OPINION
The litigation before the Court is the most recent constitutional challenge to New Jersey’s “Megan’s Law.” Plaintiffs, all of whom have been convicted of sex offenses in New Jersey and are subject to registration and community notification pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2C:7-1 et seq. (collectively referred to as “Megan’s Law”), instituted this suit on October 15, 2001 challenging the constitutionality of Article IV, Section 7, Paragraph 12 of the New Jersey Constitution and recent amendments to Megan’s Law authorizing the development and maintenance of “a system for making certain information in the central registry ... publicly available by means of electronic Internet technology.” P.L.2001, Ch. 167 (codified at N.J.S.A. §§ 2C:7-12 to - 19) (hereinafter referred to as the “Internet Registry Act”). Soon after filing an initial complaint, Plaintiffs submitted an application for preliminary injunctive relief seeking to prevent the implementation of New Jersey’s Internet sex offender registry, which is statutorily authorized to become effective on January 1, 2002. P.L. 2001, c. 167 § 10. 1
For purposes of this motion, Plaintiffs’ claims can be divided into two categories. *279 First, Plaintiffs allege that the Internet Registry Act, by allowing unlimited public access to certain information collected pursuant to Megan’s Law’s registration provisions, violates their constitutional right to privacy in: (1) their home addresses; and (2) the totality of the information assembled and posted in the Internet sex offender registry. Second, Plaintiffs contend that the retroactive application of the Internet Registry Act to those members of the plaintiff class whose underlying sex offense was committed prior to the law’s enactment violates the Ex Post Facto and Double Jeopardy Clauses of the United States Constitution. 2
For the reasons stated below, the Court will grant, in part, and deny, in part, Plaintiffs’ motion for preliminary injunctive relief.
I.
Background:
Since its enactment, New Jersey’s Megan’s Law has been the subject of series of constitutional challenges.
See Doe v. Poritz,
Following registration, each sex offender is classified according to his risk of re-offense and the need for community notification. The prosecutor of the county where the offender resides and the prosecutor of the county in which he was convicted jointly determine, based on a matrix of criteria identified in the Megan’s Law guidelines, whether the registrant poses a low (tier 1), moderate, (tier 2), or high (tier three) risk of re-offense. N.J.S.A. 2C:7-8(d)(1).
4
In compliance with the decisions of the New Jersey Supreme Court and the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, all registrants designated as either high or moderate risk offenders are provided notice and an opportunity to challenge their tier classification in a judicial proceeding in which the state has the burden of persuasion to establish the registrant’s tier classification and notification by clear and convincing evidence.
See Doe v. Poritz, 142
N.J. 1,
Pursuant to the law’s existing system of community notification, registration information is not made available to the general public, but is distributed to classes of persons with a statutorily defined need for the information depending on the classification tier assigned to each registrant. As currently defined by the statute, need for the information is based on the reasonable likelihood that an individual or group will encounter the registrant. Entitlement to notification under the “likely to encounter” standard is generally based on geographical proximity to an offender’s place of residence and/or places he is likely to frequent. Tier-one notification requires county prosecutors to notify only law enforcement agencies “likely to encounter” the registrant. N.J.S.A. 2C:7-8(c)(1). Tier-two notification requires county prosecutors to notify both law enforcement agencies and registered schools, day care centers, summer camps, and other children’s or women’s organizations providing care for potential victims in areas where the registrant is likely to be encountered. N.J.S.A. 2C:7-8(c)(2). Finally, for those registered sex offenders posing the highest risk of re-offense, a tier three classification requires county prosecutors to notify, in addition to those organizations notified under the lower-tier levels, all members of the public likely to encounter the registrant. N.J.S.A. 2C:7-8(c)(3). Tier-three notification generally extends to members of the registrant’s surrounding neighborhood and places he is likely to frequent.
While breadth of notification is generally left to the discretion of the two county prosecutors (subject, of course, to judicial review), the distribution of notification must comply with the notification guidelines promulgated by the Attorney General and ultimately approved by the Third Circuit.
See Paul P. v. Farmer,
The Internet Registry Act
In the November 7, 2000 general election, New Jersey’s electorate approved by public referendum an amendment to the New Jersey Constitution authorizing the legislature to enact new statutory provisions permitting the disclosure of sex offender registry information to the general public. The amendment, paragraph 12 of Article IV, § 7 of the New Jersey Constitution of 1947, reads as follows:
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Constitution and irrespective of any right or interest in maintaining confidentiality, it shall be lawful for the Legislature to authorize by Law the disclosure to the general public of information pertaining to the identity, specific and general whereabouts, physical characteristics and criminal history of persons found to have committed a sex offense. The scope, manner, and format of the disclosure of such information shall be determined by or pursuant to the terms
of the law authorizing the disclosure. Following adoption of this amendment, both houses of the New Jersey legislature enacted Public Law 2001, Chapter 167, codified at N.J.S.A. §§ 2C:7-12 to -18 (“Internet Registry Act”), which authorizes the creation of a “system for making *282 certain information in the central registry ... publicly available by means of electronic Internet technology.” 7 The Internet Registry Act does not replace the existing system of community notification under which individuals within a court-ordered zone of notification are provided with registry information about those offenders in their community whom they are “likely to encounter” nor does it modify the basic procedures for classifying sex offenders according to an individualized assessment of their risk of re-offense and continuing danger to the community. Rather, these recent amendments provide for the creation of a web-based sex offender registry which will operate in conjunction with but independent of the existing system of notification.
The Act contains its own set of provisions governing the content of the website and scope of disclosure, and designating those registrants to whom it will apply. The most significant feature of this recent legislation and that which forms the central basis of all of Plaintiffs challenges is the undifferentiated disclosure authorized by the Act. The legislature has specifically declared that “the public may, without limitation, obtain access to the Internet registry to view an individual registration record, any part of, or the entire internet registry.” P.L.2001, c. 167, § 2(b).
*283 The Act does not make available on the Internet information about all of the sex offenders registered in New Jersey. Those subject to its provisions consist of a more limited subset of comparatively more dangerous sex offenders, including tier three (high risk offenders) and, with certain exceptions, tier two (moderate risk) offenders as to whom a court has ordered community notification. N.J.S.A. § 2C:7-13(b) and (c). The Internet registry does not contain registry information of tier 1 (low risk) offenders or those tier 2 offenders as to whom a court has ordered no notification. N.J.S.A. § 2C:7-13(f). In addition, certain moderate risk offenders who have committed only a single offense are excluded from the Act, including: (1) juveniles who have been adjudicated delinquent for a sex offense; (2) registrants who have violated N.J.S.A. 20:14-2-9 (sexual assault) or N.J.S.A. 20:14-3 (sexual contact) where the offender was related to the victim by blood or affinity to the third degree or was a foster parent, a guardian or stood in loco parentis within the victim’s household; (3) registrants who violated such sections if the victim assented to the commission of the offense, but by reason of age was not capable of giving lawful consent. N.J.S.A. § 2C:7-13(d)(l)-(3). The State may, however, override these exemptions upon a showing, by clear and convincing evidence, that “the risk to the general public posed by the registrant is substantially similar to that posed by offenders whose risk of re-offense is moderate and who do not qualify under the enumerated exceptions.” N.J.S.A. § 2C:7-13(e).
