groundbreaking system, Windows 95. But is anyone still using that? Pennsylvania’s registry laws are stuck in 1995 while everything else has moved forward,” remarked Robert Ciccinelli (Havertown), PARSOL board member, who opened the event while advocates held signs showing nostalgia from that year including props from the era including the O.J. Simpson verdict headline news, a poster from the hit 90’s TV show “ER”, the dial-up internet modem, a 22-cent postage stamp, and the floppy disk drive.
Speakers included Josiah Krammes (Pottsville), PARSOL Chair, Joey Nicholson (Coatesville), founder of the Pathfinder Reentry Project, State Representatives Emily Kinkead (D-Pittsburgh) and Tim Briggs (D-King of Prussia), and Olivia Schmidt (Sharon), PARSOL Advocates secretary.

“Modernizing the system means focusing resources on current risk, not decades-old cases. That’s how you protect families,” he noted, citing multiple studies from the U.S. Department of Justice, Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency, and Pennsylvania Department of Corrections.
Nicholson, sharing experiences from PARSOL’s statewide programs, told several personal stories of how the registry hinders successful reintegration—even among those who have completed treatment and proven stability. “When policies lack nuance, entire families carry the weight,” said Nicholson. “Modern times demand modern policies built on what we now know about accountability, growth, and rehabilitation.”

Reflecting on his fourteen years of incarceration, Nicholson added, “Real transformation doesn’t begin in a cell, it begins in the heart, and then it transforms your mind. I came home with one goal – to help others find that meaningful spark before the system or life breaks them. These programs are now supported by law enforcement, treatment providers, correctional administrators, and members of the faith community – people who believe in modernization over marginalization.”

Kinkead added that by using what we’ve learned over thirty years to modernize the law and actively include those who have committed offenses in the solution, “… we reduce the number of victims that happen. We prevent people from committing crimes because we are supporting not just survivors but the safety of the entire community.”
“People who are willing to do the work, get better, learn from their mistakes, make amends, and pay their debt to society deserve the opportunity to be a full member of it if we are willing as legislators to be bold, take a stand, and ensure we are making evidence-based policies,” she concluded. “These are common-sense reforms from thirty years of understanding what works and what doesn’t. [Legislators] cannot be held in the past because we are afraid to make changes, and how it will be perceived.
Chairman Briggs echoed Kinkead’s resolve, adding, “Too many times this issue seems too difficult for legislators to get their heads around, and they want to continue that thirty-year-old approach. Despite this, we need to modernize the registry to allow individuals who no longer pose a risk to be removed from the list and ensure the tools necessary for safe communities, including evidence-based assessments, ensuring individuals who need services are receiving them.”

“There is no time better than the present to start tackling these issues. Today’s kickoff reinforces the desire to keep our communities safe by using modern thinking to address these issues in a fair and compassionate way. We look forward to working with PARSOL moving forward,” Briggs concluded.
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About PARSOL – The Pennsylvania Association for Rational Sexual Offense Laws (PARSOL) works to modernize the Commonwealth’s sexual offense laws through advocacy, education, and evidence-based practices. PARSOL is the Pennsylvania affiliate of NARSOL.


Pennsylvania and also Florida’s exits used to be sequential. The exit to Pittsburgh was Exit 6, Breezewood Exit 12, Gettysburg Exit 17, and Reading Exit 21. If not, times has changed.
I would like to believe that at their core, all legislators feel this way yet lack they courage of conviction to stand up and do what’s right in the face of thirty years of evidence and research. They lack this courage not because they don’t believe that these facts are true, but they fear losing their position from public outcry. In my experience, everyone I’ve talked to about the issues at hand, or my path to rehabilitate myself, know that the system is flawed. We just need to have a louder voice then those trying to spew hate and vitriol towards PFR’s who are trying to live a better, meaningful life, learning from their mistakes and making an effort to contribute to society.