The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

State rep fights for bill on sexual molestatio­n suits

- By Ty Tagami ttagami@ajc.com

The sponsor of Georgia legislatio­n to give adults more time to sue people they say molested them when they were children is trying a legislativ­e maneuver to save his bill.

After the Senate reduced what the Hidden Predator Act of 2018 offered victims, Rep. Jason Spencer, R-Woodbine, on Friday got his colleagues in the House of Representa­tives to revive the version it adopted by a 170-0 vote last month.

That version extended the statute of limitation­s for victims’ lawsuits to age 38 from the current 23, and it opened a one-year window for adults of any age to sue. It also allowed lawsuits against organizati­ons accused of harboring predators even if the sexual abuse and the cover-up occurred decades ago.

But on Thursday a Senate committee, which had been lobbied by the Roman Catholic Archdioces­e of Atlanta and by the Boy Scouts of America, changed the bill in a way that made it harder to sue organizati­ons.

Molestatio­n

The committee chairman, Sen. Jesse Stone, R-Waynesboro, called the one-year window an “open season” on organizati­ons accused of covering up abuse.

Among his committee’s many amendments was the eliminatio­n of the one-year window and a reduction of the statute of limitation­s to age 30.

Spencer discounted the open season remark, saying a similar bill passed in 2015, portions of which are expiring, produced only 14 lawsuits.

There’s a good chance that at least some of those lawsuits would have to be dismissed from court if the Senate’s version becomes law, because it limits suits involving older incidents.

So on Friday morning, Spencer got the House Rules Committee to pull a switch. The committee gutted an unrelated bill already approved by the Senate and put in the House’s Hidden Predator Act. So Spencer’s House Bill 605 is now Senate Bill 335.

The senator who authored SB 335 wasn’t happy about it.

Sen. Renee Unterman, R-Buford, wasn’t concerned that her human sex traffickin­g bill had been deleted; the element making it clear that a person can be charged with traffickin­g if he or she “patronizes” someone in sexual servitude had been moved into a different bill that had already passed both chambers. But she was offended by the House’s decision to erase the Senate’s work on the Hidden Predator Act.

“What they’re essentiall­y saying is we don’t care what you’ve done to revise the bill,” Unterman said. “We have many distinguis­hed attorneys on the (Senate) Judiciary Committee, and they worked many, many hours on it, and we think our version is better.”

She predicted that the House maneuver would prove futile and that Spencer’s bill would end up in a conference committee, where a handful of lawmakers from each chamber attempt to reach a compromise.

If it does, those lawmakers will face pressure from both sides.

The Boy Scouts and the Catholic Church are concerned about the difficulty of defending against lawsuits in decades-old cases where the evidence is stale. Lawyers testified at a Senate hearing that the costs could rise into the hundreds of thousands of dollars in cases that drag on for years.

But people who say they were abused and can’t get justice because the criminal statute of limitation­s expired are demanding access to the civil courts.

Jackie Holder of Vidalia, who says her grown son survived abuse as a boy, is angered by the Senate’s decision to weaken the Hidden Predator Act as a tool for victims.

“You have just told a group of people that their pain and suffering don’t matter,” she said.

She worries that opponents of the bill are trying to run out the clock, with the legislativ­e session ending Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States