The particular information contained in the registry, while somewhat more detailed, is similar to the information provided in the unredacted community notification flyers distributed to those “likely to encounter” an offender under the current system of community notification, with a few exceptions. The Internet registry will include: (1) the offender’s name and any aliases used by the offender; (2) any Megan’s Law sex offenses committed by the offender, including a brief description of the date and location of disposition of any offense; a general description of the offender’s modus operandi, if any; (3) the determination of whether the risk of re-offense by the offender is moderate or high; (4) the offender’s age, race, sex, date of birth, height, weight, hair, eye color and any distinguishing scars or tattoos; (5) a photograph of the offender and the date on which the photograph was entered into the registry; (6) the make, model, color, year, and license plate number of any vehicle operated by the offender; and (7) the street address, zip code, municipality, and county in which the offender resides. N.J.S.A. § 2C: 7-13(g). However, unlike the notification fliers distributed under the current system of community notification, the Internet registry will not include information about an offender’s place of employment or schooling.
In enacting the law, the Legislature declared that “public access to registry information is intended solely for the protection of the public and is not intended to impose additional criminal punishment upon any convicted sex offender.” N.J.S.A. § 2C:7-12. Consistent with this purpose, the Act contains certain provisions designed to limit misuse of the registry for purposes inconsistent with the Act’s purpose in promoting public safety. For instance, the law expressly prohibits the use of registry information for the purpose of “applying for, obtaining, or denying health insurance, insurance, loans, credit, education, scholarships, or fellowships, benefits, privileges or services provided by a business establishment (unless for a purpose consistent with the enhancement of public safety), or housing or accommodations.” N.J.S.A. § 2C:7- *284 16. The Act also requires the posting of warnings that misuse of registry information to “threaten, intimidate, or harass” may be subject to prosecution and establishes new criminal offenses proscribing the use of registry information to commit a crime or disorderly persons offense. Id.; N.J.S.A. § 2C:7-14(a). 8 Finally, the Act authorizes the Attorney General or county or municipal prosecutor having jurisdiction, or any persons aggrieved by “a pattern or practice of misuse” of the registry, to bring legal action for appropriate relief. N.J.S.A. § 2C:7-16(d).
II.
Plaintiffs seek a preliminary injunction enjoining the State from commencing operation of the Internet sex offender registry. A district court should grant preliminary injunctive relief only if: (1) plaintiffs are likely to succeed on the merits; (2) denial will result in irreparable harm to the plaintiffs; (3) granting the injunction will not result in irreparable harm to the defendant; and (4) granting the injunction is in the public interest.
See Maldonado v. Houstoun,
In light of the fundamental constitutional issues raised by Plaintiffs, the availability of preliminary injunctive relief will turn primarily on whether plaintiffs have sufficiently demonstrated a reasonable likelihood of success on the merits with respect to each of their constitutional claims.
A.
Plaintiffs maintain that they are likely to prevail on their claim that the retroactive application of the Internet Registry Act to registrants whose commission of their underlying sex offenses preceded enactment of the legislation imposes additional criminal punishment in violation of the Ex Post Facto and Double Jeopardy Clauses of the United States Constitution. The Third Circuit’s decision in
E.B. v. Verniero,
The Ex Post Facto Clause prohibits the retroactive application of a law that “inflicts a greater punishment, than the law annexed to the crime, when committed.”
Calder v. Bull,
At the outset, the Court observes that the Supreme Court’s Ex Post Facto and Double Jeopardy jurisprudence has been the source of much confusion, providing no “single formula for deciding which legislative measures constitute punishment and which do not.”
E.B.,
Shortly after the Third Circuit’s decision in
E.B.,
the Supreme Court issued its opinion in
Hudson v. United States,
clarifying several aspects of its Double Jeopardy jurisprudence and more clearly articulating the proper framework for determining whether a legislative measure constitutes criminal punishment.
See
Whether a particular punishment is criminal or civil is, at least initially, a matter of statutory construction. A court must first ask whether the legislature, in establishing the penalizing mechanism, indicated either expressly or impliedly a preference for one label or the other. Even in those cases where the legislature has indicated an intention to establish a civil penalty, we have inquired further whether the statutory scheme was so punitive either in purpose or effect as to transform what was clearly intended as a civil remedy as a civil remedy into a criminal penalty.
Hudson,
In assessing whether either the objective purpose of the legislation or its effects are sufficiently punitive to overcome a presumption favoring the legislative judgment, the Court instructed that the factors previously outlined in
Kennedy v. Mendoza-Martinez,
“(1) whether the sanction involves an affirmative disability or restraint; (2) whether it has historically been regarded as punishment; (3) whether it comes into play only on a finding of scienter; (4) whether its operation will promote the traditional aims of punishment — retribution and deterrence; (5) whether the behavior to which it applies is already a crime; (6) whether an alternative purpose to which it may be connected is assignable for it; (7) whether it appears excessive in relation to the alternative purpose assigned.”
See Hudson,
Each of these factors, the Court explained, must be evaluated “in relation to the statute
on its face” and
“only the clearest proof will suffice to override the legislative intent and transform what has been denominated a civil remedy into a criminal penalty.”
Id.
(citing
United States v. Ward,
In addition to articulating the proper test for distinguishing between remedial or regulatory measures and criminal penalties, the Court signaled a retreat from its decision in
United States v. Halper,
In evaluating plaintiffs’ Ex Post Facto and Double Jeopardy claims, the Court will apply the two-prong inquiry articulated in
Hudson
against the background of the Third Circuit’s analysis in
E.B.
14
The
*288
first prong of this two-step inquiry requires the court to ascertain whether the legislature, in enacting the legislative measure, “indicated either expressly or impliedly a preference for one label or the other.”
