Politics & Government

Sen. Jim Beall's Statute of Limitations Bill to Sue Child Molesters Makes Progress

Legislation to overhaul the statute of limitations so adult survivors of child molestation can seek justice in civil courts against their abusers approved by Senate Judiciary Committee.

Legislation by state Sen. Jim Beall to overhaul the statute of limitations so adult survivors of child molestation can seek justice in civil courts against their abusers was passed earlier this month by the Senate Judiciary Committee.

“Senate Bill 131 changes California’s antiquated statute of limitations on civil claims brought forward for childhood sexual abuse,’’ said Beall, whose District 15 includes Los Gatos.

“The bill gives victims more time to recognize the psychological trauma that is linked to their childhood abuse and take action to gain a measure of justice,’’ he added.

Victim rights advocate Kim Goldman told the Judiciary Committee that addictions and suicides have been linked to adults who suffered sexual abuse as children.

“The resulting harms are latent injuries that do not manifest themselves until later in life,’’ said Goldman, who argued for allowing victims more time to sue their abusers.

Goldman also said the bill does not make it easier for victims to win their court cases because the burden of proof still rests on them to convince a judge or jury that they were harmed.

Existing law prevents victims of child sex abuse who are 26 years or older from suing their abusers. Research shows the psychological trauma from child abuse can surface well beyond the 26-year-old ceiling, Beall said in a news release.

Beall’s bill calls for extending the statute of limitation to age 43 for a victim to sue the person who abused them.

To sue the abuser’s employer, victims would have to file before they turn 31 years old, under the bill.

In either category, victims whose ages are higher than the statute of limitations will be permitted a one-year window to seek civil damages after the bill becomes law, according to the measure.

SB 131 also gives victims a causal connection window of five years as opposed to the existing three-year period to file a lawsuit after the date of discovery by a mental health professional that their psychological trauma is indeed linked to their childhood sexual abuse, Beall explained in a the release.

Beall’s legislation grants victims who were previously barred by law from filing civil actions a one-year window to seek justice against their perpetrators. If approved by the Legislature and signed into law by the governor, SB 131 would go into effect on Jan. 1, the release stated.

The bill was headed for the Senate Appropriations Committee.

Joelle Casteix, western regional director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, explained Beall's measure was proposed due to Quarry California Supreme Court decision last year.

In that case, brothers who were sexually abused lost the right to use the civil system for justice, due to a different reading of the statute of limitations.

Casteix said the National Center for Victims of Crime, SNAP, victims from U.S. Gymnastics and Swimming, and other victims groups have been supportive of the bill.





Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here