MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This is a civil rights action in which Plaintiff, referred to herein only by the pseudonym, “Alan Woe” (“Plaintiff’) alleges a deprivation of his right to due process of law as guaranteed by the United States Constitution. Plaintiff seeks to have this court hold a provision of the New York State Sex Offender Registration Act of 1995, codified at Section 168-h(l) of the New York State Correction Law (“SORA”), unconstitutional. 1 Presently before the court is Defendants’ motion, pursuant to Rule 12 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, to dismiss the complaint. For the reasons set forth below, the motion is granted and the complaint is dismissed.
BACKGROUND
I. Factual Background
The relevant facts supporting Plaintiffs claim are not in dispute and are set forth below.
Plaintiff is a designated sex offender pursuant to the terms of SORA. At the time of his designation, Plaintiff was required to register as a sex offender with law enforcement authorities for a period often years. That period began as of the *384 date of enactment of SORA, January 21, 1996. Three days before the ten year period was set to expire, SORA was amended to provide for a twenty year period of registration for sex offenders classified within Plaintiffs category of risk. Thus, instead of Plaintiffs registration period expiring on January 21, 2006, it is now set to expire on January 21, 2016.
II. Plaintiff’s Complaint
Plaintiff does not challenge the Constitutionality of SORA as a whole. Instead, this action is limited to the claim that the statutory amendment extending the registration period from ten to twenty years has deprived Plaintiff of his right to procedural due process as guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Specifically, Plaintiff argues that the newly amended statutory scheme deprives him of the procedural right to petition for relief from the twenty year registration requirement.
III. Defendant’s Motion
Defendants seek dismissal of the complaint on the ground that the amendment to the registration period required under SORA implicates no constitutionally protected right to liberty and therefore no due process rights are due to Plaintiff. Defendant further argues that even assuming the implication of a constitutionally protected right, Plaintiff has received all of the process that is due. After outlining the relevant legal principles, the court will turn to the merits of the motion.
DISCUSSION
I. Standards on Motion to Dismiss
In
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly,
— U.S. —,
The “plausibility” language used by the Supreme Court in
Bell Atlantic
has not been interpreted by the Second Circuit to require a “universal standard of heightened fact pleading,” but to require a complaint to “amplify a claim with some factual allegations in those contexts where such amplification is needed to render the claim plausible.”
Iqbal v. Hasty,
In the context of a motion to dismiss, this court must, as always, assume that all allegations set forth in the complaint are true and draw inferences in favor of the non-moving party.
Watts v. Services for the Underserved,
*385 With these principles in mind, the court holds that Plaintiffs complaint makes clear the theory of his claim. The court holds further that the relevant facts here are not in dispute and the case is ripe for decision on the pleadings.
II. The Sex Offender Registration Act
A. The Statute
SORA requires that sex offenders, defined to include individuals convicted of certain enumerated crimes, register with the New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services for a specified period of time.
See generally
N.Y. Corr. L. § 168;
see Doe v. Pataki,
Sex offenders with a low risk of re-offense are designated as “level one” offenders. N.Y. Corr. L. § 168-l(6)(a);
Doe,
Level one sex offenders are assigned a shorter period of registration and the information regarding these individuals is more limited than the scope of information allowed to be disseminated as to higher level offenders. For example, SORA provides that information disseminated as to level one offenders “may” include a photograph, while the dissemination of information as to level two and three offenders “shall” include a photograph of the sex offender. See N.Y. Corr. L. § 168-1(6)(a)(b)(c).
When SORA was enacted, level one sex offenders were required to register on a yearly basis for ten years. Sexually violent predators were required to register more often and faced a potential lifetime registration requirement.
See Doe,
*386 SORA provides for modification of findings of the sentencing court. Level two sex offenders, who are now subject to lifetime registration (and have not been designated as sexual predators, sexually violent offenders or predicate sex offenders), may, after registering for a period of thirty years, petition the court to be relieved of the requirement to register. N.Y. Corr. L. § 168-o(1). This section of SORA does not apply to level one offenders, nor could it since it applies only after a sex offender has registered for a thirty year period-ten years after the expiration of the registration period for a level one sex offender. There is no separate provision that explicitly provides a procedure for a level one sex offender to petition to shorten the twenty year period of registration. See N.Y. Corr. L. § 168-o(1) (applying to level two sex offenders).
There is, however, a SORA provision that allows any sex offender to petition a court for an order “modifying the level of notification.” See N.Y. Corr. L. § 168-o(2) (applying to “any” sex offender required to register). Thus, any level three sex offender may petition to be designated a level two offender, and any level two offender may petition to be designated as a level one offender. In the case of a level one sex offender, who has already been assigned the lowest level of risk, this would seem to include the right to seek a ruling that would relieve the offender from any designation and, thus, any registration requirement.
B. Prior SORA Litigation
Shortly after the effective date of SORA, a class action was filed challenging the Constitutionality of the statute’s application to those convicted prior to its effective date.
See Doe v. Pataki,
On remand, the district court held that the registration and community notification provisions of SORA implicated Constitutionally protected liberty interests and that the procedures for determining sex offender risk levels did not adequately protect those interests.
Doe v. Pataki,
The litigation holding that SORA did not violate the ex post facto clause, and culminating in the procedural due process settlement, did not address the issue of the permissibility of extending the duration of registration requirements. Instead, after disposition of the ex post facto question, that litigation was addressed solely at chai-
*387
lenging the procedures for determining the risk level of sex offenders.
