Walker County Messenger

‘Hidden Predator’ bill widens statute of limitation­s for child sex abuse lawsuits

- By Beau Evans

gue Georgia law is still too limiting.

House Bill 479, dubbed the “Hidden Predator Act,” would expand the age range and timeframe for many more adults in Georgia to file lawsuits for sexual abuse they suffered as children.

Supporters say the changes represent a much-needed legal show of support for victims, while opponents warn it could unleash a wave of litigation capable of crippling social-benefit groups like schools and churches.

Sponsored by Rep. Heath Clark, R-Warner Robins, the bill would let anyone between the ages of 23 and 52 file suit before July 1 of this year if they were abused as children. It would also extend the time people have to file suit from two years to four years after they realized they were abused.

That would give people suffering from repressed memories and deep trauma more time to understand the effects of abuse and decide whether to seek litigation as adults, said Emma Hetheringt­on, a University of Georgia assistant clinical professor who runs the school’s Wilbanks Child Endangerme­nt and Sexual Exploitati­on Clinic.

“It’s very akin to a veteran in combat who suffered post-traumatic stress disorder,” Hetheringt­on said at a House Judiciary Committee hearing Wednesday, March 4.

Most contentiou­sly, the bill would allow for a oneyear window starting this July for victims of any age to sue their alleged child abusers for abuse that happened at any time.

The one-year window would also apply to lawsuits filed against employer groups that harbored an abuser or buried evidence of the abuse – but only for alleged abuse that happened since July 1, 1973.

Other states like New York have recently passed laws giving victims a limited window to sue for cases dating back decades ago. Rep. Mary Margaret Oliver, D-Decatur, said Wednesday, March 4, that Georgia should follow their lead.

“We’ve got to get in line,” she said. “We are preventing victims from getting in that line without passing this bill.”

But attorneys concerned about the impacts of more lawsuits on Georgia argue much of the bill’s language is too broad and could prompt a rush to the courts.

Mark Behrens, a Washington, D. C.- based corporate defense attorney representi­ng the American Tort Reform Associatio­n, highlighte­d news reports stating the enactment of New York’s statute-of-limitation­s law change inspired hundreds of lawsuits to be filed in a single day.

“The financial impacts are going to be enormous in your state,” Behrens said Wednesday, March 4.

The Catholic Church especially faces exposure to lawsuits for abuse that occurred decades ago, during a time when church officials had a different policy for disciplini­ng abusive priests than they do now, said Frank Mulcahy, executive director of the Georgia Catholic Conference.

He worried that policy, which involved sending abusive priests to “treatment” rather than alerting law enforcemen­t, could draw churches into legal jeopardy due to a provision in the bill allowing victims to sue organizati­ons for “concealing (or) attempting to conceal” evidence of priest abuse.

“We know today it’s virtually impossible to cure a pedophilia person. But we didn’t know that at the time,” Mulcahy said.

“We would be involved in concealing that under this definition,” he added, “even though what we did was to try to help the person and the church as well.”

House lawmakers on the committee did not vote on Clark’s bill Wednesday, March 4. It is expected to go through some changes before returning for a committee vote in the coming days.

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Heath Clark

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