NY clergy sex abuse may be sweeping but legal cases few
NEW YORK (AP) — The New York attorney general’s new investigation into clergy sex abuse allegations in the Roman Catholic Church could be sweeping, delving into confidential church files in a state where hundreds of people have already made claims through programs run by the church itself.
But few criminal cases or lawsuits may come out of the inquiry, whatever its findings. New York has some of the nation’s strictest time limits on taking child sex abuse claims to civil or criminal courts. A yearslong campaign to extend the timeframe has stalled in the Legislature.
And even if it succeeds, at least 375 people who have settled abuse claims through church-run compensation programs waived any right to sue.
Still, investigations by New York Attorney General Barbara Underwood and her colleagues in several other states could be valuable to victims just by bringing information to light, says Marci Hamilton, a University of Pennsylvania legal expert on child sexual abuse and the founder of CHILD USA, an advocacy group.
“It’s a way of educating the public on how severe the problem is” and informing lawmakers’ debates on extending legal time limits, she says. “The public education and the public accountability is what we need, so there’s value in (the investigations). But there’s not a straight line to justice for the victims.”
New York and New Jersey opened new investigations Thursday into the church’s handling of sexual misconduct claims against clergy. Nebraska, Illinois and Missouri also have started inquiries in the three weeks since a Pennsylvania grand jury report found that since the 1940s, about 300 Catholic priests had abused a total of more than 1,000 children statewide.
The report, which accused senior church officials of systematically covering up the abuse, reignited outrage and national discussion of how the church has dealt with the issue. But it yielded new criminal charges against just two priests because of legal time clocks.
In Pennsylvania, prosecutors have until an accuser’s 50th birthday to file charges of child sex abuse, while accusers have until their 30th birthdays to sue.
New York’s limits are tighter: the accuser’s 23rd birthday, in both civil and criminal cases. There’s no time limit for prosecuting some major child sex crimes, but only if they occurred after 2000.
A measure that would raise the age for future cases — and open a oneyear window for lawsuits that have been barred by the current age limits — is at an impasse amid opposition from the church, as well as other large institutions.