United States v. Ward,
A. Legislative Intent
In ascertaining the “intent” of the legislature, the Court focuses on the declared purpose of the legislature, as well as the structure and design of the statute. Here, the legislature has made the remedial purposes of the legislation unmistakably clear. Recognizing that “knowledge of whether a person is a convicted sex offender at risk of re-offense could be a significant factor in protecting oneself and one’s family, or those in care of a group or community organization, from recidivist acts of’ convicted sex offenders, the legislature has authorized the posting on the Internet of certain registry information about a subset of Megan’s Law registrants who are determined to present a particularly high risk of re-offense in order to enable susceptible members of the public “to undertake appropriate remedial precautions to prevent or avoid placing potential victims at risk.” N.J.S.A. § 2C:7-12. Indeed, the legislature has expressly disavowed any intent to inflict additional punishment on Plaintiffs for their past conduct. Public access to the Internet registry, the Act’s preamble explains, “is intended solely for the protection of the public, and is not intended to impose additional criminal punishment upon any convicted sex offender.” Id. As the Attorney General explains, the Internet registry supplements the existing system of community notification by making certain registry information about particularly dangerous registrants available to individuals who do not reside within close geographical proximity to such offenders but nevertheless may at some point have a particular need for the information to avoid becoming the victim of an offender’s recidivist criminal acts. Consistent with this purely remedial purpose, the legislature has prescribed additional criminal penalties to deter the misuse of the information for purposes inconsistent with the Act’s non-punitive goals. See N.J.S.A. § 2C:7-16. In addition, the legislature has exempted certain registrants from the Act’s provisions where it has determined, based on the relative low risk of re-offense posed by a particular offender, that making such information “available to the *289 general public via the Internet would not necessarily serve the public safety purposes of the law.” N.J.S.A. § 2C:7-13(d)(1) — (3) (excluding from the Internet registry tier 2 offenders whose sole sex offense was committed was committed as a juvenile or was an incest offense or an offense where the victim consented but was underage (e.g. statutory rape)). 15
B. Effect
Having concluded that the actual legislative purpose in enacting the Internet Registry Act was remedial, the Court turns to the “effects” prong to determine whether, notwithstanding the legislature’s declared remedial intent, the statute should be regarded as punitive for purposes of the Ex Post Facto and Double Jeopardy Clauses. For purposes of the present motion for preliminary injunctive relief, the Court must determine whether Plaintiffs’ have demonstrated a reasonable likelihood of providing the “clearest proof’ that “the statutory scheme [is] so punitive either in purpose or effect as to transform what was clearly intended as a civil remedy into a criminal penalty.”
Hudson,
Before proceeding to consider each of the factors identified in Kennedy, the Court notes that, as a general matter, Plaintiffs’ renewed Ex Post Facto challenge to Megan’s Law focuses almost exclusively on the “excessive” scope of disclosure authorized by the Internet Registry Act. Specifically, Plaintiffs argue that this feature of the legislation affects the analysis with respect to nearly every factor identified by the Court in Kennedy, leading inescapably to the conclusion that the Act imposes additional criminal punishment despite its avowed remedial intent. (See Pl.’s Br. at 25) (“As to nearly all of the factors, it is the excessiveness of the notification authorized by the Act that requires a finding that the Act is punitive.”). However, as is clear following the Court’s decision in Hudson, each Kennedy factor must be evaluated individually and no one factor should be given controlling weight. Moreover, the Court observes that much of the Third Circuit’s previous analysis in E.B. with respect to the “effects” prong of the inquiry is not dependent on the scope of the public disclosure authorized by the statute. With these two general observations, the Court turns to evaluate each of the Kennedy factors.
(1) Affirmative Disability or Restraint.
The Internet registry does not work an affirmative disability or restraint in the sense traditionally associated with punishment.
See Hudson,
Moreover, as the Supreme Court has recently clarified, in considering the
Kennedy
factors, including whether the statute imposes an affirmative disability or restraint, we must evaluate the purpose and effect of the statute “on its face.”
See Hudson,
*291 The legislation, by its terms, neither condones nor tolerates the potentially adverse social consequences which may follow disclosure. Indeed, as previously noted, the Act contains a number of provisions designed to minimize any unintended negative consequences resulting from public disclosure. Warnings and newly proscribed criminal penalties serve to deter misuse of registry information for purposes inconsistent with the non-punitive goals of the legislation. The law also expressly prohibits use of registry information in denying “health insurance, insurance, loans, credit, education, scholarships or fellowships, benefits, privileges or services provided by any business establishment (unless for public safety purposes), or housing or accommodations.” N.J.S.A. § 2C:7-16(c). 16 Accordingly, because the”praetical hardships” to which Plaintiffs make reference come about as incidental to a valid remedial solution to a serious public safety problem — protecting the public from the danger of recidivism by sex offenders — this factor does not support classification of the Act as a punitive measure. 17
(2) Historical Treatment of Analogous Legislative Measures.
The second
Kennedy
factor asks whether, from a historical perspective, the legislative measure has been viewed as punishment. As the Third Circuit observed in
E.B.,
“where analogous measures have traditionally been regarded by our society as serving punitive purposes,” there may be “an objective basis for regarding the measure as punishment” despite the legislature’s avowed non-punitive intent.
In addressing this factor, Plaintiffs attempt to draw what is by now a familiar comparison between public disclosure of registry information and historic forms of punishment such as public shaming, humiliation, and banishment. Specifically, Plaintiffs argue that “because the Act authorizes excessive disclosure, it is more analogous to historical sanctions that have traditionally been regarded as punishment, such as branding and “scarlet letters, which generally broadcast an offenders’ criminal status than it is to measures such as wanted posters which serve the remedial purpose of bringing a fugitive to justice.” (Pl.’s Br. at 27.) However, the Third Circuit in E.B. rejected this analogy for reasons that do not depend on the scope of the public disclosure:
Public shaming, humiliation, and banishment all involve more than the dissemination of information.... [Tjhese colonial practices inflicted punishment because they either physically held the person up before his or her fellow citizens for shaming or physically removed him or her from the community. The ‘sting’ of [New Jersey’s sex offender notification scheme] results not from their being publicly displayed for ridicule or shaming but rather from the dissemination of accurate public record information about their past criminal activities and a risk assessment by responsible public agencies based on that information. This distinction makes a substantial difference when one looks for the relevant historical understanding of our society.
Facilitating public dissemination of registry information more closely resembles, albeit imperfectly, the “wanted posters” of the frontier days or the old “hue and cry” of colonial times, both designed to alert the public to the presence of a potentially dangerous felon in the community so that individuals could protect themselves and
*293
their families and assist law enforcement in their apprehension.
See E.B.,
(3) Finding of Scienter.
The third
Kennedy
factor directs the Court to consider whether the Act is triggered only upon a finding of scienter. Traditionally, sanctions conditioned upon a finding of mens rea are generally likely to be considered criminal rather than civil in nature. Conversely, statutory measures that apply without regard to an individual’s mental culpability to achieve some broader public interest unconnected to fault are considered civil in nature.
See Kansas v. Hendricks,
The Supreme Court’s analysis in
Hudson
suggests that the relevant inquiry when considering this factor is whether the Act’s requirements may be imposed
only
upon a finding of scienter.
See
Here, it cannot be said that the provisions of the Internet Registry Act come into play only on a finding of scienter. As is true of the system of registration and notification generally, those who are potentially subject to having their registration information posted on the Internet registry include not only those convicted of a criminal offense incorporating a mens rea component, but also those who have evidenced their propensity for recidivism and continuing danger to the community through conduct resulting in an acquittal by reason of insanity. N.J.S.A. § 2C:7-2(a). Accordingly, this factor does not support the classification of the Act as punishment.
*294 (If) Traditional Aims of Punishment.
