OPINION
Presently before the Court is plaintiffs’ motion to enforce this Court’s injunction of January 24, 2000. For the reasons set forth below, this motion is denied and the injunction is vacated.
I.
On March 16, 1999, the Third Circuit held that New Jersey’s Registration and Community Notification Act, N.J.S.A. 2C:7-1
et seq.
(“Megan’s Law”) was constitutional on its face.
Paul P. v. Verniero,
On January 24, 2000, this Court held that the Megan’s Law notification procedures were unconstitutional because they did not adequately safeguard against the unauthorized disclosure of protected information. The Court noted that, as it was then administered, the law contained no uniform method of disclosure which ensured that Megan’s Law information was disseminated to those “with a particular need for it” while avoiding disclosure to those who had no similar need.
Paul P. v. Farmer,
On March 22, 2000, this Court received a copy of the Attorney General’s revised Guidelines captioned “Attorney General Guidelines for Law Enforcement for the Implementation of Sex Offender Registration and Community Notification Laws.” The revised Guidelines, effective March 23, 2000, depart from the original Guidelines in several respects. Most significantly, the revised Guidelines now provide two versions of notice forms: an “unredacted” form and a “redacted” form. The unre-dacted notice form contains the exact home address of the Megan’s Law registrant (“registrant”) along with the registrant’s name, photograph, description, license plate number, vehicle description, and sex offender status. (Rev.Guid., 24). The redacted version contains all of the latter information, but replaces the exact street address of the registrant with more general information such as the block number or intersection nearest the offender’s residence. (Id.)
Under the revised procedures, only those individuals who sign a receipt form may receive the unredacted notice. (Id. at 43). Members of the community who are within the scope of notification, but who decline to sign the receipt form, receive the redacted notice. (Id.). 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.
(Defs.’ Ex. Q).
The Guidelines state that persons who do not sign the receipt form and therefore receive the redacted rather than the unre-dacted form are told that they are, nonetheless, bound by the applicable “Rules of Conduct.” (Rev.Guid., 43). The Attorney General has created four types of “Rules of Conduct” forms. One form is tailored for school personnel, one for community organization officials, one for community members and one for businesses. (See Defs.’ Ex. H, I, J, K). The “Rules of Conduct” for community members states *412 that “[d]oing the following is inappropriate and may result in court action or prosecution being taken against you” and lists the following prohibitions:
1. Do not share the information in this notification flier, or the flier itself, with anyone outside of your household or anyone not in your care. Do not share the information in this notification flier, or the flier itself, with the media.
2. Do not make any copies of this notification flier, or reproduce it in any way.
3. Do not post this notification flier in a public location, or display it in a place where it is visible to persons who are not members of your household. Do not attempt to harm the offender or his/her property. Do not attempt to harass the offender or make unsolicited, unwanted contact. If you believe the individual is a physical threat to you or children in your care, please contact your local police.
4. Do not take any action against the offender’s family, household members or employer that may in any way harm or harass a person or property.
(Defs.’ Ex. J). Each of the Rules of Conduct forms also states, “[i]f you are not certain whether sharing the notification flier with a particular individual or disclosing the notification information would be appropriate under particular circumstances, you should contact the Megan’s law unit in the County Prosecutor’s Office.” (Id.).
Under the revised Guidelines, businesses authorized to receive notification under Tier 2 receive only the redacted notice. (Rev.Guid., 43-33). In community organizations receiving Tier 2 notices, a responsible official is vested with discretion to distribute either the redacted or unredacted version to staff members depending upon the nature of the organization’s activities or its proximity to a sex offender’s residence. (Id. at 40). Similarly, school principals are authorized to share the redacted notice with those staff members who are in a position to observe unauthorized persons on or near school property. (Id. at 35). Principals may share the unredacted version only with those staff members whose job duties require specific knowledge of a registrant’s exact home address, such as security guards or bus monitors. (Id.). Every recipient of the unredacted notice, either in a community organization or a school, must sign the receipt form.
The revised Guidelines have also changed the method of delivery of Megan’s Law notices in several ways. Under the revised Guidelines an initial attempt is made to hand deliver Tier 3 notices. (Id. at 42). If an adult resident aged 18 or over is not present to receive the notice, a letter or door hanger is left which directs the resident to contact the local law enforcement agency or County Prosecutor’s Office to receive important public safety information. (Id.). Also, where Tier 3 notification is authorized for the parents and guardians of children attending a school within the zone of notification, notices are no longer sent home with students. Under the revised Guidelines, a redacted notice is sent directly to the parents or guardians by regular mail along with the signed Court Order and a copy of the Rules of Conduct. (Id. at 44-45).
Plaintiffs acknowledge that the “Attorney General has gone to great lengths in the [r]evised Guidelines toward ensuring uniform distribution of Megan’s Law information.” However, they argue that the revised Guidelines remain deficient in two respects. (Pis.’ reply, 1). First, plaintiffs argue that the revised Guidelines are deficient because they do not require the issuance of a court order which would make the recipient of sex offender information subject to contempt of court sanctions for subsequent unauthorized disclosures. Second, plaintiffs argue that a person’s block of residence is constitutionally protected information which will be disseminated without any safeguards against its improper use in the “redacted” notices. The Court will consider each argument in turn.
*413 II.
In this Court’s Opinion on January 24, 2000, the Court emphasized the importance of the “adequacy of safeguards” in upholding a statute against a privacy challenge. The Court stated:
Defendants ask the Court to overlook any deficiencies in the current system 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 diselo-sure.’”)(quoting United States v. Westinghouse 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.,
In
Fraternal Order of Police,
In reaching this conclusion, the Third Circuit held that the adequacy of safeguards was “[o]ne of the crucial factors in weighing the competing interests referred to in Westinghouse.” Id. at 117-118. 1 The Court emphasized that, in this case, there was no directive to City employees which limited access to the responses to specific employees or specified the proper method for handling and storing the responses. Id. at 118. In addition, the Court noted that there was no statute or regulation which “penalize[d] officials with confidential information from disclosing it.” Id.
