Victims are voicing concerns, as the man known as the "jogger rapist" is set to be released on parole on December 16th.
Richard Gillmore ran through Portland neighborhoods in the 1970s and 80s, scouting out victims and returning to attack them.
Gillmore admitted to raping nine girls and women but was only convicted in one of those cases.
Danielle Tudor is meeting with Multnomah County on Tuesday, asking to be recognized as a victim.
Gillmore was not convicted for attacking Tudor when she was 17, because the statute of limitations expired. But Tudor said the memory of running up the stairs and calling for the police still haunts her.
"He came back, he couldn’t resist, hunted me down in the darkness of my childhood home, and raped me in the safest place I knew, which was my parent’s bedroom," she said.
Staff with the Multnomah County Department of Community Justice said they recognize Tudor as a survivor, and they will provide resources, but she does not meet the Oregon Constitution's definition to receive victim rights.
"If anything goes wrong with his parole I will not be notified. So, I’m just kind of hanging out there with a lot of information that I will not be able to know because they do not recognize me as a victim," Tudor said.
The county said Gillmore will have a strict curfew that's enforced by both GPS monitoring and staff at his housing unit.
He'll receive regular check-ins as well, but because Oregon's parole board did not deem Gillmore to be a level three sex offender, those steps are not mandatory.
"They don’t have to do certain things because he’s only a level one offender which then means they don’t have to treat him like a level three offender per se but they’re choosing to do more when he first gets out," Tudor said.
Moving forward, the county plans to evaluate the use of that GPS device every 30 days.