Jehovah Witness victims of Childhood Sex Abuse - and all supporters from the State of Pennsylvania - Action Alert to get movement on SOL reform!

by Sol Reform 14 Replies latest watchtower child-abuse

  • Sol Reform
    Sol Reform

    http://sol-reform.com/News/pa-residents-action-alert-to-get-movement-on-sol-reform/

    PA Residents Action Alert to get movement on SOL reform! 20 May 2013 | Pennsylvania

    PA residents, especially constituents, please EMAIL Rep. Turzai at [email protected] the following this week:

    Dear Rep. Turzai: I am contacting you to urge you to let HB 342 with the McGeehan and Rozzi amendments go to the House Floor. You have the power to protect kids with this simple decision.

    The McGeehan and Rozzi amendments give victims of child sex abuse access to justice. HB342 protects the privacy of child victims. Together, they tip the balance away from child predators and more fairly toward victims.

    [email protected]

  • Sol Reform
    Sol Reform

    Pennsylvania Action Alert to get #Window to House Floor!

    PA Action Alert to get Window to House Floor

    Please alert PA voters that we need Rep. Turzai to release HB342 with amendments to the House Floor.

    Send this letter to your Representative!

    Download letter as Word Document(.doc)Find your representative contact information at: http://sol-reform.com/Pennsylvania/index.php#action

    By admin|June 7th, 2013|Pennsylvania

    http://sol-reform.com/News/pa-action-alert-to-get-window-to-house-floor/

  • RayPublisher
    RayPublisher

    Huh? Perhaps some explanation of what you would like us to do...sounds like a good bill though.

  • Sol Reform
    Sol Reform

    http://www.abc27.com/story/23470500/pa-bills-would-lift-statute-in-child-sex-abuse-cases

    Pa. bills would lift statute in child sex abuse cases Posted: Sep 18, 2013 7:59 PM Updated: Sep 18, 2013 7:59 PM By Myles Snyder - email HARRISBURG, Pa. (WHTM) -

    Two Pennsylvania lawmakers plan to unveil legislation that would temporarily lift the statute of limitations in child sexual abuse cases. Sen. Rob Teplitz (D-Dauphin) will introduce Senate Bill 1103 while Rep. Mark Rozzi (D-Berks) will introduce companion legislation, House Bill 238.

    Both measures would establish a two-year window during which the civil statute of limitations would be suspended to allow past victims of child sex abuse to access the justice system and expose guilty perpetrators, according to Rozzi. "It is not right that sexual predators are permitted to continue to walk the streets and essentially be protected by the law. It's time the law is changed to expose these monsters and keep our children safe," Rozzi said in a statement. "Similar legislation in California and Delaware unmasked hundreds of predators and helped to protect a generation from abuse," he said.

  • Sol Reform
    Sol Reform

    http://www.bctv.org/special_reports/safety/rozzi-to-host-press-conference-on-lifting-the-statute-of/article_c6ac2676-216c-11e3-b268-001a4bcf887a.html

    Rozzi to Host Press Conference on Lifting the Statute of Limitations in Cases of Child Sexual Abuse Mark Rozzi Posted: Thursday, September 19, 2013 5:00 pm from the PA House of Representatives | 0 comments State Rep. Mark Rozzi, D-Berks, along with state Sen. Rob Teplitz, D-Dauphin, are teaming up to garner support for legislation that would increase the statute of limitations for victims of child sexual abuse to take civil action against alleged abusers. The legislators will hold a news conference at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 25 in the East Wing Rotunda of the state Capitol Building in Harrisburg. Those expected to join Rozzi and Teplitz at the news conference include state Reps. Michael McGeehan and Louise Williams Bishop. Additional members of the General Assembly will be in attendance and speaking. Teplitz will unveil S.B. 1103, companion legislation to H.B. 238, coauthored by McGeehan and Rozzi. Both measures would establish a two-year window during which the civil statute of limitations would be suspended to allow past victims of child sex abuse to access the justice system and expose guilty perpetrators. “It is not right that sexual predators are permitted to continue to walk the streets and essentially be protected by the law. It’s time the law is changed to expose these monsters and keep our children safe,” Rozzi said. “Similar legislation in California and Delaware unmasked hundreds of predators and helped to protect a generation from abuse. I encourage the media to attend the event and help us gather as much support as possible to move this legislation and protect Pennsylvania’s children.” More information about the event is available by contacting contact Rozzi’s office at 610-921-8921.

