Sex offenders in Missouri must post a sign on Halloween that says “no candy or treats at this residence.”
A new lawsuit is challenging a Missouri law that bars those on the state’s sex offender registry from participating in Halloween activities involving children.
The law, which took effect in 2008, also requires offenders to turn off exterior lighting on their homes and post a sign that says “no candy or treats at this residence” after 5 p.m. on Halloween.
Attorney Connie McFarland-Butler observed that the success of the lawsuit may pivot on more than just the question of a sex offender’s right to free expression.
She noted that the Hazelwood man who filed the legal challenge, Thomas Sanderson, 58, consulted with his local police department before staging a lavish Halloween display outside his home. Sanderson was convicted in 2006 of statutory sodomy involving a 16-year-old girl. Last year, Hazelwood police arrested him after receiving reports that he had decorated his home and was handing out candy to kids.
“Although I'm not sympathetic to what he was previously convicted of, he did reach out and seek out advice," McFarland-Butler said. “He was misled.”
That might not sway a judge when it comes to overturning the law.