Advocates for Child Victims Act |
Child sexual abuse must be
stopped, and the abusers punished. No one disagrees with that statement. Right now, many victims cannot get justice
because of the statute of limitations – a time limit on when a lawsuit can be
brought against the abusers. We need a law to get rid of the statute of
limitations in New York. According to
constitutional scholar and Cardozo Law School Professor Marci Hamilton, New
York is one of the worst states in the nation for child sexual abuse statutes
of limitation.
But what is the best way to do
this? There are two bills up for approval in New York State -- but only one
will become law. Why should we be concerned about which child abuse bill
becomes a law? Advocates for abused
children have been trying for many years to get the Child Victims Act (CVA) to
be law. Sponsored by democrats, the CVA has never passed the republican senate
in New York. Recently, a new bill was
introduced by a republican senator and has met with quick approval by other
republicans. Is this because the true sponsors are overjoyed with a bill that
lets all the offending institutions evade their responsibility as abusers?
Will one of these bills be
more helpful to child abuse victims than the other? The rules proposed for each
bill need to be looked at closely.
The
Child Victims Act (CVA) is New York Senate Bill S809, sponsored
by Senator Brad Hoylman (D). This bill does away with statutes of limitations
for prosecuting child sexual abuse crimes and for filing civil lawsuits for
damages against individuals, public institutions, and private institutions.
Importantly, it also creates a one-year period during which victims who were abused
and missed the statute of limitations reporting time period can seek the
justice they have been denied. This is
easy to understand: no statutes of limitations and a window for those who
missed out on getting justice.
The other bill is more
complicated, will have financial consequences for New York taxpayers, and will
allow some of the abusers to avoid any responsibility for their horrendous
actions.
New
York Senate Bill S8736 sponsored
by Senator Catharine Young (R) sets up a fund that will be used to compensate
victims that file an application and who meet requirements determined by
officers chosen by lawmakers.
Some facts from Young’s bill:
The bill states that due to
the amount of time that may have passed since the abuse took place, the claim
can’t be pursued as a regular lawsuit.
Who is deciding this? Such a decision should be based on the individual
case and discussion is between the victim and his/her lawyer.
Young’s Bill may help some
people in cases where their sexual abuser has no money, can’t be found, or is
dead. Many others will not be helped such as those whose abuse happened a long
time ago and where the perpetrator was from an institution like the Catholic
church. Institutions can be sued even if the perpetrator is dead. Marci Hamilton said on Twitter: “Sen Young's
bill is actually a New Joke for child victims
It should be called the Institutional Subsidy Act Lets all institutions off the hook Loved by Dolan and insurance companies.”
Young’s Bill would allow
people who were abused to be represented by a lawyer. But the requirements of
the bill decrease the chance that a lawyer would really be interested in the
case. The lawyer would have to conform
to the rules of Young’s bill.
Because institutions like the Catholic church, Boy
Scouts, yeshivas, and insurance companies would not be financially responsible,
compensation would be limited to what the rules allowed. It’s a fact that
lawyers want to get paid for their services and with this bill, with its fixed
compensation, they will not want to take these cases. Then the victim will be
dependent only on NY State rules.
The CVA would open a one-year
window for people who missed the statute of limitations, but each person would
have an interested lawyer and a better chance of success.
In Young’s Bill the claims
cannot include punitive damages. Punitive damage awards are meant not to
compensate the victim but to punish the offending party for reckless or
shocking conduct*. Courts have held that punitive damages can be awarded only
where the conduct to be punished approaches criminality.
*This bill will not help me. After being raped by a Catholic priest along
with my brother, I was tortured for months by Dominican nuns. I was smothered
with a pillow by a nun with intent to kill me. I was in a coma for many months and left with brain
damage that affects my speech, vision and hearing. My brother killed himself
because he couldn’t accept what they did to both of us. I personally know of others who were abused in
New York and who were crippled or died. The perpetrators need to be forced to
stop abusing and murdering children and hitting them in their pockets is an
effective way to do it.
The process of choosing the
decision makers and what the victim has to go through is unacceptable. It is
open to prejudiced interpretations by those who make the decisions – the victim
would have to “go through the mill” and be re-victimized. The victims, if they want a lawyer will most
likely have to pay the lawyer’s retainer fees unless they qualify for free
help. Will the victims have to go
through a financial evaluation, another stress on already abused person?
The chief administrator of the
plan is selected by the NY state comptroller along with leaders of the senate
and assembly. So, this means that
lobbyists and others with their own agendas can influence the “leaders” and the
comptroller. We will then get a chief
administrator who is under the influence of those who chose him/her. Then, like a domino effect, the people chosen
down the line are also suspect.
The chief administrator then
appoints the Hearing Officers who will decide the merits of each victim’s
request.
The chief administrator is
authorized to accept contributions by individuals, businesses, or “other
entities” to add to the $300 million compensation fund. The fund money comes from
the more than $700 million in asset forfeiture funds controlled by Manhattan
District Attorney Cy Vance Jr.'s office. These forfeiture funds come from money taken
from terrorist activities, drug
related crimes, and other criminal and civil offenses. Again, here is the opportunity for
special interest influence on the outcomes of victims’ requests. Who are these “other entities”? Do they include for example the Catholic Archdiocese
of NY, other religious denominations, schools and universities? So the abusers can control the money. Do you trust them?
Senator Hoylman questions whether
it is legal to take funds from Vance's office. Even if it is legal, it is
taking money from worthy criminal justice programs like the purchase of rape
test kits and cameras for public housing at the expense of protecting
"child sexual abusers and institutions who harbor them." So more people are abused by the mis-use of
the money. It is not clear whether any of the processes and the use of money
allocated for other things will put some type of tax burden on New York
residents.
When the victim files a claim
he/she must say why they are eligible for compensation and how much money they
want. These are people with complex
histories and multiple disorders – even difficult for teams of experts to
understand. Some of them, like my husband have complex post-traumatic stress
disorder, others have psychological damage or physical disabilities. Will the Hearing Officers have the
qualifications to really understand whether a victim is eligible? Will they
have to hire “experts” – also of their choosing and spend more taxpayers’ money.
Will the amount of money in
the fund be enough? Will these Hearing
Officers or their superiors change limits on the amount of compensation if the
money runs out? Even with the 5%
allotted to the fund yearly and possible contributions the administrators of
the fund will necessarily be frugal with the amount. Will they award victims
what they deserve?
Members of the clergy will
have to report to the district attorney any information they have that a child
was abused by a clergy member within 20 years prior to the bill becoming law.
My husband was abused 70 years ago. Or they must report if they know that a
clergy member who is still active in the institution has abused a child. My husband’s abusers are all dead, but the
Church is still in business. The clergy member does not have to provide this
information if came from confidential communications (like confession) or was
under privileged law or if the abuser is dead. It seems that the clergy member
would not have much to say – the designers of the rules appear to want it that
way.
I know that all the abusers
and especially the institutions would like to see the victims die off before
they get justice or fair compensation.
Everyone – voters, lawmakers, child abuse advocates, victims and their
families should work together to ensure that the best Bill – the one that will
help the most victims gets passed this time. We are hoping it is the Child
Victims Act.