  • Sol Reform
    Sol Reform

    http://sol-reform.com/News/its-time-pa/

    It’s time, PA! 24 Sep 2013/in Pennsylvania /by SOL Reform FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: John Salveson, President, FACSA 215-870-0680 [email protected] Tammy Lerner, Vice President, FACSA 610-509-9568 [email protected] FACSA calls on Legislature to support statutes of limitations reform for child sex crimes Urges Support for Senate Bill 1103, House Bill 238 Bryn Mawr, PA, September 24, 2013 FACSA (Foundation to Abolish Child Sex Abuse) applauded Senator Teplitz, for introducing Senate Bill 1103, would open a two year window for victims to file civil charges in cases where the civil statutes of limitation have already expired. Teplitz will discuss the bill at a press conference on Wednesday, September 25th at 10 AM in the East Rotunda at the State Capitol in Harrisburg. SB 1103 is a companion bill to House Bill 238 introduced by Representative Mike McGeehan and Representative Mark Rozzi. Rep. Rozzi is a survivor of childhood sexual abuse. These bills would: Establish a 2 year window during which the civil statute of limitations would be suspended. Remove “sovereign immunity” in cases of child sexual abuse Allow past victims of childhood sexual abuse to access the justice system. Expose guilty perpetrators. “After three grand jury investigations – two investigations of the Philadelphia Archdiocese and one investigation of the Jerry Sandusky scandal – and their outcomes recommending statutes of limitation reform and the creation of a civil window, adult survivors are still suffering and children are still at risk. PA politicians must do better than this.” said FACSA president, John Salveson. Earlier this month, the California legislature, for the second time in 10 years, passed a similar bill, lifting the Statute of Limitations in sexual abuse cases. The 2003 one-year “window” bill, helped identify of over 300 predators. Similar laws have recently been enacted in Delaware, Hawaii and Minnesota. FACSA | The Foundation to Abolish Child Sex Abuse is a non-profit organization working to: Help enact laws that protect children from sex abuse; Bring perpetrators of child sex abuse to justice; Hold accountable societal structures that hide perpetrators and fail to protect children from continued harm.

  • Sol Reform
    Sol Reform

    http://catholics4change.com/2013/09/26/please-call-your-pa-state-representative-today/ Please Call Your PA State Representative Today September 26, 2013 by Susan Matthews 2 Comments Please call your Pennsylvania state rep and say you want the statute of limitations removed for child sex abuse. Protect children by exposing predators hiding behind the current law. Father Robert Brennan had many victims who don’t fall within the current statutes. For them, there is no justice. How many more abusers are roaming free in our communities because they can’t be prosecuted? There is no statute for murder. Why should there be one for child sex abuse. Find your State Rep contact info by clicking here.

    http://www.abc27.com/video?clipId=9346368&autostart=true

  • Sol Reform
    Sol Reform

    http://www.pennlive.com/midstate/index.ssf/2013/10/ad_seeks_to_apply_pressure_law.html

    Ad seeks to apply pressure lawmakers to act swiftly to lift statute of limitations on child sex abuse cases

    By Jan Murphy | [email protected] Email the author | Follow on Twitter on October 08, 2013 at 7:18 AM, updated October 08, 2013 at 7:19 AM

    A grassroots advocacy organization for child sex abuse victims is stepping up the pressure on lawmakers to eliminate the statute of limitations on child sex abuse crimes.

    Ad from Justice4PAKids is hoped with prompt legislators to take up legislation to lift or extend the statute of limitations on child sex abuse crimes. The Patriot-News/file Justice4PAKids is running advertisements on PennLive and in editions of The Patriot-News with a haunting message that they hope will motivate legislative leaders to act this fall.

    It says, “PA legislative leaders: Many victims of child sexual abuse live with this nightmare: ‘He’s still out there.’ And they can’t even talk about he did because the statute of limitations expired.” Maureen Martinez, co-founder and president of the Malvern-based group focused solely on dealing with this statute of limitations issue, said her group has worked faithfully for nearly three years on getting the statute of limitations on child sex abuse crimes lifted.