Doe v. Pataki,
III. Disposition of the Motion
Plaintiff’s claim is limited to the argument that the amendment of SORA that increased the time period of registration for level one offenders from ten to twenty years violates his right to procedural due process. Specifically, Plaintiff claims that the statute is constitutionally deficient in that it fails to allow level one sex offenders to petition for relief from the twenty year registration requirement, while allowing for such petitions by level two and three sex offenders.
To state a claim under the due process clause, a plaintiff must first show the existence of a constitutionally protected right. Second, plaintiff must show the deprivation of that right without due process of law.
See Valmonte v. Bane,
Here, Plaintiff asserts a due process right to liberty that includes the right to seek employment, that has been infringed by his continued inclusion in the sex offender registry. The Supreme Court has held clearly that injury to reputation alone is insufficient to implicate a liberty right under the due process clause.
Paul v. Davis,
In
Doe v. Pataki,
The district court decision in
Doe
led to a settlement with the State of New York and passage by the New York State Legislature of extensive procedural due process protections regarding risk level assessment. In view of the fact that the case was settled, the issue of the existence of a liberty interest implicated by registration was not addressed by the Second Circuit. While the District Court holding in
Doe
is therefore not binding on this court, the Second Circuit’s decision in
Valmonte v. Bane,
In
Valmonte,
the Second Circuit held that inclusion in a state registry of suspected child abusers, maintained by the Department of Social Services, implicated a liberty right to future employment. Noting that certain prospective employers are required to consult this registry before making hiring decisions, the Second Circuit held that Plaintiff satisfied the “stigma plus” requirement set forth by the Supreme Court in
Paul.
Thus, the Second Circuit held that the plaintiff in
Valmonte
established more than an injury to her reputation that might impair “job prospects or for that matter, romantic aspirations, friendships, self-esteem, or any other typical consequence of a bad reputation.”
Valmonte,
It is not a great leap to assume that prospective child care employers are similarly required or inclined to consult the SORA registry before making hiring decisions. Indeed, SORA’s provision that groups with “vulnerable” populations are entitled to SORA information appears to contemplate the dissemination of this information to this precise pool of employers. Additionally, SORA itself places a limit on prospective employment by sex offenders providing that those required to register may not be employed on, or dispense goods for sale as, ice cream truck vendors. N.Y. Corr. L. § 168-v. The court concludes, therefore, that Plaintiff has shown that SORA registration effects a protected liberty interest.
The holding that SORA registration implicates a protected liberty right does not lead, as a matter of course, to the conclusion that there is a right to maintain a ten, as opposed to twenty year, registration requirement. This argument is, essentially, that the State has improperly increased the period of punishment. As such, it is akin to the
ex post facto
argument before the Second Circuit in
Doe,
which argued that SORA’s registration requirement should not be applied to those convicted prior to passage of the statute. To the extent that Plaintiffs argument is based upon this theory, is foreclosed by precedent of the Second Circuit in
Doe
as well as a subsequent decision of the Supreme Court in
Smith v. Doe,
As to any procedural due process argument aimed at the issue of the duration of registration, a recent decision of the Second Circuit is instructive. In a case construing the
Doe
settlement, the court commented that if the matter had proceeded to final adjudication it would have been “extremely doubtful” that Plaintiffs would have been entitled to a judgment prohibiting the State from amending SORA as to
*389
the duration of registration requirement.
Doe v. Pataki,
Even assuming that Plaintiffs complaint somehow sets forth a protected liberty interest in the right to continuation of the ten year registration requirement, it is clear that the procedural amendments to SORA, passed as a result of the settlement of the Doe litigation, provide Plaintiff with all of the process that is due in connection with the determination of the risk level to be assigned. Indeed, Plaintiff himself took advantage of the redetermination hearing provided for in the settlement. At that time, Plaintiff was assigned the lowest level of risk. Plaintiff does not argue otherwise. Instead, he argues only that he was entitled to some sort of procedural protection when the State made the decision to increase the period of registration from ten to twenty years. Plaintiff seeks a mechanism protecting his “right” to a ten year period of registration.
The argument that the statute is Constitutionally deficient because it does not allow Plaintiff to petition the court for relief from further registration is, however, flawed. As noted above, SORA provides for modification of findings as to the level of risk and registration requirements. Plaintiff notes, and the Defendant concedes, that level two sex offenders may, after a thirty year period of registration, petition the court to be relieved of the requirement to register. N.Y. Corr. L. § 168-o(1). It is also noted and conceded that there is no similar explicit provision allowing for a level one sex offender to petition to shorten the period of registration. See N.Y. Corr. L. § 168-o(1) (applying to level two sex offenders).
However, all sex offenders required to register under SORA, including Plaintiff, are afforded the statutory right to petition a court for an order modifying the level of notification. See NY. Corr. L. § 168-o(2). With respect to level one offenders, an adjustment of the risk level below level one would necessarily relieve the offender from any registration requirement. Moreover, Plaintiff cannot argue that level two or three offenders are afforded a higher level of process than level one offenders. Any argument based upon the notion that level two and three offenders are in a better position than level one offenders must be rejected. This is because higher level offenders cannot petition the court for a reduction in the period of registration until after they have been registered for thirty years, ten years after the expiration of the registration period for level one offenders.
For the foregoing reasons, the court holds that Plaintiff states no liberty interest, protected by the due process clause, to maintenance of the SORA ten year registration requirement. To the extent that any such right is alleged, the statute affords Plaintiff all of the process that is due.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Defendants’ motion to dismiss is granted and Plaintiffs complaint is dismissed. The Clerk of the Court is directed to close the file in this case.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. By stipulation of the parties dated August 14, 2007, Plaintiff agreed to discontinuance of this action against the Governor of the State of New York and the Commissioner of the New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services. Thus, the sole remaining defendant is the State of New York.
