CT- Deter wrong doing, preserve law SNAP says
By Jim Hackett
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests
September 18, 2014
http://www.snapnetwork.org/ct_deterring
Deterrence. That's what I want to stress: current Connecticut law deters wrongdoing. That's why current Connecticut law should be preserved.
The message our current law sends is this: “Don't try to hide child sex crimes. With our smart and just statute of limitations, you won't succeed in keeping it under wraps long enough to escape detection. So when abuse reports surface, act promptly and responsibly and protect kids.” That's the message we should keep sending. That's the message Archbishop Blair doesn't want to hear. He wants to go back to the old days when a tight, unfair statute of limitations stopped victims who wanted to show the public, through judicial channels, who the molesters were and who their enablers were.
It's tough for a supervisor to call 911 when he or she suspects an employee is assaulting boys or girls. But in Connecticut, that supervisor knows those boys or girls, even decades later, may file lawsuits. They may prove to the public that trusted authority figures acted improperly. That's a strong disincentive for a supervisor who's tempted to act selfishly. That's a strong prod to a supervisor to act responsibly.
A restrictive statute of limitations will save complicit Catholic officials money. More importantly, it will save complicit Catholic officials' reputations and power and careers. We think this is the real reason Blair wants to overturn Connecticut's statute of limitations. And we think this is terribly dangerous and unwise. We hope he fails and kids win.
Contact: SNAPct@cotse.net
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