The fourth factor in the
Kennedy
analysis — whether the Act promotes the traditional aims of punishment — does not point conclusively in favor of either classification. The prospect of having one’s criminal history, along with various pieces of identifying information assembled and posted in an Internet registry accessible to the general public may presumably deter some persons from perpetrating sex offenses. However, any deterrent effect attributable to the Act is merely incidental to the statute’s stated' remedial purpose. Moreover, as the Supreme Court has noted, the fact that a statute intended by the legislature to accomplish prospective, remedial purposes may incidentally serve to deter others who might otherwise emulate the conduct of those subject to the Act does not necessarily lead to the conclusion that the legislative measure must be classified as punitive. Many purely remedial legislative measures may serve to convince those who would prefer not to be subject to the provisions to refrain from engaging in conduct which could potentially subject them to the statute’s provisions. Indeed, as the Supreme Court has observed, to hold that the mere presence of a deterrent purpose renders ... sanctions “criminal” for double jeopardy purposes would severely undermine the Government’s ability to engage in effective regulation ...”
Hudson
at 496,
Moreover, the Act’s purpose cannot fairly be characterized as retributive.
See Artway v. Attorney General of the State of New Jersey,
(5) Application to Conduct Similarly Proscribed by Criminal Statute.
The fifth
Kennedy
factor examines whether the conduct to which the statute’s provisions apply is already punishable as a crime. In general, the fact that the conduct triggering the provisions of the challenged statute is criminalized by another statute “seems to point toward a finding that [the measure] is criminal in nature.”
United States v. Ward,
(6) Alternative Non-punitive purpose/Ex-cessiveness
The final two factors under the
Kennedy
analysis require the Court to determine whether there is a prospective, remedial purpose that can reasonably be assigned to the Act, and if so, whether the means employed to achieve the goals of the statute “appear excessive in relation to the alternative non-punitive purpose assigned.”
Kennedy,
The Court finds this argument unpersuasive for two reasons. First, as the preceding analysis makes clear, a careful examination of the other
Kennedy
factors provides little, if any, support for classifying the Internet Registry Act as a punitive measure. Plaintiffs’ are, therefore, left to argue that the “excessiveness” of the public disclosure authorized by the Act alone suffices to overcome the presumption in favor of the legislature’s stated remedial intent. However, while there is some language in the Third Circuit’s opinion in
E.B.
suggesting that the excessiveness of notification in relation to the legitimate remedial purposes of the statute may be dispositive on issue of whether the statute inflicts “punishment,” the Supreme Court has since expressly disapproved of an approach which assigns dispositive weight to any single factor outlined in
Kennedy. See Hudson,
Second, in evaluating the significance of this factor, the relevant question is whether the disclosure of registry information beyond that which is fully supported by the legislation’s legitimate remedial purposes renders the statute so exceedingly severe as to overcome the presumption in favor of the legislature’s state remedial intent. The Court views this question as distinct from the issue of whether the Act, by expanding notification beyond those with a particular need for the information, unnecessarily infringes on plaintiffs’ privacy interests. Even were we to accept that allowing unlimited access to the Internet registry impermissibly intrudes on Plaintiffs’ privacy interests, this would not necessarily compel the conclusion that the “effects — or ‘sting’ — of a measure is so harsh ‘as a
matter of degree’
that it constitutes ‘punishment.’ ”
See Artway v. Attorney General of the State of New Jersey,
The State has a “compelling interest,” the Third Circuit has recognized, in protecting the public which fully justifies disclosure of information about “moderate” and “high risk” sex offenders to numerous individuals in the general public under the existing community notification guidelines.
19
In
E.B.,
the Third Circuit held that the “direct effects” of this system of community notification, pursuant to which notification flyers are actively distributed
*297
to a significant segment of the public, “clearly do not rise to the level of extremely onerous burdens that sting so severely as to compel a conclusion of punishment.”
Nor does the absence of “reasonable fit” between the statute’s legitimate non-punitive goals and the means employed necessarily provide a sufficient objective basis for impugning the express remedial intent of the legislature. In evaluating this factor, courts have never insisted on a “perfect fit between means and ends.”
E.B.,
The Court is therefore unwilling to conclude that Plaintiffs’ have adequately demonstrated a reasonable likelihood of adducing the “clear proof’ necessary to negate the legislature’s expressly stated remedial intent and classify the Act as “punishment” for purposes of the Ex Post Facto and Double Jeopardy clauses. Accordingly, Plaintiffs’ motion to enjoin the retroactive application of the Internet Registry Act to those members of the plaintiff class convicted of a sex offense prior to the law’s enactment will be denied.
B.
The crux of Plaintiffs’ privacy claims centers on the implications of the undiffer *298 entiated disclosure of registration information via the Internet. Specifically, Plaintiffs contend that unlimited public access to Plaintiffs’ home addresses under the Internet Registry Act cannot be reconciled with recent Third Circuit precedent regarding the permissible scope of Megan’s Law notification. Plaintiffs further argue that the Act violates their as yet unrecognized right to privacy in the compilation of the information contained in the Internet registry.
General Framework for Analyzing Plaintiffs’ Privacy Claims:
While the full scope of constitutionally-protected privacy rights has not been precisely delineated, the types of privacy interests entitled to constitutional protection can be grouped into two categories: (1) the individual interest in avoiding disclosure of personal matters (“confidentiality interest”), and (2) the interest in independence in making certain kinds of important decisions without governmental interference (“autonomy interest”).
See United States v. Westinghouse,
While Courts have generally devoted considerably less attention to clarifying the nature and scope of protection for individual interests in maintaining the confidentiality of personal information, the Third Circuit has developed a general framework for analyzing these types of privacy claims. In determining whether information is entitled to privacy protection, the threshold question is “whether it is within an individual’s reasonable expectations of confidentiality.”
Fraternal Order of Police v. City of Philadelphia,
The right to control access to and limit the disclosure of confidential information is not, however, absolute and must often yield to certain legitimate governmental interests.
20
See Trade Waste
*299
Management Ass’n, Inc. v. Hughey,
The government’s collection and use of otherwise confidential information necessarily entails limited disclosure of the information to those who, consistent with the proper governmental purposes, are authorized to receive it.
See, e.g., Westinghouse,
Constitutionally-Protected Privacy Interest in the Confidentiality of One’s Home Address:
Applying this analytical framework, the Third Circuit ultimately upheld the current system of community notification against the claim that public disclosure of information collected pursuant to the Megan’s Law impermissibly infringes on registrants’ constitutionally protected privacy interests.
See Paul P. v. Verniero,
As is clearly evident from the subsequent decisions of both this Court and the Court of Appeals, the careful tailoring of notification in a manner reasonably calculated to limit disclosure of a registrant’s home address to those with “a particular need for it” while avoiding “disclosure to those who have no similar need” was critical to maintaining the delicate constitutional balance between the individual registrants’ privacy interests and the legitimate goals of the statute. Adequate safeguards against unnecessary public disclosure were necessary to sustain operation of the law’s existing notification provisions against constitutional challenge. In Paul P. v. Farmer, on remand from the Third Circuit, this Court declared that the Megan’s Law notification provisions, as administered under the Attorney General’s original guidelines, were unconstitutional to the extent that the State had failed to implement reasonably adequate safeguards to prevent the unnecessary disclosure of registrants’ home addresses to members of the public who are not reasonably “likely to encounter” a registrant and who otherwise have no particular need for the information. Id. In this Court’s opinion, the Court emphasized the importance of these safeguards in sustaining the notification procedures against a privacy challenge:
Defendants ask the Court to overlook any deficiencies in the current system [of community notification] in light of the compelling purposes served by the Act. However, the procedural safeguards contained within the Attorney General Guidelines are crucial to maintaining the constitutional balance between plaintiffs’ privacy interests and the goals of the statute. See Fraternal Order of Police,812 F.2d at 117 (“One of the crucial factors in weighing the competing interests referred to in Westinghouse is ‘the adequacy of safeguards to prevent unauthorized disclosure.’ ”) (quoting United States v. Westinghouse *302 Electric Corp.,638 F.2d 570 , 577 (3d Cir.1980)). If, in practice, these safeguards fail to limit the release of plaintiffs’ home addresses to those persons with a statutorily defined need for this information, a different constitutional balance would result.
