Background

The U.S. Congress passed three laws that require States to keep track of sex offenders; the Wetterling Registration Act, the Lynchner Tracking and Identification Act and Megan’s Law. On March 5, 2003, The Supreme Court ruled that information about potential predators may be posted on the Internet.


The Problem

The information is available and you have the right to see it. But the problem is that access is very difficult. You have to know the name of the individual you are looking for and in many States you must go to your police station and complete a request form. In some States there is a fee and limit to view only two names


National Alert Registry

Rebooting after Predator Alert uninstallation
If you attempt to uninstall Predator Alert while the system tray icon is active, you will receive an alert message asking you to reboot the computer. This allows the program, which is still active in memory, to terminate and also will remove the installation files and folder.

Do not install a new version of Predator Alert until you first reboot, as the newly-installed files will otherwise also be removed.

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