The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Limits on child sex-abuse suits may be eased

Changes in some states seem likely after elections.

- By David Crary

NEW YORK — In many states across the U.S., victims of long-ago child sex abuse have been lobbying for years, often in vain, to change statute of limitation laws that thwart their quest for justice. This year seems sure to produce some breakthrou­ghs, due in part to the midterm election results and recent disclosure­s about abuse by Roman Catholic priests.

New York state is Exhibit A. The Democrats’ takeover of the formerly Republican-controlled Senate seems almost certain to produce a more victim-friendly policy in place of one of the nation’s most restrictiv­e laws.

Prospects are considered good for similar changes in Rhode Island and New Jersey, and the issue will be raised in Pennsylvan­ia — which became the epicenter of the current abuse crisis in August when a grand jury accused some 300 Cath- olic priests of abusing more than 1,000 children over seven decades.

Abuse survivors and their allies are once again proposing a two-year window for now-adult victims to sue perpetrato­rs and institutio­ns over claims that would oth- erwise be barred by time limits. That provision was approved by the Pennsyl- vania House last year but rejected by the top Repub- lican in the Senate.

Nationwide, only a handful of states — including Cali- fornia, Minnesota, Delaware and Hawaii — have created these “lookback windows” enabling victims to file civil lawsuits against institutio­ns such as churches and youth groups that bore some responsibi­lity for the abuse. California’s one-year window opened in 2003, leading to hundreds of civil actions and more than $1 billion in payouts by the Catholic church; activists and legislator­s in California hope to create a new lookback window this year.

In California, Minnesota and Delaware, large payouts prompted several dioceses to file for bankruptcy. The Catholic Church, the insur- ance industry and the Boy Scouts of America have lobbied vigorously against efforts to create lookback windows in other states.

University of Pennsylvan­ia professor Marci Hamilton, an expert on statute-of-limitation­s reforms, predicts that more states will provide windows despite the vociferous lobbying. She says the Penn- sylvania grand jury report has changed the dynamics of the debate, increasing pressure on lawmakers to take victim-friendly actions.

“Before, people were giv- ing the bishops the benefit of the doubt, but this time there was outrage,” said Hamilton, the CEO of Child USA, a think tank focused on preventing child abuse. “Politician­s now understand that people are behind the victims.”

In New York, victim advo- cacy groups and their allies in the Legislatur­e have tried for a dozen years to loosen the statute of limitation­s.

Last year, the legislatur­e’s Democratic-controlled lower chamber overwhelmi­ngly approved the long-stymied Child Victims Act, which would extend the time frames for pursuing civil and criminal cases in the future, and create a one- year window allowing vic- tims to sue over past abuse claims. Senate Republican­s blocked the bill from getting a vote and suggested alter- natives that lacked the lookback window.

In November, Democrats gained control of the Sen- ate, and the measure is now expected to pass with the window included. Demo- cratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo says he’ll include the act in the state budget, due in April, if a separate measure doesn’t pass before then.

Among those pleased by the change is Brian Toale, 65, who has written about being abused in the 1970s by the adult adviser to the radio club at his Catholic high school on Long Island.

Toale, who lives in New York City, underwent years of therapy and still participat­es in a weekly 12-step program with other abuse vic- tims, including some who still don’t speak publicly about their experience.

Toale is unsure whether the Child Victims Act would bring him any compensati­on or formal apology from the Catholic diocese and reli- gious order that had juris- diction over his high school. But he hopes that enactment would encourage more victims to come forward.

“When people do tell their stories and expose their abuser, it’s so helpful,” he said.

The New York Catho- lic Conference, which represents the state’s bishops, remains firmly opposed to the lookback window.

“This extraordin­ary provision would force institutio­ns to defend alleged conduct decades ago about which they have no knowledge, and in which they had no role, potentiall­y involving employees long retired, dead or infirm, based on informatio­n long lost, if it ever existed,” the conference argued.

Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the archbishop of New York, says the church is meeting its obligation­s to victims through a compensati­on program launched in 2016 that has paid out more than $200 million to more than 1,000 individual­s.

“It insures fair and reasonable compensati­on; and prevents the real possibilit­y — as has happened elsewhere — of bankruptin­g both public and private organizati­ons, including churches, that provide essential services in education, charity and health care,” Dolan wrote in a recent newspaper column.

Similar compensati­on programs are being set up in Pennsylvan­ia and New Jersey, but victim advocates say the programs — unlike civil lawsuits — fail to ensure that there is accountabi­lity and full disclosure on the church’s part.

“The right thing to do is come clean, open the books and know sunlight is the best disinfecta­nt,” said Michael Polenberg of Safe Horizon, a New York City nonprofit serving victims of sexual abuse and domestic violence.

 ?? KATHY WILLENS / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Brian Toale, 65, has written about being abused in the 1970s by the adult adviser to the radio club at his Catholic high school on Long Island.
KATHY WILLENS / ASSOCIATED PRESS Brian Toale, 65, has written about being abused in the 1970s by the adult adviser to the radio club at his Catholic high school on Long Island.

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