    Yet, any legislation that would alter the statute of limitations has yet to get a vote by the full House or Senate. Arguments that it is unconstitutional, along with ones raised by the Pa. Catholic Conference and Insurance Federation of Pennsylvania that it is misguided and unfair have stymied the statute of limitations legislation thus far.

    And that frustrates Martinez. She said after the child sex scandals involving the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, Jerry Sandusky and the Boy Scouts, “What more needs to happen before we do something about this?" She said child sex victims sometimes take 30, 40, 50 or more years after becoming an adult before they are ready to speak publicly about what happened to them as a child. But Pennsylvania law cuts off their opportunity to seek criminal prosecution against their abusers at age 50 and to bring civil claims against them at age 30.

    Lifting the statute of limitations on civil actions, even temporarily as Rep. Mike McGeehan, D-Philadelphia, and Sen. Rob Teplitz, D-Harrisburg, have proposed, would allow victims to publicly identify their abusers without fear of getting sued for slander so others could be alerted, Martinez said. Rep. Ron Marsico, R-Lower Paxton Twp., who chairs the House Judiciary Committee, is not ready to bend to the pressure on this issue, yet.

    While he maintains that lifting the statute of limitations for civil actions would be unconstitutional, he also has not closed the door on repeating his push for eliminating it for criminal prosecutions that moved out of the Judiciary Committee last year. “I know it’s an emotional and difficult issue and human nature pushes us to protect the most vulnerable, but we can't pick and choose which parts of the constitution we want to follow,” Marsico said.

    Marci Hamilton, a constitutional law professor at New York’s Yeshiva University, strenuously disagrees with Marsico’s contention that lifting the statute of limitations civilly or criminally in Pennsylvania is unconstitutional. Further, she said the Pennsylvania courts have decided no cases to indicate even a temporary lifting of the statute of limitations in civil cases is prohibited.

    Saying it’s unconstitutional “is a standard argument raised in every state where they are trying furiously" to stop this legislation from advancing, said Hamilton, who has conducted a study of this issue in all 50 states and is regarded as a national expert. The Insurance Federation of Pennsylvania, however, has said extending or lifting the statute of limitations on these crimes exposes potential suspects and institutions to financial liability for allegations they may have little supporting evidence.

    Additionally, it maintains it is unfair to insurers to change deadlines after they’ve expired. The Pennsylvania Catholic Conference maintains it presents an unworkable situation whereby it would have to defend itself in court against decades-old, fading memories of alleged victims. Besides, its spokeswoman Amy Hill argues allowing lawsuits to be filed for sexual abuse cases 30 to 50 years after the fact, “wouldn’t put one perpetrator in jail.” Marsico said his committee’s focus right now is on getting legislation enacted that was recommended by the Pennsylvania Task Force on Child Protection.

    “Once we get those through, then we’ll consider other proposals,” Marsico said, adding that includes the statute of limitations legislation. Martinez said she just wants the legislation to reach the House and Senate where all legislators can share what they collectively think about the issue and tweak it to address their concerns. “But it’s got to get a vote. It’s been many, many years,” she said. “This shouldn’t be that difficult. This issue is about protecting kids.”

    Justice 4 Pa Kids advertisement

  • Sol Reform
    Sol Reform

    http://rhrealitycheck.org/article/2013/10/22/a-pennsylvania-priest-who-allegedly-abused-children-may-go-free-while-statute-of-limitations-reformers-press-on/

    Pennsylvania Child Sexual Abuse Case Highlights Need for Statute of Limitations Reform

    (Updated) by Tara Murtha October 22, 2013 - 4:01 pm Resurrection of Our Lord Parish in Northeast Philadelphia (Latest New's / YouTube)

    UPDATE, October 23, 4:10 p.m.: On Wednesday, Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams announced that his office cannot move forward with the prosecution against Father Brennan given the recent unexpected death of the 26-year-old man reported on below.

