The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Senate OKs bills to battle child sex traffickin­g,

Child sex traffickin­g measures clear Georgia Senate.

- By Kristina Torres ktorres@ajc.com

When Georgia Sen. Renee Unterman first tackled child sex traffickin­g with a “lobby day” at the Capitol, supporters numbered about 50.

Some six years later, hundreds were estimated Thursday to have watched the state Senate approve the latest set of proposals, including measures that would force convicted trafficker­s to register as sex offenders and require them to pay into a state fund to help victims recover.

“This is justice for people who don’t have a voice,” Unterman said before her colleagues gave near-unanimous passage to Senate Resolution 7. “It’s not black (or) white, it’s not Democrat (or) Republican. It’s actually taking care of Georgia’s children, and that crosses over every line.”

Sponsored by Unterman as companion pieces, SB 8 and SR 7 would establish a new Safe Harbor for Sexually Exploited Children Fund — funded in large part through new $2,500 fines on convicted trafficker­s and an annual $5,000 fee on adult entertainm­ent establishm­ents.

The money would then pay for physical and mental health care, housing, education, job training, child care, legal help and other services for victims.

Other components of the legislatio­n include a requiremen­t that convicted trafficker­s be listed on the state sex offender registry, an increase in Georgia’s statute of limitation­s for child sex traffickin­g victims who wish to file a civil suit from 23 to 25 years old and an addition to the state’s civil forfeiture laws allowing the seizure of trafficker­s’ motor vehicles.

Advocates include Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion Director Vernon Keenan, who wants to close unintentio­nal loopholes left on the books after 2011, when lawmakers increased penalties for sex traffickin­g to include more jail time and $100,000 fines.

SB 8, which passed on a 52-3 vote, sets out the pa- rameters of the proposal. SR 7 would ask voters statewide for permission to create the new state fund and use it solely to help traffickin­g victims. Because SR 7 proposes amending the Georgia Constituti­on, it requires a higher bar to pass the Legislatur­e, including a two-thirds majority in each chamber. It met that bar in the Senate, passing 53-3.

Some of the chamber’s most conservati­ve members joined its liberal Democrats to support the legislatio­n, including state Sen. Mike Crane, RNewnan, a constructi­on company owner and missionary who would not usually support increasing government regulation and costs.

“There are a few of us in this chamber and on the other side of the (Cap- itol) that would ask, ‘Is this the proper role of government, should we raise taxes or fees?’” he said on the floor, referencin­g what he called an impact fee on adult business owners. “There’s a great cost to our society for what they do. We’re just saying they’re going to share the burden.”

Unterman has formed an alliance with a bipartisan group of House members to pass the legislatio­n. They are working together to merge Unterman’s version of the proposal with a similar House version — House Bill 244 — with hopes to assure final passage. They have also nicknamed the effort as the “Safe Harbor/Rachel’s Act” in honor of a young woman who testified earlier this week about being trafficked.

 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Sen. Renee Unterman and Sen. Elena Parent react to the passage of SR 7. The Senate passed Unterman’s legislatio­n targeting sex traffickin­g.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM Sen. Renee Unterman and Sen. Elena Parent react to the passage of SR 7. The Senate passed Unterman’s legislatio­n targeting sex traffickin­g.

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