NARSOL Files Federal Lawsuit Challenging Texas Deregistration for Federal Convictions
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
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Austin, TX – February 26, 2026 – The National Association for Rational Sexual Offense Laws (NARSOL) has filed a federal civil rights lawsuit in the Western District of Texas challenging the current deregistration process in the state that arbitrarily bars those convicted in federal court from deregistration.
The proposed class action lawsuit Burton, et al. v Martin et al., submitted on behalf of the plaintiff and all similarly situated plaintiffs in Texas, contends that the state has arbitrarily denied individuals convicted in federal court access to the same deregistration process provided by law to state-convicted registrants with substantially similar offenses. NARSOL’s staff attorney and Texas-based attorney Courtney Vincent jointly filed the action.
Under the state interpretation of current Article 62.404 law, only those convicted of a sexual offense in Texas state court can deregister. Those convicted in federal court cannot.
According to the complaint, the state has violated constitutional provisions of the Equal Protection Clause and Due Process. In addition, the statute in question places a venue bar for the deregistration process by requiring registrants to file the deregistration action “. . . with the trial court that sentenced the person.” While those convicted in state court can do this, those with federal convictions cannot. Citing the venue restriction, the state has denied all federally convicted registrants from the deregistration process. The lawsuit argues that a restriction on venue should not be construed as a jurisdictional limitation for deregistration in state court.
The class action suit, represented by the plaintiff and NARSOL, is partially funded by Texas Voices for Reason and Justice, NARSOL’s Texas state affiliate. The complaint requests that the Court:
- Permanently enjoin Defendants from treating Article 62.404’s filing directive as a jurisdictional bar to motions filed by federally convicted registrants;
- Declare that, to the extent Defendants continue to interpret or enforce Article 62.404 as categorically barring federally convicted registrants from accessing any judicial forum, such interpretation and enforcement violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment;
- Declare that Defendants’ interpretation and enforcement of Article 62.404 violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment by creating a statutory remedy that is illusory and denying federally convicted registrants any meaningful opportunity to be heard;
The National Association for Rational Sexual Offense Laws (NARSOL) is a civil rights organization dedicated to promoting evidence-based policies and constitutional protections for individuals affected by sex offense laws.
They will provide updates as the case progresses.
Note to editors: Court documents and supporting materials available upon request.


I just like to say thank you, and I appreciate this organization for all the work it’s doing on behalf of sex offenders.
With myself being one who’s required to register.
However passing polygraph test.
Im so aggravated with the process of having to register every 3 months, having to renew my driver’s license every year.
Not to mention can’t find employment, people think there’s a second chance, but there’s really not.
Forever I will be labeled, for something I didn’t do.
I wonder why letting one out of prison, if one is granted parole, the system is saying that this person has do orand met all conditions to be released back into society.
Yey when one os released you quickly find that you are treated as though you are anything but ready for society.
By not only administration, and law, but society as a whole.
I hope this challenge to the Texas system goes well. I am not able to benefit from a positive outcome but I pray and hope that the ones that can and will be able to.
I wish that there was a way for my two convictions to be combined since they were literally committed within the same week, under the same circumstances (the leading events were the same). The court decided to try me separately, even though I only had one trial for each of the cases. So, in sorts I would assume (probably wrongly) it should be one conviction. However, I know the law doesn’t work that way.
If I could get them combined to one conviction, then I could utilize the Texas deregistering process. That would be an amazing thing for me, and I could live my life free without having to worry about my ultimate goal of leaving this country. I could live in the land I love in peace for the rest of my life. That’s all I want for me and my family.