SEX OFFENDER SENTENCED FOR FAILURE TO COMPLY WITH REGISTRATION REQUIREMENTS

Jeffery Glenn. MCSO/Contributed

The Monroe County State Attorney’s Office announced that Jeffery Dyound Glenn, 54, was adjudicated guilty and sentenced following a plea to charges related to failing to comply with Florida’s sex offender registration laws.  

On March 6, Glenn entered a plea of guilty before County Judge Mark Wilson to failure of a sexual offender to properly register. He was adjudicated guilty.

Judge Wilson sentenced Glenn to 270 days in the Monroe County Jail, with credit for 66 days served. He was also ordered to pay $838 in fines and court costs, as well as $3,925 in transportation-related fees associated with returning him to Monroe County.  

The charges stem from a February 2025 investigation by the Key West Police Department’s Criminal Investigations Unit during routine sex offender compliance checks. Detectives determined that Glenn had provided a Key West address where he did not reside and failed to properly update his driver’s license information as required under Florida law.  

As a result of the investigation, a warrant was issued for Glenn’s arrest. He was later located and arrested in Hillsborough County and subsequently transported back to Monroe County to face these charges.  

Further investigation revealed that Glenn had recently been released from custody in January 2025 and had completed a sex offender registration form listing an address that was later determined to be inaccurate. Attempts to locate him at that residence were unsuccessful, and database checks confirmed discrepancies in his reported residency and his required updates to the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles.  

Glenn has been a registered sex offender for over 25 years following a prior conviction for attempted second-degree rape in North Carolina.

“Sex offender registration laws are clear and they exist to protect the public,” said Chief Assistant State Attorney Joseph Mansfield. “When someone provides false or outdated information, it undermines that system and diverts law enforcement resources. In this case, a warrant had to be issued, and additional taxpayer-funded resources were required to locate, arrest, and transport the defendant back to Monroe County. That is exactly why these laws are enforced as strictly as they are.”

 The case was prosecuted by Assistant State Attorney Madeline Thompson.

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