Only if he is charged and convicted of a criminal sex offense. That is within the prosecutor’s discretion.
I remember about 5 yrs ago I was living in a nice development and then one day my neighbors moved out suddenly. No for sale sign, no word on why, no goodbyes..no nothing.
We had armed security guards at the gated entrance to our property and I used to talk to them on nightly walks around the neighborhood. They told me that the guy who was living with his fiancee was told by the police department that not only did he have to move out of the development but he was in total violation of a court order preventing him from contact with a child due to a sexual offense charge/arrest against him from 5 yrs prior because he was living with his fiancee’s child in the house as well.
One day he came by to pick up a case of mail that had been sitting during his address change. He told me his story and what had happened to him.
He told me when he was 18 yrs old he was dating a girl who was 16 turning 17 for about 4 months. This girl’s father and mother did not approve and found the 2 of them having sexual intercourse in her room late at night one night.
Cops were called...etc..the whole thing got blown out of proportion...the father pressed charges for sexual assault on a minor, breaking and entering (he entered through her window) and a host of other ridiculous charges.
His life was destroyed even though the age of consent in Florida is 16. I felt bad for the guy.