<P> The Sexual Offences Act Chapter 11: 28 Part III provides for Notification Requirements for Sex Offenders . This Sex Offenders Registry is only accessible to the Police Service and other branches of government . There are several gaps in this policy noted by members of the Caribbean Committee against Sex Crimes, most notably that the registry only deals with offenses committed within the Jurisdiction of Trinidad and Tobago . Persons who are registered Sex Offenders from other jurisdictions are not registered when they immigrate or are deported to Trinidad and Tobago . </P> <P> In the United Kingdom, the Violent and Sex Offender Register (ViSOR) is a database of records of those required to register with the Police under the Sexual Offences Act 2003, those jailed for more than 12 months for violent offences, and unconvicted people thought to be at risk of offending . The Register can be accessed by the Police, National Probation Service and HM Prison Service personnel . It is managed by the National Policing Improvement Agency of the Home Office . </P> <P> Sex offender registries in the United States consist of federal and state level systems designed to collect information of convicted sex offenders for law enforcement and public notification purposes . All 50 states and District of Columbia maintain registries that are open to public via sex offender registration websites, although some registered sex offenders are visible to law enforcement only . According to NCMEC, as of 2015 there were 843,260 registered sex offenders in the United States . Registrants have to periodically appear in person to their local law enforcement for purposes of collecting their personal information, such as photograph, fingerprints, name, scars, tattoos, living address, place of employment and vehicle information . </P> <P> Information pertaining to names, addresses, physical description and vehicles are made public via official websites . In addition, registrants are often subject to restrictions that bar loitering, working or living within exclusion zones that sometimes cover entire cities and have forced registrants into encampments, such as the Julia Tuttle Causeway sex offender colony . </P>

Where do you register as a sex offender