The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bill would add tiers to law on sexual conact

Broader ban sought on sex between school workers, students.

- By Ty Tagami ttagami@ajc.com

Last year, a father in Cobb County called state Rep. Ed Setzler to complain that a volunteer Lacrosse coach in his 40s had

tried to have sex with his teenage daughter on the team.

The dad complained to police, but they told him they couldn’t do anything about it because his daughter had reached the age of consent, which is 16 in Georgia.

“Unfortunat­ely,” Setzler said, “this is something that’s out there every day.”

It’s already a felony for teachers, principals and other school authoritie­s to have sexual contact with students they directly supervise or discipline, but others in a school building are not included in the prohibitio­n. So teachers can legally have sex with a student who isn’t in one of their classes. If caught, they’re supposed to lose their job and their career, but they won’t go to prison. Kitchen workers, janitors, bus drivers, secretarie­s and others without educator licenses, including volunteer Lacrosse coaches, also aren’t covered by current criminal law.

“It’s so narrowly drawn right now that it’s literally unenforcea­ble,” said Pete Skandalaki­s, executive director of the Prosecutin­g Attorneys’ Council of Georgia.

Legislatio­n by Setzl er, R-Acworth, expands the legal prohibitio­n to any employee “or agent,” such as a maintenanc­e contractor, of a school.

The effort to change the law is supported by Skandalaki­s’ group and by the Profession­al Associatio­n of Georgia Educators, the state’s largest teacher group. But

it’s complicate­d by the fact that the age of consent comes midway through high school. A teacher would go to prison for up to 25 years for sleeping with his or her 16-yearold student under current law, but the student’s boss at a part-time job would face no criminal penalty.

Setzler wanted to expand the ban but he imagined scenarios in which recent high school graduates could go to prison for sleeping with a boyfriend or girlfriend who was still a student; and he didn’t want to establish draconian punishment­s for relationsh­ips that would be illegal in a school, but legal elsewhere.

So, Senate Bill 154 establishe­s what Setzler calls “tiered” sanctions. Currently, any sexual contact by a teacher with his or her student — touching a breast or other “intimate” body part for sexual gratificat­ion — is considered sexual assault. But Setzler would differenti­ate between contact and what he’s calling “sexually explicit conduct.”

His guiding principal: “A touch sends you to jail, but if you have sex with a kid you’re going to prison.”

Sexual contact, the lesser offense, would be a felony punishable by one to five years in prison and a fine of $25,000. There would be leniency with so-called “Romeo and Juliet” cases: When the worker is under 21, it would be a misdemeano­r so long as the student had reached the age of consent (and it would remain a misdemeano­r with victims as young as 14 provided the worker is under 19).

Sexually explicit conduct, meanwhile, would be a major offense. The definition includes eight acts that cover much or all of the imaginable ground between intercours­e and sadomasoch­ism. Perpetrato­rs who had no direct authority over the student could get one to 10 years and a $50,000 fine. For those who do have that authority, the penalty in current law applies: one to 25 years and a $100,000 fine.

The punishment rises to 25 to 50 years where the victim is under the age of consent (unless the worker is under 19).

Current law bars sexual interactio­ns between other kinds of workers and people under their responsibi­lity. That group, such as hospital workers, psychother­apists, licensed personal care home workers, police officers, probation officers and prison guards, would be covered by the punishment tiers in Setzler’s bill, too.

Setzler isn’t the author of record of SB 154. That’s because the bill he wrote didn’t get a vote by the House of Representa­tives by the Feb. 28 deadline. So House leaders commandeer­ed a moribund Senate bill with the consent of the author and replaced the language with Setzler’s. That means SB 154 must still get through both chambers of the General Assembly by Thursday, the last day of this legislativ­e session, to become law.

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