28 de febrero de 2023
Condado de Bucks, PA- 28 de febrero 2023 - El senador Steve Santarsiero (D-10) se unió a sus colegas demócratas en el Senado del Estado para pedir a los líderes republicanos del Senado para hacer justicia a las víctimas de abuso sexual infantil, mediante la aprobación de una legislación para abrir una ventana de dos años para las víctimas a presentar reclamaciones sobre los asaltos que han expirado el estatuto de limitaciones.
Emitió la siguiente declaración:
"Ha llegado por fin el momento de abrir de par en par la puerta a la justicia para las víctimas de abusos sexuales en la infancia. El Senado del Estado puede hacerlo ahora mismo aprobando la HB 1 o la HB 2. El proyecto de ley HB 1 enmendaría la Constitución del Estado para permitir el plazo de dos años para las reclamaciones que actualmente han prescrito. El proyecto de ley 2 haría lo mismo como una simple promulgación de leyes. Si bien creemos que un nuevo estatuto resistiría un desafío constitucional y representa un camino mucho más rápido a la justicia, apoyamos la modificación de la Constitución si eso es lo que la mayoría republicana sigue insistiendo. Pero tenemos que hacerlo ahora".
"Los republicanos del Senado aprobaron la enmienda constitucional en enero, pero la unieron a dos propuestas de enmienda no relacionadas: una que permitía la identificación de los votantes, tan mal redactada que ni siquiera sus autores pudieron explicarla, y otra que permitía al poder legislativo anular las normas del poder ejecutivo. Las víctimas no deberían ser rehenes de la agenda política de los republicanos del Senado en estas cuestiones. No tienen nada que ver con garantizar a las víctimas el acceso a los tribunales".
"Hace tiempo que pasó el tiempo del debate. Aprobemos estos proyectos de ley".
El viernes 24 de febrero, la Cámara de Representantes aprobó la enmienda constitucional, House Bill 1, por un voto abrumadoramente bipartidista de 161Y-40N. A continuación, se aprobó el proyecto de ley 2, la modificación estatutaria, por 134Y-67N, en una votación igualmente bipartidista.
Vea aquí la rueda de prensa completa del Grupo Demócrata del Senado.
Consulte aquí el texto de la Proposición de Ley 1.
Consulte aquí el texto de la Proposición de Ley nº 2.
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10 de abril de 2019
HARRISBURG, PA − Abril 10, 2019 − Today, members of the Senate Democratic Caucus introduced legislation to eliminate the statute of limitations for sexual offenses and open a window for civil liability.
The legislation was introduced as Senate Bill 540.
“I wanted to get to Harrisburg to amplify the voices of those who’ve gone unheard for far too long,” said Senator Tim Kearney. “Trauma does not have an expiration date; We will not limit survivors’ opportunities to seek justice.”
“I support Senate Bill 540 because it follows the unanimous recommendations of the Pennsylvania grand jury that spent two years examining widespread sexual abuse of children by Catholic clergy, and an institutional cover-up spanning decades,” Attorney General Josh Shapiro said. “Since the Grand Jury Report was released last Agosto, 16 other states have opened investigations into clergy abuse and cover-up, the U.S. Justice Department has launched a probe, 1600 people have called our clergy abuse hotline, and 35 states are considering legislative changes like those called for by the grand jury. It’s time for Pennsylvania lawmakers to do their part.”
“Sexual assault is horrific in every instance,” said Senator Maria Collett. “This legislation acknowledges the reality of why victims are often slow to report as well as the egregious lifelong damage this type of trauma inflicts.”
“In the PA House, I worked with Rep. Mark Rozzi in trying to eliminate the statute of limitations in cases of child sex abuse,” said Senator Steve Santarsiero. “Over the past few years support has steadily built for that idea. This should be the year that we lift the statute for all victims of sexual violence, children and adults. Justice demands no less.”
“SB 540 is a victim-centered bill that will finally allow all survivors to choose their pathway to healing and justice,” said Senator Katie Muth. “Sexual violence and abuse is a public health crisis and we must stop this rape culture epidemic.”
“I’m hopeful that this bill will be embraced and ultimately passed with bipartisan support,” said Senator Lindsey Williams.
The bill would amend Title 42 (Judiciary and Judicial Procedure) to:
- eliminate the criminal and civil statute of limitations (SOL) for sexual abuse, assault and misconduct victims whose abuse happened at any age;
- provide a 2 year civil window to revive previously expired SOL claims, and;
- also provide a 6-month delay to the window in which survivors who wish to voluntarily settle their claim outside the court system are able to do so.
While this bill addresses the concerns of the Grand Jury report on church sex abuse, what will be introduced is not SB 261 of 2017-2018 nor HB 612 of 2017-2018, though those pieces of legislation did inform the context of this bill.
“There is a war on sexual violence in this country and in so many ways, Pennsylvania has been ground zero,” said state Victim Advocate Jennifer Storm. “I am honored to stand here with our new Senators as we add more voices to this army of support to finally change our broken system, expose those who seek to behind it and offer a path to justice and healing for all Pennsylvania’s victims and survivors.”
The Senators were also joined by a handful of survivor victims who offered remarks on the need for this legislation.
This crisis is indiscriminate of age; there are countless victims who have been subjected to sexual abuse, assault and misconduct in their lifetime. A study done by the Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network (RAINN) found that 82% of sexual assault victims are between the ages of 18 and 64. The 2015 National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey Date Brief showed that 55.6% of women surveyed were 18 years old or older when they were first-time victims of completed or attempted rape.
However, this research is based on reported abuse, assault and misconduct. The Bureau of Justice Statistics found that only 36% of rapes, 34% of attempted rapes, and 26% of sexual assaults were reported between 1992 and 2000. This data describes a marginalized population and does not reflect the real scope of the crisis due to under-reporting.
Senators signed on to sponsor the bill are: Senator Timothy P. Kearney and Senator Maria Collett, Senator Katie J. Muth, Senator Steven J. Santarsiero, Senator Lindsey Williams, Senator John P. Blake, Senator James R. Brewster, Senator Jay Costa, Senator Andrew E. Dinniman, Senator Lawrence M. Farnese, Jr., Senator Wayne D. Fontana, Senator Vincent J. Hughes, Senator Daylin Leach, Senator Judith L. Schwank, Senator Sharif Street, Senator Christine M. Tartaglione, Senator Anthony H. Williams.
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8 de abril de 2019
Harrisburg - 8 de abril de 2019 - Los miembros del Caucus Demócrata del Senado de Pensilvania presentarán legislación para abolir el estatuto de limitaciones para una lista de delitos sexuales, independientemente de si la víctima era un niño o un adulto cuando ocurrió el crimen.
A ellos se unirán partidarios del proyecto de ley y supervivientes de agresiones sexuales.
CUÁNDO: Miércoles, 10 de abril a las 9:30
DÓNDE: Rotonda principal del Capitolio
QUIÉN: Senador Tim Kearney
Senadora Maria Collett
Senadora Katie Muth
Senador Steve Santarsiero
Senador Lindsey Williams
Fiscal General Josh Shapiro
Defensora de las víctimas Jennifer Storm