OPINION
COATS, Chief Judge.Harold W. Hawkins was charged with failing to register as a sex offender under the Alaska Sex Offender Registration Act (ASO-RA).1 Hawkins moved to dismiss, asserting a number of grounds. Magistrate Bradley N. Gater rejected all of Hawking's grounds but one; the magistrate granted Hawking's motion to dismiss on the ground that ASORA violated the ex post facto clause of the federal constitution because ASORA, on its face, required sex offenders to register nearly forty days before ASORA was actually passed. The state appeals, arguing that failure to register under ASORA is a continuing offense, and that there was no ex post facto violation because Hawkins's offense was failure to register more than three years after the law was enacted. Hawkins cross-appeals, arguing that Magistrate Gater erred when he found that Hawkins had a duty to register under ASORA even though the state could not prosecute him for failing to register. For the reasons set out below, we reverse the magistrate's decision that Hawking's prosecution violated the federal ex post facto clause and affirm his decision that Hawkins had a duty to register under ASORA.
Facts and proceedings
Hawkins was convicted of first-degree sexual assault in 1981. He was sentenced to six years of imprisonment, with three years suspended. He was unconditionally discharged from his conviction in 1987. In August 1994, when the requirement to register under ASORA went into effect, Hawkins failed to *1128register. According to the record, he has never registered as a sex offender.
On January 28, 1998, Hawkins was charged under former AS 11.56.840 with failure to register as a sex offender. He moved to dismiss the charge, arguing, among other things, that ASORA violated the federal prohibition against ex post facto laws.2 Magistrate Gater agreed, granted the motion, and dismissed Hawking's case.3 Based on his review of ASORA and its related regulations, Magistrate Gater found that although Hawkins had a duty under ASORA to register as a sex offender, the state could not prosecute him for failing to register by July 1, 1994. As part of his decision, Magistrate Gater found that the Department of Public Safety (the Department) exceeded its authority when it passed former 13 Alaska Administrative Code (AAC) 09.010(d), which extended for certain sex offenders the deadline for initial registration. In essence, the magistrate found that failure to register under ASORA is not a continuing offense.
©The state appealed the dismissal of Hawking's case. However, like many ASORA cases, the case was stayed pending this court's decision in Patterson v. State4 and State v. Otness5 - After this court issued decisions in Patterson and Otness, this case was remanded for reconsideration. Upon remand, Magistrate Gater did not change his decision that, as applied to Hawkins, ASORA violated the federal ex post facto clause. Consequently, the state renewed its appeal, and Hawkins filed a cross-appeal.
Discussion
The state's appeal
ASORA went into effect on August 10, 1994. Among other things, it required certain convicted sex offenders to register by July 1, 1994-more than a month before the law was enacted.6 With one general exception, ASORA required all convicted sex offenders to register with the Department. The only sex offenders exempt from the registration requirements were those who had been convicted of a single sex offense and unconditionally discharged from that convietion before July 1, 1984.7 ASORA also created various categories of sex offenders and set out specific filing deadlines for each of them.8 Consequently, the Department, which was responsible for implementing ASORA, promulgated a number of regulations. Included in these (apparently to correct the problem caused by the July 1, 1994, registration date, among other things) was a regulation extending the filing deadline for certain sex offenders until January 31, 1996.9 Under ASORA and the Department's regulations, Hawkins was required to register as a sex offender. However, by January 28, 1998, he had not yet done so.
Magistrate Gater ruled that ASORA's registration requirement was not "punishment" for ex post facto purposes. On the other hand, he found that the prosecution of Hawkins for failure to register would violate the federal constitution's ex post facto clause. In other words, the magistrate found that under ASORA, the state could only prosecute sex offenders like Hawkins for failing to register by July 1, 1994.
This finding, however, is based on a narrow interpretation of ASORA as it was initially enacted. Clearly, as the state concedes, prosecuting Hawkins for failure to file by July 1, 1994, would violate the ex post facto clause. But it is equally evident that when the legislature passed ASORA, it intended to impose upon sex offenders a continuing registration requirement and to prosecute those who refused to register. As this *1129court found in Nunley v. State,10 "[the language of former AS 12.63.010(a) maldle it clear that '[all]l sex offender{s] who [are] physically present in the state shall register.... 11 From this, we concluded that "sex offenders physically present in Alaska who had been released from probation before the effective date of ASORA still were required to comply with the general duty to register - set forth in former AS 12.63.010(a)." 12 Moreover, a majority of this court concluded "that the legislature intended to subject convicted sex offenders such as the appellants to criminal penalties under former AS 11.56.840 for failing to comply with ASORA's general duty to register." 13 Hawking's cireumstances are similar to those of the appellants in Nunley; therefore, the magistrate's narrow construction of ASORA completely defeats the legislature's intent to force certain sex offenders to register.
