Megan's Law: The Child Murder That Created Sex Offender Registries
How a 7-year-old's death transformed American law in 89 days

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Quick Facts
Quick Facts
A summer day that changed American law
Seven-year-old Megan Kanka was playing outside her home on Barbara Lee Drive in Hamilton Township, New Jersey, on July 29, 1994. Her neighbor Jesse Timmendequas, 33, lured her into his house with the promise of showing her a new puppy. Hours later, police found Megan's body in a nearby park. She had been raped and strangled.
Jesse Timmendequas had two prior convictions for sexual offenses against children. But Megan's parents, Richard and Maureen Kanka, didn't know that. They didn't know their neighbor was a pedophile. They didn't know he shared a house with two other convicted sex offenders. No system existed that could have warned them.
The Kanka family's horror quickly turned to anger, and anger turned to action. Within days of Megan's funeral, they launched a petition drive with one clear demand: Parents have the right to know if convicted sex offenders live in their neighborhood.
From grief to legislation in record time
Eighty-nine days after Megan's death, the Kanka family had collected 430,000 signatures. The pressure on New Jersey lawmakers was massive. In October 1994—exactly three months after the murder—the state passed the first version of Megan's Law.


