3.1416 would be alpha’d as CNP. Any ideas?
After reading other recent posts on this thread she apparently was referring to pie as in pizza pie.
Perhaps a DATE? Here is an article from New Yorker Magazone from 3/14/2016.
New Yorker Magazine Article on Sex Offender Registry
Excerpt:
Patty Wetterling kept returning to the question of what might have helped the police find her sons abductor during those critical early hours. Officials told her that what they needed was a unified database of local residents who had sex-crime convictions. Wetterling went on to fight for such a registryfirst in Minnesota, and then nationally. In 1994, she helped win the first federal mandate that all states create a database of people convicted of violent sex crimes or crimes against children. It was known as the Jacob Wetterling Act. Initially, this was supposed to be a private law-enforcement tool, Patty Wetterling told me. I was one of those people who thought, Once a sex offender, always a sex offender, and my view was: Lock em up and send em away, forever and ever.
The act marked the first in a series of sex-registry laws, mostly named after nightmarish stranger danger cases. Megans Law, passed in 1996, required that states make their registries accessible to the public. Jessicas Law, and its variants, established long mandatory minimum sentences for first-time offenders convicted of sex crimes against children, and stipulated that certain offenders be subject to lifetime electronic monitoring after their release. Particularly consequential was the crusade of John Walsh, the host of Americas Most Wanted and the father of a six-year-old boy who, in 1981, was abducted inside a shopping mall and beheaded. Walsh lobbied for the most sweeping set of changes to date: the Adam Walsh Act. It broadened the scope of the sex-offender registry, mandating the full disclosure of a former offenders address, along with a photograph, and more; promulgated a form of indefinite detention, known as civil commitment; and, in a late addition to the bill, required that children as young as fourteen who had committed certain sex offenses be placed on the public registry. Jurisdictions that refused to comply would lose federal funds.