    According to the local NBC affiliate: “The district attorney said he dropped rape and sexual assault charges levied against the 75-year-old priest because there was no longer enough evidence—direct or circumstantial—to continue a trial. ‘In many cases of sexual assault whether they be victims or adults or children, really the testimony of that victim is paramount to getting a conviction,’ he said.”

    A 26-year-old man who, along with a number of other individuals, accused Father Robert L. Brennan of raping him as a child died of an accidental drug overdose last week.

    Now, the chance to finally put Father Brennan behind bars may have died along with him, despite a paper trail of abuse accusations stretching back 25 years.

    The 26-year-old told authorities that the abuse lasted for three years, beginning when he was an 11-year-old altar boy and Brennan, then 60, was assistant pastor at Resurrection of Our Lord Parish in Northeast Philadelphia. All told, more than 20 boys from at least four Philadelphia parishes have filed complaints about Brennan, now 75, according to the second of three grand jury reports investigating the Philadelphia archdiocese.

    However, the 26-year-old’s allegations were the first to lead to legal charges, thanks to Pennsylvania’s statute of limitations on child sexual abuse. (In Pennsylvania, victims have until age 50 to open a criminal prosecution and age 30 to file a civil suit.)

    In September, Brennan was arrested in his Maryland home and charged with rape, involuntary deviant sexual intercourse, and aggravated sexual assault. But Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams, who publicly identifies as Catholic, said his office is reviewing whether the prosecution will continue. “The decades-long demons and scars the victim in this case endured ended this weekend,” Williams told the local CBS affiliate.

    Research has long linked the trauma of childhood sexual abuse with depression, anxiety, and substance abuse. A Brief History of Father Brennan When the first grand jury was impaneled in Philadelphia to investigate rape in the Catholic Church in 2001, they expected to review “a small number of isolated incidents that occurred decades ago.”

    Instead, they uncovered evidence that “over the past 35 years more than 120 priests serving the Archdiocese of Philadelphia had been accused of sexually abusing hundreds of” children, and that with “rare exceptions” the archdiocese didn’t contact authorities. According to the grand jury:

    Child molesters purposefully select the most defenseless children. They should not be rewarded for their deliberate selection of vulnerable victims by a statute of limitations that, given the severity of the harm they inflict … makes it very unlikely their crimes will be timely reported. The grand jury discovered so much evidence that they exceeded the two-year sitting limit, and had to fold their findings into a 2005 bombshell report, which singled out Father Brennan as one of several case studies of priests with long histories of suspect behavior.

    Cardinal Bevilacqua (then archbishop of the Philadelphia archdiocese) assigned Brennan to St. Ignatius parish in suburban Philadelphia in 1988. According to records, the assistant pastor at St. Ignatius expressed concern over Brennan’s “actions with young boys and teenagers” since Brennan’s first day on the job.

    The assistant pastor characterized Brennan’s interest in young boys, whom he reportedly often “forced” to sit on his lap, as “extreme”; he was even said to host sleepovers in the rectory. When the mother of the first complainant, a 13-year-old boy, met with Brennan, he gave her an autographed photograph of himself, according to the report.

    When Brennan was sent to the archdiocese-owned hospital for a psychological evaluation, church officials lied to parishioners and told them their pastor was on retreat. From the report: Since that time, the Archdiocese has learned of inappropriate or suspicious behavior by Fr. Brennan with more than 20 boys from four different parishes.

    He was psychologically evaluated or “treated” four times. Depending on the level of scandal threatened by various incidents, Cardinal Bevilacqua either transferred Fr. Brennan to another parish with unsuspecting families or ignored the reports and left the priest in the parish with his current victims.

    The Cardinal’s managers advised Fr. Brennan to “keep a low profile,” but never restricted or supervised his access to the youth of his various parishes. Cardinal Bevilacqua died last year, a day after a judge ruled him competent to testify in the trial of his one-time right-hand man, Monsignor William Lynn. Lynn was ultimately convicted of child endangerment, making him the first administrative church official found criminally liable for sexual abuse crimes committed by a priest.

    The first grand jury was correct to worry that, combined with the statute of limitations on child sexual abuse, the church’s strategy of rotating priests and lying to parishioners would hamstring justice. Although the 2005 grand jury said they documented evidence of child sexual abuse by at least 63 priests, and have “no doubt” there are “many more,” not one priest faced legal charges. “The biggest crime of all is this: it worked,” they wrote.

