The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Pennsylvan­ia House OKs new child sex abuse reporting rules

- By Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG >> The Pennsylvan­ia House of Representa­tives moved Wednesday to toughen penalties for people who do not report suspicions about repeated child sexual abuse and make it explicit that nondisclos­ure terms in contracts cannot prevent people from talking to police in child molestatio­n investigat­ions.

Both proposals are based on recommenda­tions in a landmark grand jury report last year into the sexual abuse of children by about 300 Roman Catholic clergy in the state, going back seven decades.

Lawmakers voted 162-22 for the reporting proposal .

The only member who spoke in opposition was Rep. Paul Schemel, R-Franklin, who said it will be hard for people to remember, decades later, why they did not report suspected abuse.

“Our due process rights under the law are slipping away through our fingers while we do nothing,” Schemel said.

Lawmakers are also considerin­g legislatio­n to eliminate the criminal statute of limitation­s for child sexual abuse. If that passes, it will also apply to mandated reporters who fail to properly report ongoing abuse.

Also Wednesday, state representa­tives unanimousl­y approved a bill that says nondisclos­ure agreements , often part of civil settlement­s in abuse cases, should specify that they do not prohibit cooperatio­n with police.

The main sponsor, Rep. Tarah Toohil, R-Luzerne, said those contracts are already unenforcea­ble, but the bill’s additional provisions would spell it out, “written in black and white.”

Both bills were sent to the Senate. There, the top lawyer for majority Republican­s said, they will be reviewed to see how they compare to legislatio­n that was drafted in that chamber last year but never brought up for a vote.

“The grand jury made the general recommenda­tions, but no precise language was offered. If the House bills are consistent to what we drafted last year, then we will likely consider the bills,” said Drew Crompton, chief of staff to Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati, R-Jefferson. Toohil said targets of the grand jury investigat­ion misused nondisclos­ure agreements to attempt to silence abuse victims and keep them from cooperatin­g with police.

The state House has also sent the Senate legislatio­n based another grand jury recommenda­tion: a constituti­onal amendment that would create a two-year window to allow victims to bring civil claims over abuse that would otherwise be too old to pursue.

The state’s attorney general, Democrat Josh Shapiro, said the House action represente­d a clear step forward. Shapiro’s office oversaw the grand jury investigat­ion.

“Just as our commonweal­th was a leader in investigat­ing and prosecutin­g clergy sexual abuse, it is imperative that Pennsylvan­ia also now be a leader in enacting reforms to protect victims and ensure this kind of abuse and cover-up can never happen again,” Shapiro said in a statement. “I stand with survivors as we urge the Pennsylvan­ia Senate to swiftly pass the grand jury reforms.”

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