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Waiving Statutes in Ga. Would Affect Church, But Not State

ATLANTA (CNS) – Georgia lawmakers are considering waiving the statutes of limitations on civil lawsuits claiming sexual abuse of young people against nonprofits and businesses, but not government agencies or public schools.

Archbishop Wilton D. Gregory of Atlanta said the bill called the Hidden Predator Act, or H.B. 605, is unfair to the Catholic Church and would be catastrophic to the church’s mission. Many of the cases of alleged abuse could go as far back as the 1940s.

“I write to inform you of an extraordinarily unfair bill currently pending in our state legislature,” he said in a March 9 statement. “If passed, H.B. 605 could drastically damage our ability to carry out the mission of our Catholic Church in the state of Georgia.”

Sponsored by Republican Rep. Jason Spencer, it was approved by the Georgia General Assembly’s House of Representatives and sent to the state Senate for consideration.
“We have always fully supported criminal prosecution of and lawsuits against any individual abuser of children, no matter how long ago the abuse is alleged to have occurred,” said Archbishop Gregory.

“Additionally, for the past two decades the Catholic Church in Georgia has had what may be the strongest safe environment program, nonprofit or otherwise, in the state. Our church and our schools have strict zero-tolerance policies regarding sexual abuse of any vulnerable person.”

Does Not Protect Anyone

H.B. 605 does not protect anyone, the archbishop said in his statement.

“Rather, innocent people and the organizations to which they belong will be radically impacted based on allegations against individuals who may no longer even be alive and cannot speak for themselves,” he wrote.

In the statement, Archbishop Gregory emphasized the extensive work of the Atlanta Archdiocese’s Office of Child and Youth Protection to create and maintain safe environments and to help survivors of sexual abuse in their journey to healing.

Frank Mulcahy, executive director of the Georgia Catholic Conference, urges all Catholics to “read the bill.”

The Georgia Catholic Conference promotes public policy positions that affect the common good and interests of the Catholic Church, and works under the direction of the bishops.

As adopted by the House, H.B. 605 would allow lawsuits against churches, private schools, businesses and nonprofit organizations for actions asserted to have occurred many decades ago, potentially as far back as the 1940s. The accused are often deceased.

Recognizing that these lawsuits can be difficult if not impossible in determining the truth and risking grave injustice, the vast majority of states do not permit them.

‘Look Back’ Provision

A point of contention is a “look back” provision in the bill, said Mulcahy. The look back is establishment of a one-year window period, beginning July 1, in which anyone can file a lawsuit claiming to have been a victim of childhood sexual abuse that was concealed at any time in the past.

There is a difficulty shared by all nonprofits, including churches, said Mulcahy. “They don’t have records that go back that far. We have no way to defend. That’s part of the problem,” he told The Georgia Bulletin, the archdiocesan newspaper.

The current statute of limitations for past childhood sexual abuse is five years after the plaintiff reaches 18. The proponents of H.B. 605, including plaintiff trial lawyers, sought to change the law in 2015 to open a window allowing suits against private organizations, churches and nonprofits, regardless of when the abuse had occurred.
The state Assembly did not pass the law, but did approve a two-year window for suits against individual predators regardless of when the abuse happened. The Archdiocese fully supported that measure.

With the current bill, another factor behind the opposition is that it discriminates between the church and the state. All governmental agencies – park districts, public school districts and care facilities – are immune from the potential devastating effects of these lawsuits because of sovereign immunity. Churches, religious and private schools, nonprofits and businesses are affected.

“We have proposed language that would make it apply to everybody,” said Mulcahy.

To allow suits against the government, any law must specifically waive the defense of sovereign immunity, a legal concept that protects a government, its departments and agencies from suits of liability without its consent. State governments, counties and municipalities in Georgia are further protected by the requirement that a claimant must give written notice of a claim within one year of injury.