The Court in
Fraternal Order of Police
stated that safeguards against disclosure “have been held to be adequate when there exists a statutory penalty for unauthorized disclosures.”
Id.
However, the Court did not hold, as plaintiffs suggest, that safeguards are automatically inadequate in the absence of such statutory penalties. In fact, the cases suggest that the adequacy of safeguards, like the entire
Westinghouse
balancing test, is a flexible determination
*414
to be made based upon the facts of the particular case and the goals of the particular statute.
See Faison v. Parker,
The facts of this case and the goals of Megan’s Law are in many ways unique. In Westinghouse and Fraternal Order of Police, confidential information was gathered for the use of public officials. In these cases, the ultimate purpose of gathering the information was to serve the public interest, but the information gathered was not itself disseminated to the public. In contrast, the overriding purpose of Megan’s Law is to place information about sex offenders directly in the hands of the public.
In light of the unique purposes of Megan’s Law, the Attorney General has devised a reasonable method of distributing sex offender information to authorized persons, while avoiding disclosure to unauthorized persons. Under the revised Guidelines, only those persons within the scope of notification as defined by a Court are sent Megan’s Law notices. The county prosecutors charged with delivering these notices are given explicit and detailed instructions regarding the appropriate methods of distribution. In addition, as noted in the Court’s previous Opinion, there are statutory penalties which may be enforced against public officials who distribute Megan’s Law information improperly.
2
See Paul P.,
The Attorney General’s office has indicated that it is currently working with Megan’s law judges to incorporate contempt of court language into all Megan’s Law orders.
(See
Defs.’ brief, 19).
3
If contempt of court language is incorporated into all Megan’s law orders and if contempt sanctions are uniformly enforced, the number of unauthorized disclosures may be reduced even further. However, the Guidelines as currently written are constitutional. As the Court emphasized in its previous Opinion, a system in which there are no unauthorized disclosures is practically unattainable.
See e.g., Schachter v. Whalen,
III.
Plaintiffs next argue that information contained in the redacted notices is constitutionally protected and will be dis *415 tributed to persons without any protection against its unauthorized use. According to plaintiffs, the constitutional right to privacy protects information such as the block on which a registrant lives or the intersection nearest his home. Defendants argue that the constitutional right to privacy protects a person’s address, but does not extend to the “general vicinity” in which a person lives.
The right to privacy upon which plaintiffs’ claims are based derives from the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Whalen v. Roe,
In its opinion in this case, the Third Circuit stated that, “[i]n determining whether information is entitled to privacy protection, we have looked at whether it is within an individual’s reasonable expectations of confidentiality.”
Paul P.,
Although the existence of a right to privacy in personal information is now relatively well-established, the boundaries of that right are less clear.
See Scheetz v. The Morning Call, Inc.,
Plaintiffs also argue that a street name or block number is entitled to constitutional protection because it may lead people to discover a registrant’s “exact” street address. Specifically, plaintiffs state:
By disclosing the street name and block on which a registrant resides or the name and address of his motel, along with the registrant’s name, photograph, description, and vehicle identification and license plate number, the State has given more than enough information for a recipient — many of whom live within blocks of the registrant — to know or easily discover a registrant’s ‘exact’ street address, if so desired.
(Pis.’ brief, 10). In today’s world, much “private” information can be uncovered about a person from non-private sources. In most cases, a person with the inclination and internet access can discover a another’s home address without great effort. Were this Court to expand the Supreme Court’s holding in Whalen to protect all information which may “lead to” the discovery of private information, very little information would be free from constitutional protection. The Court declines to read Whalen so broadly.
IV.
For the reasons set forth above, plaintiffs’ motion to enforce the injunction is denied. Because the Court has concluded that the revised Attorney General Guidelines comply with the Court’s previous Opinion, the injunction against disseminating Megan’s Law notices is vacated. The Court will issue an appropriate order. 5
Notes
. In
United States v. Westinghouse Electric Corp.,
. Defendants argue that an additional safeguard against improper disclosure is the requirement that notice recipients sign the receipt form and agree to the Rules of Conduct in the presence of a law enforcement officer. Plaintiffs state that such "moral and psychological suasion does not equate in deterrent effect with a legally enforceable contempt sanction.” (Pis.' reply, 4). This may be true. However, the deterrent effect of signing .the receipt form in the presence of a law enforcement officer should not be dismissed too quickly. Indeed, the entire jury system is built upon the assumption that jurors, for moral and psychological purposes, will try "to live up to the sanctity of [their] oath.”
Dennis v. United States,
. Defendants state that "preliminary discussions ha[ve] taken place with the Honorable David S. Baime, J.A.D., the Chair of the three-judge Megan's Law Disposition Review Committee ..., the Honorable Lawrence M. Lawson, A.J.S.C., and members of the Administrative Office of the Courts ...” (Defs.' brief, 19 *).
. Most people have no particular interest in keeping their home address secret. They willingly have their addresses listed in the phone book and take no steps to hide their location. It may be that individuals in the witness protection program, battered women or those with reason to fear the actions of others have a particularized need to keep their home addresses hidden. Performers, public officials and some "ordinary folk” may also desire to conceal their home addresses.
See, Paul P.,
. At oral argument, plaintiffs asked the Court to stay its decision pending appeal to the Third Circuit if the Court decided to vacate the injunction. Because the Court does not see any potential for irreparable harm in the relatively short period of time necessary to appeal this decision to the Third Circuit, the Court, in its discretion, will deny this request. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 62(c).