Paul P.,
The unlimited public disclosure of registrants’ home addresses authorized by the Internet Registry Act simply cannot be reconciled with the Third Circuit’s holdings in Paul P. I and II. 23 The proposed Internet registry, which the state maintains is intended not to replace but rather to supplement the existing system of notification, dispenses with any safeguards designed to carefully limit disclosure of protected information to individuals and groups with a legitimate public safety-related need for the information. 24 As the State concedes, in making the home addresses of a subset of Megan’s law regis *303 trants available to the general public via the Internet, the Act also permits access to this information by “people who will never actually encounter any registered sex offenders in New Jersey nor have any particular need for the information.” (Def.’s Br. at 14). In doing so, the Act impermis-sibly strips this protected information of any protection from unnecessary public disclosure.
The State argues that the public interest in alerting individuals who are not statutorily entitled to receive this information under the current restrictive community notification system but who nonetheless run the risk of actually encountering a comparatively high risk sex offender or otherwise have a particular need for information about such offenders justifies making the information freely accessible to these unidentified members of the public via the Internet. However, while the State may have a compelling interest in ensuring that individuals “with a particular need for the information,” but not readily identifiable based on fixed criteria such as geographical proximity, have access to the information necessary to protect themselves and their families, a necessary corollary implicit in the Third Circuit’s
Paul P.
decisions is that any broader interest in informing the public at large or the global community about the whereabouts of those previously convicted of sex offenses is significantly diminished and, in any event, does not suffice to justify the disclosure of protected confidential information to innumerable individuals without a legitimate public safety-related need for the information.
Cf., E.B. v. Verniero,
*304 Constitutionally-protected Privacy Interest in the Totality of the Plaintiffs’ Registry Information:
With the exception of Plaintiffs’ home addresses, none of the individual pieces of information included in the Internet registry is the type of personal, intimate information generally considered to be within an individual’s reasonable expectations of confidentiality. Indeed, the Court of Appeals has specifically recognized that information regarding an individual’s criminal history, as well as the basic identifying information accompanying it, is not constitutionally entitled to privacy protection.
See Paul P. I,
In
Paul P. v. Vemiero,
this Court addressed a similar privacy claim brought against Megan’s Law’s original system of community notification. Relying, in part, on the Third Circuit’s opinion in
E.B.,
this Court rejected the proposition that a compilation of public information implicates a constitutionally-protected privacy interest that would otherwise not exist with respect to each individual piece of information but for the fact of compilation.
See
In support of their claim, Plaintiffs rely heavily on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Reporters Committee,
as well as on the New Jersey Supreme Court’s interpretation of that decision. Plaintiffs confidently predict that the Third Circuit is likely to hold, as did the New Jersey Supreme Court in
Doe v. Poritz,
that the “compilation and dissemination of information effected by Megan’s Law notification implicates a constitutionally protected privacy interest.”
Both the Third Circuit and this Court have repeatedly stressed that
Reporter’s Committee
is inapposite on the issue of those privacy interests entitled to protection under the United States Constitution.
See E.B.,
Plaintiffs also suggest that the Third Circuit, if given an opportunity to directly address the issue, is likely to concur with the holding of the New Jersey Supreme Court in
Doe v. Poritz
recognizing a constitutionally protected privacy interest in preventing the compilation and dissemination of otherwise public information.
See
Apart from these decisions, Plaintiffs point to no other persuasive legal authority supporting their asserted right to limit the compilation and dissemination of the totality of the information contained in the Internet registry. To the contrary, the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit upheld Washington state’s version of Megan’s law against a similar claim that the “accumulation and dissemination” of information about those subject to the Act’s registration and notification provisions violated registrants’ constitutional right to privacy.
See Russell v. Gregoire,
III.
In light of the foregoing analysis, the Court concludes that Plaintiffs’ have demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits of their claim that the Internet Registry Act violates their constitutionally protected privacy interest to the extent that it permits the unlimited public disclosure of Plaintiffs’ home addresses. Moreover, the Court has little difficulty concluding that Plaintiffs have satisfied the remaining components of the preliminary injunction standard. In the absence of an injunction preventing the unlimited public disclosure of Plaintiffs home addresses, Plaintiffs will undoubtedly suffer irreparable harm to their constitutionally-protected privacy interests. Generally, in order to demonstrate “irreparable harm,” a plaintiff must demonstrate “potential harm which cannot be redressed by a legal or equitable remedy following trial.”
Acierno v. New Castle County,
Moreover, a grant of limited injunctive relief will not prevent the State from posting the vast majority of registration information on the Internet registry or continuing to affirmatively distribute notification flyers under the existing notification scheme to a significant segment of the public likely to encounter registered offenders As such, any potential danger posed to the community which results from postponing operation of the Internet registry does not outweigh the irreparable harm posed to Plaintiffs constitutional rights. In any event, registrants’ individual rights guaranteed by the United States Constitution must take precedence over the State’s interest to make this protected information available to the broadest segment of the public. The interests of the public are necessarily promoted when individual rights to privacy are protected from unwarranted state intrusion. Accordingly, Plaintiffs have satisfied the Court that they are entitled to a preliminary injunction preventing the State from granting unrestricted public access to Plaintiffs’ home addresses via the Internet pursuant to N.J.S.A. § 2C:7-13(g).
The State argues that any injunction issued by this Court to protect Plain *308 tiffs’ interests in limiting the disclosure of their home addresses should be limited to precluding the exact home address from inclusion on the Internet registry and should not mandate the exclusion of the “general vicinity of a sex offender’s home address, as it is only the exact home address that arguably is protected under the federal constitution.” Def.’s Br. at 24. 28 The precise scope of information entitled to protection from unlimited disclosure to the general public is unclear. The Third Circuit addressed a similar issue with respect to the Redacted Notices distributed under the existing system of community notification:
The single issue raised with respect to the Redacted Notices is this: the “governmental disclosure of one’s street name, block of residence, and name of apartment building ... breaks the veil of anonymity surrounding one’s place of residence” and, thus, infringes upon appellants’ privacy interest. Again, we disagree. Whatever privacy interest, if any, may exist in the area of one’s residence, i.e., street name, block of residence, or name of apartment building, however, is substantially outweighed by the state’s compelling interest in disclosing Megan’s Law information to the relevant public, an interest recognized in Paul P. I.
