In this case, Appellant, a sex offender, contends that Louisiana violated the Constitution’s proscription of ex post facto laws by subjecting him to a sex offender neighborhood notification law enacted after his conviction and sentencing for indecent behavior with a juvenile. For the following reasons, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
In 1994, Appellant Michael D. Moore pleaded guilty in Louisiana state court to indecent behavior with a juvenile. The court sentenced him to five years’ imprisonment, then suspended his sentence and placed him on probation. A condition of Moore’s probation was that he register with law enforcers in the parish of his residence per the Louisiana sex offender registration statute, La. R.S. 15:542.
In 1995, the Louisiana Legislature amended the sex offender registration statute. As amended, the statute requires a sex offender placed on probation to notify his neighbors of his residence and his sex offender status. In 1996, a Louisiana court revoked Moore’s probation and made executory his sentence because Moore failed to comply with the amended statute’s neighborhood notification requirement. Moore successfully appealed the revocation to the Louisiana Third Circuit Court of Appeals. Louisiana then appealed to the Louisiana Supreme Court. The Louisiana Supreme Court reinstated the revocation of Moore’s probation.
Moore subsequently filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus, arguing that, as applied to him, Louisiana’s neighborhood notification requirement was a constitutionally prohibited ex post facto law. Citing cases from the Second, Third, and Ninth Circuits holding that sex offender neighborhood notification requirements do not constitute “punishment” violating the constitutional proscription of ex post facto laws, the magistrate judge recommended dismissal of Moore’s habeas petition. The district court adopted the magistrate *872 judge’s recommendation and dismissed Moore’s habeas petition. Moore appeals.
DISCUSSION
Louisiana’s sex offender neighborhood notification law does not violate the Constitution’s proscription of ex post facto laws. Article I, § 10 of the Constitution prohibits the states from enacting any law “which imposes a punishment for an act which was not punishable at the time it was committed; or imposes additional punishment to that then prescribed.”
Weaver v. Graham,
The Louisiana sex offender neighborhood notification law passes this test. Three Circuits have held that sex offender neighborhood notification laws like Louisiana’s do not, according to the “intent-effects” test, impose “punishment” violating the Ex Post Facto Clause.
See Russell v. Gregoire,
The intent of Louisiana’s law is not punitive. We discern a statute’s intent by looking first at the words of the statute. If its words are clear and unambiguous, “then our interpretative journey comes to an end, "and we apply that plain meaning to the facts before us.”
United States v. Barlow,
Nor does the statute’s structure point up a punitive intent. Appellant contends that because the Louisiana law does not condition neighborhood notification on carefully calibrated, individualized determinations of dangerousness, we should look past the legislature’s stated nonpunitive intent and scrutinize critically its “objective intent.” Appellant argues that the objective intent of the Louisiana law is punitive, and that his subjection to the law, therefore, vio
*873
lates the Ex Post Facto Clause. We disagree. “A perfect fit between ends and means” need not exist for the legislature’s objective intent to be other than punitive: “If a reasonable legislator motivated solely by the declared remedial goals could have believed the means chosen were justified by those goals, then an objective observer would have no basis for perceiving a punitive purpose in the adoption of those means.”
Verniero,
Moore has not marshaled the “clearest proof’ that the Louisiana law is “so punitive in form and effect as to render [it] criminal despite [the legislature’s] intent to the contrary.”
Ursery,
CONCLUSION
Because the Louisiana sex offender neighborhood notification law is not unconstitutionally punitive either in intent or effect, we affirm.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
See also Doe,
. We reach this holding mindful of
State v. Bishop,