We find the magistrate erred when he decided that the legislature intended only to prosecute sex offenders for failing to register by July 1, 1994. Accordingly, we conclude that because the state charged Hawkins with failure to register on or about January 28, 1998, there was no ex post facto violation.
In a related argument, Hawkins asserts that Magistrate Gater correctly found that the Department exceeded its authority when it promulgated former 13 AAC 09.010(d), the regulation that extended the registration deadline for certain sex offenders until January 31, 1996. We conclude, however, that the Department's regulation was within the scope of the Department's authority. This regulation ensures that the legislature's intent to regulate sex offenders, and to prosecute those who fail to register, would be implemented. By extending the initial registration deadline for certain sex offenders, the Department's regulation is consistent with the purposes and policies of ASORA.14
Hawkins's cross-appeal
Hawkins, in his cross-appeal, contends that Magistrate Gater erred when he found that Hawkins had a duty under ASO-RA to register.15 Hawking's contention is the same as the one rejected by this court in Nunley. Like the defendants in Nunley, Hawkins claims that he had no duty to register because former AS 12.63.010 did not by its explicit terms in subsections (1), (2), and (8) include him. As set out above, however, in Nunley we not only decided that the defendants had a duty to register under ASO-RA, but a majority of the court held that the defendants could be criminally prosecuted for failure to register, Because Hawking's circumstances are similar to those of the defendants in Nuniley-that is, Hawkins and those defendants were unconditionally discharged after July 1984, but prior to August 10, 1994-our decision in Nunley disposes of Hawking's contention that he had no duty to register. Additionally, the majority decision in Nunley disposes of Hawkins's implicit argument that he could not be prosecuted for failure to register.
Conclusion
The decision of the district court is REVERSED in part and AFFIRMED in part. We REVERSE the decision dismissing the charge and return this case to the trial court *1130for further action on the complaint. We also REVERSE the decision that the Department exceeded its authority when it promulgated former 13 AAC 09.010(d). We AFFIRM the district court's decision that, under ASORA, Hawkins had a duty to register as a sex offender.
. See former AS 11.56.840 (1998).
. U.S. Const., art. 1, § 10.
. Magistrate Gater noted that Hawkins did not challenge ASORA under the Alaska Constitution's ex post facto clause.
. 985 P.2d 1007 (Alaska App.1999).
. 986 P.2d 890 (Alaska App.1999).
. See former AS 12.63 (1998); ch. 41, § 12(a), SLA 1994.
. See Nunley v. State, 26 P.3d 1113, 1114 (Alaska App.2001) (citing ch. 41, § 12, SLA 1999).
. See former AS 12.63.010(a)(1), (2), and (3) (1998).
. See former 13 AAC 09.010(d) (1996).
. 26 P.3d 1113 (Alaska App.2001).
. Id. at 1114 (quoting former AS 12.63.010(2)) (brackets in Nunley); see also Patterson, 985 P.2d at 1011 (observing that the legislature, finding that sex offenders pose a high risk of re-offending after release from custody, enacted sex offender registration to promote public safety); Otness, 986 P.2d at 894 (Mannheimer, J., concurring) ("the purpose of the sexual offender registration act is to protect the public by alerting them to the presence of persons who have been convicted of sex offenses").
, Nunley, 26 P.3d at 1115.
. Id.
. Cf. Otness, 986 P.2d at 892 ("The Department's conclusion that persons whose conviction had been set aside should have the duty to register is a reasonable construction consistent with the purposes and policies of ASORA.").
. Hawkins initially raised four points of error in his notice of cross-appeal. However, on appeal he only argues one of these-that ASORA did not apply to him because he did not fall under any of the provisions listed in - former - AS 12.63.010(a)(1), (2), and (3). Accordingly, we will not address his other claims.