I want to explain why this work matters to me, and why my involvement in reform is both personal and structural. Before my case, I worked in law enforcement and served as a Navy Reservist, where I was recognized for going above and beyond my assigned duties. I believed deeply in accountability, public safety, and the rule of law. My family and I were also foster and adoptive parents. I saw myself as someone operating within the system, not navigating it from the inside.
That changed when I became involved in a criminal case that ultimately resulted in a conviction.
During the pretrial phase, I spent approximately fifteen months in county jail on a bond my family could not afford to pay. At the same time, we had just completed a prolonged and financially draining custody battle with the state to regain our children. By the time my case approached trial, our resources were exhausted. I was advised that proceeding to trial would require financial commitments we could not sustain, and that rejecting a plea agreement could expose my wife to additional charges, placing our children at risk of removal again. Under those circumstances — extended incarceration, financial collapse, and risk to my family — I accepted a plea agreement. I served my sentence and have now lived under registry requirements for more than a decade.
Living under the registry shifted my focus from compliance to study. I needed to understand the statutory framework governing my future. Oklahoma operates an offense-based registry system. Under 57 O.S. § 582.5, the offense of conviction serves as the basis for the assigned registration level. The Oklahoma Department of Corrections publishes a level assignment chart mapping specific criminal statutes to Level 1, Level 2, or Level 3 classifications.
My conviction was under 21 O.S. § 1021.2, which is designated as a Level 2 offense. However, other possession-related statutes within Title 21 — including 21 O.S. § 1024.2 (Purchase, Procurement, or Possession of Child Pornography) and 21 O.S. § 1040.12a (Aggravated Possession of Child Pornography) — are designated as Level 1 offenses under the same chart.
In an offense-based system, that distinction is decisive. Registry duration and reporting frequency flow directly from the statute of conviction. Where overlapping possession provisions exist with materially different level assignments, the charging decision effectively determines long-term registry consequences. The statute selected at plea — not an individualized risk assessment — becomes the controlling factor in whether a person registers for fifteen years or twenty-five years.
Compounding that issue, I was initially informed that my classification would be Level 1 and was later assessed at Level 2. That discrepancy pushed me to examine the statutory mechanics more closely. I began studying not only the charging statutes and cross-references, but also the procedural mechanisms available to correct statutory misalignment — including nunc pro tunc corrections and post-conviction relief pathways.
What began as an effort to understand my own situation expanded into broader policy analysis. I began drafting a structured reform proposal that would create a narrowly tailored off-ramp for non-habitual, non-aggravated Level 2 registrants — allowing petition-based review for reduction to Level 1 under defined statutory criteria. The goal is not automatic relief, but proportional calibration within an offense-based framework that currently allows little flexibility once a statute number is assigned.
This is not an attempt to relitigate my case or avoid accountability. I accepted the legal outcome and have complied with registry requirements for over a decade. The issue I am focused on is structural. When closely related possession statutes produce materially different registry tiers, and when statutory selection alone controls duration, the architecture of the law itself deserves examination.
That realization redirected my life.
I completed a bachelor’s degree in Operations Management to better understand systems design and institutional structure. I am completing a master’s degree in Psychology with a focus on organizational systems because I wanted to understand how institutional incentives shape decision-making and long-term outcomes. I intend to pursue a PhD in Public Policy to develop the research tools necessary to examine statutory frameworks with precision and contribute to evidence-based reform.
I am unequivocally opposed to exploitation and do not consider these offenses victimless. My advocacy is not about minimizing harm or undoing accountability. It is about statutory clarity, proportionality, and ensuring that registry frameworks are internally consistent, narrowly tailored, and constitutionally aligned.
Having served in law enforcement, served in the military, navigated the criminal justice system, and lived under registry obligations for more than a decade, I have experienced the system from multiple vantage points. That perspective drives my commitment to reform that is measured, lawful, and structurally sound.
I share this for transparency. My work in this space is rooted in lived experience, sustained study, and a long-term commitment to improving statutory design in a way that preserves accountability while ensuring proportional and consistent application of the law.