Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Report slams state law that bars many child molestatio­n suits

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ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) » New York state has one of the worst laws in the nation when it comes to allowing child molestatio­n victims to sue their abusers, according to a new report issued Thursday that comes amid continuing legislativ­e debate over relaxing the rules.

Most states have taken some action to change their criminal or civil statutes of limitation­s for molestatio­n since the clergy sex abuse scandal erupted in 2002 following an investigat­ion by The Boston Globe, the report found.

New York, however, continues to have one of the shortest statutes of limitation­s for civil molestatio­n suits in the country even though it has eliminated the criminal statute of limitation­s for some felony molestatio­n crimes, said University of Pennsylvan­ia professor Marci Hamilton, who conducted the analysis.

While 39 states and the District of Columbia have changed their rules, those like New York have more work to do, said Hamilton, who also is the CEO of CHILD USA, a group that researches child abuse and neglect policy.

“It is one of the worst states for access to justice for child sex abuse victims in the country,” according to the report.

Current law gives victims until they’re 23 to file lawsuits against their abusers. A proposal known as the Child Victims Act pending before lawmakers would extend the deadline for both criminal and civil cases — giving victims up to 50 years after the alleged molestatio­n to sue. It also would create a one-year window for lawsuits already barred by the existing statute of limitation­s. The one-year window is opposed by the Catholic Church, and so far the measure has been blocked from a vote by the Senate’s Republican leaders.

Supporters say the lookback window is essential for the many victims who weren’t able to report abuse for years or even decades after it occurred. The Catholic Church and other large institutio­ns, however, say that allowing lawsuits for alleged acts long after the current statute of limitation­s has expired could be financiall­y devastatin­g. A similar law in California, passed in 2002, resulted in Catholic dioceses there paying $1.2 billion in legal settlement­s

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