On this episode of Registry Matters, we unpack why SORNA’s so‑called “affirmative defenses” for emergency international travel are dangerously vague, only kick in after you’ve already been charged, and shouldn’t give anyone false confidence about skipping that 21‑day notice without first getting expert legal advice, then pivot to a unanimous Supreme Court ruling that finally labels federal restitution as criminal punishment—opening the door to powerful ex post facto arguments and new strategies to fight retroactive financial burdens that keep people in post‑sentence debt bondage, and we wrap up with a deep dive into Arizona, where advocates are working with Representative Powell to refine a promising registry‑removal bill so its standards, language, and procedures actually deliver meaningful, workable relief instead of illusory hope.

[0:00] Introduction
[02:38] Emergency travel defenses remain risky
[08:54] Restitution reclassified as punishment, reshaping ex post facto protections.
[27:47] Arizona bill seeks workable registry exit

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The Registry Matters Podcast’s mission is to cover issues surrounding the Registry. We cover cases that will peel back the veneer of what we need to do to change our lives for the better. We cover news articles that spark conversations about the total insanity of this modern day witch hunt. This podcast will call out bad policy and call out those that are making bad policy.

To change things for the positive, we need to act. We are 6-7-8-900k strong. With that many people, plus their friends and family, over a million people are affected by the registry. We should be able to secure donations to hire lawyers and lobbyists to move the agenda in our favor. We need our people to be represented.