A high-risk sex offender has moved to a new address and two others have recently become homeless.
Kenneth Lester Bull, 62, Brian M. Hargrove, 32, and Lonny Duane Hanburg, 53, are classified as Level 3 sex offenders, the group considered most likely to commit new sex crimes, according to bulletins from the Sex Offender Registration Unit of the Clark County Sheriff's Office.
Bull has been convicted of first-degree child molestation of a 7-year-old girl, who was confined to a wheelchair and whom he was baby-sitting; and communication with a girl, age 15 to 16, for immoral purposes.
In prison, he refused to participate in sex offender treatment.
Bull is living in the 3100 block of East Mill Plain Boulevard, near Harney Elementary School.
He is white, 5 feet 5 inches tall and 175 pounds. His eyes and hair are brown and he drives a white 2002 Jeep Liberty with Washington license 726XCP.
Hargrove has been convicted of two counts of indecent exposure; sexual exploitation of a minor, for masturbating in view of two boys, 9 and 11, in the shower room of a public swimming pool; and twice of dealing in depictions of minors involved in sexually explicit conduct.
Hargrove recently registered as being homeless in Clark County.
Hanburg has been convicted of first-degree child molestation of a 10-year-old girl; and indecent liberties without forcible compulsion with a 5-year-old girl.
While in prison, he failed to complete sex-offender treatment.
He is white, 5 feet 10 inches tall and 190 pounds, with brown hair and blue eyes. He drives a gray 1988 Ford Bronco with Washington license 334WTK.
Hanburg recently registered as being homeless in Clark County.
Bull, Hargrove and Hanburg are monitored by the sheriff's unit and the Sex Offender Tracking Unit of the Vancouver Police Department.
Hargrove also is monitored by the state Department of Corrections.
Corrections officers say it is very dangerous for Level 3 sex offenders to be homeless, because it makes them more difficult for officers to track.
The three men are not being sought by police. After serving their prison sentences, sex offenders can live where they wish, unless there is a court order, under state law.
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