    Shuffling abusive priests strategically exploits the way victims process trauma and frequently delay reporting, especially when the abuser is a trusted authority figure. In the largely working-class Catholic neighborhoods of Northeast Philadelphia in the 1980s, there was no bigger authority figure than a priest.

    The grand jury even noted a case wherein a boy who told his father about his younger brother’s abuse was beaten to the point of unconsciousness for telling “lies.” Meanwhile, as the Philadelphia district attorney’s office has been investigating child sexual abuse and its subsequent cover-up by the archdiocese, the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference, the public affairs arm of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, has been lobbying state legislatures against reforming the statute of limitations on child sexual abuse.

    The Fight Over Statute of Limitations Reform Criminal and civil statutes of limitations on child sexual abuse vary state by state, but have generally been expanding, or liberalizing, since the explosion of the 2002 Catholic sexual abuse scandal in Boston. Advocates of statute reform generally want to expand or abolish the time-frame wherein victims can file both criminal and civil complaints.

    In Pennsylvania, in the wake of child sexual abuse problems exposed in the church, at Pennsylvania State University, and in Boy Scout troops in Pennsylvania and elsewhere, advocates are focused on pushing for a bill that would establish what a “window”—a temporary period of time, usually one or two years, wherein victims can file civil complaints based on incidents that otherwise already timed out of the statute. California passed a window bill in 2002.

    The resulting flood of lawsuits identified 300 perpetrators, which resulted in the church paying $1.2 billion in settlements. (Gov. Jerry Brown just vetoed a bill that would have implemented a second window, a decision applauded by the California Catholic Conference.)

    Delaware, Minnesota, and Hawaii have implemented pieces of window legislation. In Pennsylvania, the statute of limitation has been viciously fought over for years, but the Penn State and Philadelphia church sexual abuse scandals forced the issue into the forefront last year.

    State Rep. Louise Bishop (D-Philadelphia) helped bring even more attention to the issue by coming forward as a sponsor of a statute of limitations reform bill and, for the first time in her life, a survivor of child sexual abuse. Bishop, a minister and accomplished radio DJ, had been silent about her abuse for 66 years. Still, after an elaborate and messy game of brinksmanship, the bills were once again left to die of neglect.

    One of the main arguments the Catholic Conference has made against the window legislation is that over time, evidence is lost or can’t be found. But evidence has been found, again and again, and it’s the statute of limitation that prevents that evidence from seeing the light of day in the courthouse.

    Optimistic About Reform Advocates for survivors of child sexual assault in Pennsylvania have a fierce new ally in their corner: state Rep. Mark Rozzi (D-Berks), who recently spoke out about his own abuse at the hands of a Catholic priest at a press conference in Harrisburg.

    Rozzi says he didn’t start speaking out about his own abuse until four years ago, so he knows first-hand that often, by the time victims are ready to speak out, they have already timed out of civil litigation. In Rozzi’s case, he came forward after a friend who was allegedly abused by the same priest committed suicide.

    “We just want to be given a chance to have our voices heard in a court of law and to expose the perpetrator,” Rozzi said in a September press conference. “I think the community has a right to know that these men and women are still out there.” Rozzi announced that yet another Pennsylvania bill would be introduced to try and reform the state’s statute of limitations for child sexual abuse.

    The legislation would raise the age wherein a victim can file a civil suit to 50 years old, establish a window for civil suits (window legislation is not possible for criminal complaints), and eliminate sovereign immunity, which means the law would apply to both public and private organizations.

    For years, the problem has been that legislators against reform—namely state Reps. Ron Marsico (R-Lower Paxton) and Thomas Caltagirone (D-Berks)—stonewall such bills by refusing to allow them to get to the floor for a vote. Last year, lawmakers supporting statute of limitations reform had to resort to a rare parliamentary procedure to force the bills to the floor for a vote.