Paul P. II,
Redacted Notices, it must be remembered, are not released wily-nily to the general public. Rather, they are generally given only to individuals within the court-authorized notification zone, individuals who are otherwise authorized to receive an Unredacted Notice, but who do not sign a receipt form. Any burden imposed on appellants as a result of the identification of a quite specific area of residence, albeit not the precise home address itself, simply does not trump the state’s interest in providing that information to authorized individuals within the court-authorized notification zone.
Id. (emphasis added). In light of the broad scope of disclosure authorized by the Internet Registry Act, the burden imposed by the release of information regarding Plaintiffs’ specific area of residence is substantially higher. Moreover, any state interest in extending disclosure beyond the court-ordered notification zone to the general public without regard to the public safety-related goals of the legislation is likewise significantly reduced. Providing unlimited access via the Internet to the name of the specific street, block of residence, apartment building, or even municipality in which a registrant resides may permit numerous individuals with no legitimate public safety-related need for the information to quickly ascertain an offender’s precise home address. For purposes of this motion, the Court need not conclusively decide this issue. The purpose of a preliminary injunctive relief, where appropriate, is to prevent irreparable harm to the plaintiffs by preserving the status quo pending the court’s final determination of plaintiffs’ claims on the merits. Accordingly, in order to provide meaningful protection to Plaintiffs’ privacy interests pending final resolution of this issue, the Court determines that it is necessary to limit the content of the information which may be permissibly disclosed to the county in which the offender resides.
*309
Before granting partial injunctive relief, however, the Court must briefly consider whether this specific feature of the Act is severable from the remainder of the legislation. The issue of severability is generally a question of state law.
See Trade Waste Management Ass’n v. Hughey,
780 F.2d
221, 231
(3d Cir.1985). Under New Jersey law, the central inquiry in determining the severability of a specific clause or provision is whether the legislature intended that the challenged Act “should stand or fall as a unitary whole.”
Inganamort v. Borough of Fort Lee, 72
N.J. 412, 422,
The provisions of this act shall be deemed to be severable, and if any phrase, clause, sentence, word, or provision of this act is declared to be unconstitutional, invalid, or inoperative in whole or in part, or the applicability thereof to any person is held invalid, by a court of competent jurisdiction, the remainder of this act shall not thereby be deemed to be unconstitutional, invalid, or inoperative and, to the extent it is not declared unconstitutional, invalid or inoperative, shall be effectuated and enforced.
N.J.S.A. 2C:7-6. The incorporation of a broad severability clause is evidence of the legislature’s intent and creates a presumption that the invalid sections of the statute are severable.
See Id.
However, in order to ascertain the intent of the legislature, the Court must further determine “whether the objectionable feature of the statute can be excised without substantial impairment of the principal object of the statute.”
Id.
at 422,
IY.
For the reasons set forth above, Plaintiffs’ motion to enjoin implementation of the Internet Registry Act is granted in part. The Court will enter an 'order enjoining the State from granting unrestricted public access to registry information identifying the house or apartment number, street, zip code, and municipality in which the Plaintiffs’ reside pursuant to N.J.S.A. § 2C:7-13(g) of the Act. Plaintiffs’ motion to enjoin implementation of the remaining provisions of Act is denied. The Court will enter an appropriate order.
ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION FOR A PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION OF THE INTERNET REGISTRY ACT, N.J.S.A. §§ 2C:7-12 — 19
This matter having appeared before the Court upon Plaintiffs motion for a preliminary injunction, and the Court having reviews the submissions of the parties and having heard oral arguments, for the reasons set forth in an opinion issued by this Court, which findings of fact and conclusions of law are incorporated herein by reference, and for good cause appearing,
IT IS on this 6th day of December, 2001,
*310 ORDERED THAT: Plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction preventing the implementation of P.L. 2001, ch. 167 (codified at N.J.S.A. §§ 2C:7-12 to -19) is DENIED provided that the Internet Registry MUST EXCLUDE information identifying the home or apartment number, street, zip code, and municipality in which Plaintiffs’ reside.
Notes
. Plaintiffs simultaneously filed a motion for class certification and an application for an order sealing certain materials filed with the Court and permitting the use of pseudonyms. The Court heard oral argument on all three motions on November 16, 2001, and subsequently signed a consent order granting certification of a class of plaintiffs containing four separate subclasses:
Subclass Al: All persons found to have committed a sex offense or offenses (as defined in N.J.S.A. 2C:7-2(b)), none of which were committed on or after July 23, 2001, who, pursuant to Public Law 2001, chapter 167, now sure, or in the future will be, subject to having information about them which is contained in the sex offender central registry established pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2C:7-4 made available to the public through the Internet.
Subclass A2: All persons found to have committed a sex offense or offenses (as defined in N.J.S.A. 2C:7-2(b)), at least one of which was committed on or after July 23, 2001, who, pursuant to Public Law 2001, chapter 167, now are, or in the future will be, subject to having information about them which is contained in the sex offender central registry established pursuant to 2C:7-4 made available to the public through the Internet.
*279 Subclass Bl: All persons found to have committed a sex offense or offenses, none of which were committed on or after November 7, 2000, and who are subject to Article IV, Section 7, paragraph 12 of the New Jersey Constitution.
Subclass B2: All persons found to have committed a sex offense or offenses, at least one of which was committed on or after November 7, 2000, and who are subject to Article IV, Section 7, paragraph 12 of the New Jersey Constitution.
On October 22, 2001, the Court, upon motion by Plaintiffs, issued an order temporarily sealing a portion of the documents submitted to the Court which were previously filed under seal in Paul P. v. Farmer, pending the Court’s consideration of a motion to permanently seal those documents. Plaintiffs subsequently filed a motion to permanently seal those documents and an application to proceed under pseudonyms in this litigation. At oral argument, counsel for defendants raised no objection to the motion. Accordingly, in a separate order. issued with this opinion, the Court will grant Plaintiffs' motion for a permanent sealing order and permission to use pseudonyms in order to preserve the confidentiality of Plaintiffs' identities.
. Plaintiffs' complaint also alleges that the Internet Registry Act violates analogous provisions of the New Jersey State Constitution and seeks a declaration that paragraph 12 of Article IV, § 7 of the New Jersey Constitution violates Plaintiffs' rights to Equal Protection under the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution. Plaintiffs have not, however, raised these additional claims in support of their application for preliminary injunctive relief.
. Those subject to the Act's registration provisions include persons adjudicated delinquent or acquitted by reason of insanity for commission of a designated sex offense. N.J.S.A. 2C:7-2(a).
