Sunday Star-Times

Lobbyist links gay marriage to crime rise in NZ

- By KIRSTY JOHNSTON

CRIME WILL rise if gay couples are allowed to marry, says the head of the country’s victim lobby group.

Sensible Sentencing Trust leader Garth McVicar has submitted to Parliament that changing the law to allow same-sex marriage will be yet another erosion of basic morals and values in society which have led to an escalation of child abuse, domestic violence, and an everincrea­sing prison population.

‘‘The marriage amendment bill will not benefit society at all and will ultimately have detremetal (sic) effect on crime at all levels,’’ the submission read.

Labour MP Louisa Wall’s Marriage (Definition of Marriage) Amendment Bill is currently before a select committee, which will report to Parliament on February 28. If passed, it could see gay marriage legal by May next year.

The committee has received over 20,000 submission­s on the bill.

Green MP Kevin Hague, who sits on the select committee, said after reading the vast majority of submission­s, McVicar’s was the only one linking crime to gay marriage.

‘‘Although it echoes a number of submission­s that say marriage has been the same way for a long time and that if you tamper with it there will be lots of unforeseen circumstan­ces,’’ Hague said.

He said he had not read any evidence to suggest that allowing gay people to marry would create a dysfunctio­nal society or increase crime. ‘‘I suspect that underlying this submission is a prejudice against gay people. If you break the argument down, it is manifestly nonsensica­l.’’

McVicar’s statement said that he considered the bill would be a further erosion of what he considered to be essential basic values and morals that have ‘‘stood the test of time for centuries’’.

‘‘ Furthermor­e, the bill represents a further decay and erosion of the traditiona­l family that society has been founded on.’’

He said while much good work has been done recently to reduce crime and ensure better treatment of victims, the bill had the ability to destroy that good work.

Criminolog­ist Dr James Oleson, from Auckland University, an expert in deviance, said he was not familiar with any research that would suggest homosexual­s would be responsibl­e for a disproport­ionate amount of crime.

For McVicar’s argument to be plausible, he said, it would have to be proved that allowing homosexual­s to marry degraded morality, and that this produced more crime. ‘‘ But I’m not sure that’s true.’’ The more common drivers of crime were economic issues, alcohol, drugs, education and employment and family dysfunctio­n, Oleson said.

McVicar did not respond requests for comment.

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