<P> A few states have also created separate online registries for crimes other than sex offenses . Montana, for example, has a publicly accessible violent offender registry that includes crimes such as aggravated assault, robbery, assaulting a police officer, both deliberate and non-deliberate homicide and a third conviction for domestic violence . Kansas has publicly accessible registries of people convicted of both serious drug offenses and people convicted of crimes involving a weapon . Indiana, Illinois, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Montana all have publicly accessible registries for those convicted of murder . Florida requires all felons, regardless of the crime, to register with law enforcement for 5 years after release, although the Florida felon registry is not available to the general public . If a felon in Florida is convicted of enough non-sexual felonies in a certain period of time, however, they are required to register for the rest of their life on a "Habitual Offender" registry that is available to the general public . Ohio has a publicly accessible registry for people convicted five or more times of drunken driving . </P> <P> In 2014, a murder registry was proposed in Rhode Island and an animal abuser registry was proposed in Pennsylvania . A bill to create a publicly accessible registry for domestic violence offenders passed the Texas House of Representatives in 2013, but was not voted on in the Texas Senate . </P> <P> Currently, only the United States allows, and more often than not requires public disclosure of offender information, regardless of individual risk . Other countries do not make sex offender information public, unless the risk assessment has been conducted and the offender has been determined to pose a high risk of re-offending . </P> <P> In some localities in the United States, the lists of all sex offenders are made available to the public: for example, through the newspapers, community notification, or the Internet . However, in other localities, the complete lists are not available to the general public but are known to the police . In the United States offenders are often classified in three categories: Level (Tier) I, Level II, and Level III offenders, Information is usually accessible related to that level (information being more accessible to the public for higher level offenders). In some US jurisdictions, the level of offender is reflecting the evaluated recidivism risk of the individual offender, while in others, the level is designated merely by the virtue of conviction, without assessing the risk level posed by the offender . </P>

Where do you go to register as a sex offender