. Each registrant's future risk of re-offense is determined using the "Registrant Risk Assessment Scale” promulgated by the Attorney General. The scale is a matrix of thirteen categories organized into four larger headings: (1) Seriousness of the Offense; (2) Offense History; (3) Characteristics of the Offender; and (4) Community Support. The complete list of factors is as follows: (1) Degree of Force; (2) Degree of Contact; (3) Age of Victim; (4) Victim Selection; (5) Number of Offenses/Victims; (6) Duration of Offensive Behavior; (7) Length of Time Since Last Offense; (8) History of Anti Social Acts; (9) Response to Treatment; (10) Substance Abuse; (11) Therapeutic Support; (12) Residential Support; and (13) Employment/Educational Stability. These criteria are based on a list of factors identified by an advisory counsel of experts as relevant to assessing an offenders risk of recidivism. N.J.S.A. § 2C:7-8(b).
. For a detailed description of these notification guidelines,
see Paul P. v. Farmer,
. The receipt form states, in pertinent part:
I will comply with the Order of the Court which allows me to receive the sex offender information provided to me;
I will comply with the Megan's Law Rules of Conduct which have been provided to me;
I will submit to the jurisdiction of the Court.
Paul P. v. Farmer,
. The Internet Registry Act represents New Jersey's version of what is rapidly emerging as the next generation of Megan’s Law legislation. A number of other states have similarly taken advantage of the technology afforded by the Internet and adopted statutes authorizing the creation of web-based sex offender registries. Many of these sites contain a multi-field search function allowing unlimited access to information about convicted sex offenders residing throughout the state. The Attorney General has provided a list of 30 states which currently maintain sex offender Internet registry web sites. The following is a listing of each states respective authorizing statutes and sex offender registry web site addresses: Alabama, Ala.Code § 15-20-25 (www.qsvweb.net); Alaska, Alaska Stat. § 18.65.087 (www.dps.state.ak.us); Arizona, Arizona Stat. § 13-3827 (www.azsexoffen-der.com); Colorado, Colo.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 18-3-412.5 (www.sor.stoie.co.MsJ; Delaware, Del.Code. Ann. Tit. 11 § 4121 (www.state.de.us/dsp/sexoff); Florida, Fla. Stat. Ann. § 775.21 and § 943.043 (www.fdle.state.fl.us/Sexual Predators/); Georgia, Ga.Code Ann. § 42-1-12 (www.gan-et.org/gbi); Hawaii, Haw.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 846E-2 et seq. (www.ehawaiigov.org/HI— SOR); Illinois, 730 Ill. Comp. Stat. Ann. 152/115 (www.isp.state.il.us); Indiana, Ind. Code § 5-2-12-11 (www.state.in.us.serv/cji— sor); Iowa, Iowa Code § 692A.13 (www.state.ia.us/govemment/dps/dci/isor/); Kansas, Kan. Stat. Ann. § 22-4909 (amended by 2001 Kan. Sess. Laws Ch. 208 to provide explicit authority for maintenance of a statewide Internet sex offender registry) (www.ink.org/public/kbi/kbiregoffpage.html); Kentucky, Ky.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 17.510 (http://kspsor.state.ky.us/); Louisiana, Lá.Rev. Stat. Ann. § 15.540 et seq. (www.la-socpr.lsp.org/socpr/); Maryland, Md. Ann. Code art. 27, § 792 (www.dpscs.state.md.us/sor/);^ Michigan, Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.730 (www.mip-sor.state.mi.us/); Minnesota, Minn.Stat. § 244.052 ('www.doc.state.mnMs/level3llev-el3.asp); Mississippi, Miss.Code Ann. § 45-33-49 (www.sor.mdps.state.ms.us/); Montana, Mont.Code Ann. § 46-23-508 (http: //svor.doj.state.mt.us); Nebraska, Neb.Rev. Stat. § 29-4001 et seq. (www.nsp.state.ne.us/sor/find.cfrn); New Mexico, N.M. Stat. Ann. § 29.11A-5.1 (www.nmsexoffender.dps.state.nm.us/); New York, N.Y. Correct. Law § 168-q (www.cri-minaljustice.state.ny.us/nsor/); North Carolina, N.C. Gen.Stat. § 14 — 208.15 (www.sbi.jus.state.nc.us); South Carolina, S.C.Code Ann. § 23-3-490 (www.sled.state.sc.us); Tennessee Tenn.Code Ann. § 40-39-106 (www.ticic.state.tn.us); Texas, Texas Crim. P.Code Ann. § 62.01 et seq. (http://records.txdps.state.tx.us/so — search, cfm); Utah, Utah Code Ann. § 77-27-21.5 (www.corrections.utah.gov); Virginia, Va.Code Ann. § 19.2-390.1 (www.vsp.stofe.va.Ms/; West Virginia, W. Va.Code § 15-12-5 (www.wvstatepolice.com/sexo/j9; Wyoming, Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 7-19-303 (http://attomey-general.state.wy.us/dci/).
.N.J.S.A. § 2C:7-14(c) provides that "any person who uses information inclosed pursuant to this act to commit a crime shall be guilty of a crime of the third degree. Any person who uses information disclosed pursuant to this act to commit a disorderly persons offense shall be fined not less than $500 or more than $1,000, in addition to any other penalty or fíne imposed." To assist in the prosecution of such offenses, the Act further provides that "evidence that a person obtained information about an offender from the Internet registry within one year prior to committing a criminal offense against that offender shall give rise to an inference that the person used information in violation" this provision. N.J.S.A. 2C:7-14(e).
. Article I, Section 10 of the United States Constitution provides that "no state shall ... pass any ex post facto law." U.S. Const. Art. I§ 10.
. The Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution similarly provides that no person shall "be subject for the same offense to be put twice in jeopardy of life and limb.” U.S. Const., Amend. V.
. In
Artway,
the Third Circuit upheld the registration provisions of Megan’s Law against claims that mandatory registration violated the Ex Post Facto and Double Jeopardy clauses of the United States Constitution. In addressing the threshold inquiry of whether the registration component of the law constituted "punishment,” the Court observed the "confused state” of the Supreme Court's evolving jurisprudence with regard to this issue.
. Notably, the Supreme Court granted cer-tiorari, in part, because of "concerns about a wide variety of novel double jeopardy claims spawned in the wake of
Halper,"
including those raised in
E.B.,
challenging the Megan's Laws existing system of community notification as violative of the Double Jeopardy clause.
Hudson,
. This aspect of the decision in
Hudson
merely further confirms a trend acknowledged by the Third Circuit in
E.B.,
.While the Supreme Court's decision in Hudson suggests that Artway no longer provides the appropriate test for determining whether a statutory measure should be classified as "punishment,” there appears to be substantial overlap between the factors relied on in E.B. and those which comprise the "intent-effects” test articulated in Hudson. The threshold question for both tests is whether the "actual intent” of the legislature in *288 adopting the challenged statutory measure (whether express or implied) was to punish past conduct or to remedy a perceived societal problem. The second prong of Hudson's “intent-effects” test essentially collapses the second two prongs of the Art-way analysis— the "objective purpose” and “effects” of the Act — into a single inquiry: whether the legislation is so punitive in either its objective purpose or effect as to negate the legislature's remedial intent. Many of the factors which the Supreme Court has indicated are relevant to this question coincide with the factors which comprise the "objective purpose" and "effect” prongs of the Artway analysis, including the relationship between the remedial goals of the legislation and its means of effectuating those goals and the historical treatment of analogous measures. Thus, to the extent possible, the Court incorporates the Third Circuit’s analysis in E.B. into its evaluation of the factors outlined in Kennedy.
