Lovett: N.Y. Assembly blocks pol from showing ‘Spotlight’ to push child-rape law

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY KENNETH LOVETT

ALBANY — A state assemblywoman’s desire to use the Academy Award-winning movie “Spotlight” to boost her fight to help child sexual abuse victims has run into a roadblock — her own chamber’s leadership.

Assembly Democratic leaders are refusing to allow Assemblywoman Margaret Markey (D-Queens) from holding a screening of the film at the Capitol complex during a two-day lobbying effort in May to build support for her bill to make it easier for people sexually abused as kids to bring lawsuits as adults.

Markey’s office, which received a Blu-ray copy of the Best Picture winner that chronicles the Boston Globe’s investigation into sexual abuse by priests, was originally told it was a copyright issue.

Since then, Markey aide Michael Armstrong says he paid $200 to the film’s distributor for a license to show it one-time in a legislative hearing room.

But that is still not enough for Assembly leadership, who now say it’s about precedent.

“It’s just not something we do on government property,” said Michael Whyland, spokesman for Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie. “It would open the door to showing all sorts of things that some people might find objectionable, not that “Spotlight” is. We just don’t want to go down that road.”

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