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Citizens can search for current inmates using their CT DOC number, name and date of birth. Information regarding offenders currently incarcerated with the Department of Correction (DOC) is made available as a public service and in the interest of public safety.
The State of Connecticut Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection (DESPP) maintains a Connecticut Sex Offender Registry website which provides information on sex offenders living in Connecticut who are required to register with DESPP under Connecticut law.
Governor M. Jodi Rell today demonstrated major upgrades in Connecticut’s “Megan’s Law” sex offender registry, debuting an updated site that is far easier to for parents to use to protect their children and offers exciting enhancements such as interactive maps and the ability to e-mail notifications to friends and neighbors.
To access the Connecticut Sex Offender Registry Website: www.state.ct.us/dps.
Search sex offender registries for all 50 states, the District of Columbia, U.S. Territories, and Indian Country.
Connecticut Sex Offender Registry contains an updated searchable record of sex offenders. Information provided includes the offenders last known address and physical descriptors as well as location, date, and details of the offense.
The State of Connecticut Department of Public Safety maintains a Sex Offender Registry that is available to the public on the internet. The Sex Offender Registry on the CT.gov portal contains public information about those convicted of certain offenses and who reside in Connecticut.
The Connecticut Sex Offender Registry is managed by the Connecticut State Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection. The state sex offender registry and all registering agencies in the state use OffenderWatch to manage offenders and notify the public.
Connecticut's sex offender registry law applies to persons convicted, or acquitted by reason of insanity, of four categories of offenses: (1) criminal offenses against a victim who is a minor, (2) nonviolent sexual offenses, (3) violent sexual offenses, and (4) felonies committed for sexual purposes. It also applies to attempts, conspiracies ...
Those convicted of crimes in the first three categories must register as sex offenders; courts may require registration of those in the fourth. Registration is with the Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection (DESPP), which maintains an on-line, searchable registry. The registry contains offenders’ names, photographs, and ...