    But the fight ultimately led nowhere. Chad Schlanger, chief of staff for Rep. Rozzi, says reform-supporting lawmakers are prepared to use the same procedure—a discharge resolution—again if necessary. He also says the bill will pass if it makes it to the floor. “If Marsico, Caltagirone, and [Republican House Majority Leader Mike] Turzai would get this to the floor, this would pass,” Schlanger told RH Reality Check. “I have lists of every single member.”

    As the legislative fight continues to brew in Harrisburg, Marci Hamilton, co-counsel for the recently deceased 26-year-old, is hopeful that a survivor who falls within the current statute of limitations can continue the work started by her client.

    “I am confident there are survivors out there who will be able to carry on the legacy started by this brave young man,” said Hamilton, a constitutional law scholar and professor at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law who has represented other alleged church sexual abuse victims and is one of the most outspoken advocates for abolishing the statute of limitations on child sexual abuse.

    Hamilton speculates that her client’s fate may have been brighter had he not been forced to bear the burden of being the only person to press charges against Brennan. “Perhaps if many [individuals] had been able to come forward together, he might have felt the support of other survivors through the process,” Hamilton said.

    “I hope the many still in [the statute of limitations] will now come forward to bring Brennan to justice and complete what our survivor started so heroically.” Brennan’s next preliminary hearing is scheduled for November 14.

  • Sol Reform
    Sol Reform

    http://readingeagle.com/mobile/article.aspx?id=517293

    John Fidler: Courage to speak out about sexual abuse cannot be tied to a legal calendar
    10/25/2013 In a recent column about cowardice, I wrote about a father who beat his 2-year-old daughter so severely three years ago that she remained paralyzed, blind and brain-damaged until she died Sept. 5.

    I prefer to write about cowardice's honorable - and rare - opposite: courage.

    I've been privileged to be the voice for several survivors of sexual abuse. Their stories, beyond shocking, expose the darkest corners of our nature and the slimy, cowardly predators who lurk there. They also reveal a courage we don't often see.

    I have learned that survivors must come forward according to their own schedules.

    They might also decide not to speak out.

    I'm still dismayed when people ask why a survivor took so long to talk about it, as if this is something inconsequential that happens on a Monday and on Tuesday you tell someone. The crime of sexual abuse is so colossal that most people who aren't survivors can't grasp its horrors.

    I prefer to think that when people ask questions such as these, they are asking not out of insensitivity, though that happens often enough, but instead out of ignorance.

    Tammy Troutman Miller is a survivor of childhood sexual abuse, and she has decided to tell her story.

    Tammy, 44, of Sinking Spring said she was abused 30 years ago by someone she knows. He is still living.

    "I felt a lot of guilt," Tammy said in the office of her therapist, Dr. Alison Hill of Wyomissing.

    Some family members supported Tammy's decision to begin talking about her abuse, others didn't.

    She said she confronted her abuser, and he admitted to the abuse.

    She said she forgave him.

    The patterns in Tammy's life are familiar to those who study sexual abuse of children. She used drugs and alcohol to dull the pain of her abuse. She was depressed and suicidal.

    A year ago, Tammy decided to begin her emancipation from decades of silence and shame by telling her story in a video she posted on YouTube.

    "You need to tell someone you trust and get help," Tammy told me, echoing sentiments she expressed in her video.

    The process of revealing one's history of sexual abuse should lead logically to telling that story in a court of law. In Pennsylvania that is not possible because of laws that some say protect predators by insisting that survivors come to court according to a schedule that fails to account for the time needed for survivors to make the most important decision of their lives: to begin talking about their abuse.

    State Rep. Mark Rozzi, D-Muhlenberg Township, who told his story of sexual abuse by a Catholic priest in this column, has introduced a measure to extend the civil statute of limitations from 12 years past one's 18th birthday to 32 years and provide a two-year window for survivors of sexual abuse to file their claims in civil court.

    Tammy, who said she supports the legislation introduced by Rozzi and state Sen. Rob Teplitz, D-Dauphin, works with Justice4PAKids, a statewide advocacy group. On its website is this powerful comment: "There is no statute of limitations for murder in Pennsylvania - child sexual abuse should be treated the same."

    Why should the murder of a child's innocence be different from the murder of a child?

    John Fidler is a copy editor and writer at the Reading Eagle. Contact him at 610-371-5054 or [email protected].

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