. The preamble to the legislation explains the basis for excluding these one-time offenders from the provisions of the Internet Registry Act:
... the interest in facilitating rehabilitation of juveniles who have been adjudicated delinquent for the commission of one sex offense, but who do not present a relatively high risk of re-offense, justifies the decision to limit public access to information about such juveniles through the Internet. Other instances where the Legislature has determined that making sex offender registry information available to the general public through the Internet would not necessarily serve the public safety purposes of the law include moderate risk offenders whose sole sex offense involved incest or consensual sex.
N.J.S.A. § 2C:7-12.
. Plaintiffs argue that, despite these provisions, the harsh consequences for sex offenders which may flow from notification are "compounded exponentially” by the unlimited public access afforded by the Internet Registry Act. PL's Br. at 26. However, the anecdotal evidence presented by plaintiffs does not support such dire predictions. Many of plaintiffs’ exhibits are recycled from previous legal challenges to Megan's Law and refer to the negative social consequences attendant on community notification generally. Plaintiffs place particular emphasis on certain affidavits describing incidents of public retribution during the period of unfocused, "wily-nily” public notification preceding this Court's order directing the State to establish adequate safeguards to prevent unnecessary public disclosure of registry information. However, this evidence does not support Plaintiffs' exaggerated claims that extending disclosure of registry information to the general public will significantly increase the frequency and intensity of such incidents and dramatically magnify the severity of the burdens imposed on registrants and their families. While unrestricted public access to registry information may provide access to individuals who intend to misuse the information and will take no heed of the additional criminal penalties imposed by the Act for such misuse, as a practical matter, any increased risk to offenders and their families is likely to be marginal.
See Femedeer v. Haun,
. Plaintiffs further argue that the "excessive” public disclosure authorized by Act, by unnecessarily and unreasonably infringing on Plaintiffs’ privacy interests in ensuring that registry information not disclosed "wily-nily” to those without a legitimate public-safety related need for it, the Act imposes an "affirmative disability” on Plaintiffs. This aspect of the Act, which requires an evaluation of the "fit” between the legitimate remedial goals of the statute and the means employed, will be addressed within the context of the final factor in the Kennedy analysis.
. While
Kennedy
lists these factors separately, these two factors appear to be very closely related. Once it has been determined that the challenged legislation was not motivated retributive animus, but rather actually intended to accomplish legitimate non-punitive goals, the Court must essentially determine whether the means employed are “rationally related” to the statute’s legitimate remedial goals.
See E.B., 119
F.3d at 1093. The relevance of the relationship between these two factors appears to be two-fold: (1) the absence of a reasonable "fit” between the means and ends of the legislation may provide an objective basis for determining that the legislation was actually motivated by retributive animus,
see id.
("While it is true that 'even remedial sanctions carry the sting of punishment,’ only if the sting is not 'reasonably related' to the remedial goal would an objective observer be justified in perceiving a punitive purpose.”) (quoting
Artway,
. For instance, under the notification guidelines upheld by the Third Circuit in
Paul P. II,
. The language of the Court of Appeals’ decisions in this area suggest that the Court will typically employ a deferential “rational basis” standard of review in evaluating the constitutionality of government-mandated disclosure.
See, e.g., Westinghouse,
. In
United States v. Westinghouse Electric Corp.,
. In
Paul P. I,
the Third Circuit rejected this court's conclusion that individuals required to register under Megan's Law had no reasonable expectation of privacy in their home address. Relying primarily on several Freedom of Information Act cases, as well as the New Jersey Supreme Court’s opinion in
Doe v. Poritz,
. The State suggests that reliance on the Third Circuit’s Paul P. decisions is misplaced insofar as it ignores the distinction between active notification (as affirmatively delivered through the current community notification scheme) and passive dissemination (through an Internet registry that requires individuals who wish to access the information to take some affirmative step to do so). As a practical matter, this distinction has little significance and is largely illusory in light of the nature of Internet technology. The posting of registry information on the Internet facilitates widespread dissemination by reducing registry information to an electronic format in which it is accessible with extraordinary ease to any individual, including young children, with a basic understanding of computers. Even a relatively unsophisticated search engine would permit a significant segment of the public to navigate the web site and retrieve registry information with very little effort. Once obtained, plaintiffs’ home addresses can be shared with other members of the public who may not have Internet access. Moreover, the State has cited no legal authority to suggest that this distinction has any constitutional significance in determining an individual's reasonable expectations of confidentiality. In any event, to the extent that the State invites this court to re-examine the question of whether plaintiffs have a constitutionally-protected privacy interest in their home address, and to re-balance the state's interest in disclosing that information against the plaintiffs' privacy interests based on this tenuous distinction, this Court must decline to do so.
. Under the Act, there are no “unauthorized disclosures,” as registry information is made freely available to the general public. While the Act contains a number of provisions aimed at sanctioning and deterring misuse of the information posted on the Internet registry once it has been obtained, these provisions do not serve to limit access to registrants' home addresses by persons without a proper or specific need for the information. These provisions do not suffice to protect the interest of registrants in assuring that this confidential information is disclosed only to those individuals who have a particular need for it. Any unwarranted intrusion into plaintiffs' protected privacy interests is complete the moment the information is released to an individual with no proper or specific need for the information.
. In reaching this conclusion, the Court does not intend to suggest that the Third Circuit’s Paul P. decisions necessarily foreclose altogether the creation of an Internet-based registry which permits access to the home addresses of particularly dangerous sex offenders to members of the public who do not reside within the court-ordered zone of notification but nonetheless have "a particular need for this information.” The State may, for instance, manage to devise a password system which restricts access to the Internet registry to individuals with a legitimate public-safety related need for the information. Moreover, neither the decisions of the Third Circuit nor this court necessarily preclude the State from *304 adopting more flexible statutory criteria which allow the State to more accurately identify those members of the community who may have “a particular need for the information.” Either of these alternatives may present an opportunity for the State to remedy the perceived problem of under-notification in a manner more carefully calculated to better achieve the goals of the statute without unreasonably impinging on the "nontrivial” privacy interests of the Plaintiffs' in the confidentiality of their home address.
. In
E.B.,
the Court of Appeals observed that “[w]hile the Supreme Court recognized in
Reporters Committee
that ‘Rap Sheets’ are protected under the privacy-for-law-enforcement records exemption to the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(7)(C), such protection reflects a Congressional policy judgement, not federal Constitutional law.”
. It is instructive to note that, in
Doe v. Kelley,
plaintiffs challenged an amendment to Michigan’s Sex Offenders Registration Act which made registry information fully available for public inspection upon request at the local law enforcement agency having jurisdiction over the respective zip code area in which the specific registrant resides.
. The Act currently authorizes the release of "the street address, zip code, municipality and county in which the offender resides.” NJ.S.A. § 2C:7-13(g).
