EFTA00077244.pdf
Extracted Text (OCR)
From: '
To: '
Subject: Re: guidance
Date: Fri, 06 Sep 2019 02:26:55 +0000
Let's talk tomorrow.
Sent from my iPhone
On Sep 5, 2019, at 5:49 PM,
> wrote:
This isaho
is the Director of Safe Horizons. Safe Horizons runs all the victim organizations around New
York City and the surrounding boroughs.
I would like to give him an answer but it is up to you.
He has been very helpful to the office in the past.
From:
Sent: Thursday, September 5, 2019 5:25 PM
To:
Cc:
Subject: guidance
With the passage of the Child Victims Act in NYS last January, there seems to be some (renewed) interest in considering
statute of limitation reform on the federal level for survivors of childhood sexual abuse. Since I gather SOL reform at the
federal level would only apply to federal crimes (and if I'm mistaken, please correct me,) and since I believe civil claims
are brought in state — not federal — courts, I wonder if you can let us know what the SOL currently is for federal sex
crimes against children.
For a frame of reference, I'm pasting an op-ed that ran in the NY Daily News last week that calls for a "change in federal
laws to enable victims, regardless of the state they live in, to have the opportunity to face their abuser in court..."
Also, introducing you both to our Policy Directo
(cc-d here.) Jimmy has been with Safe Horizon for
many years in a variety of roles, and moved into the Policy Director position earlier this summer.
Thank you both so much!
EFTA00077244
We need a federal Child Victims
Act
By Theresa Covington
New York Daily News
Aug 30, 2019 1 1:20 PM
In the wake of high-profile cases involving Jeffrey Epstein and Larry Nassar, child sexual abuse has become a
bigger part of the national dialogue. The common thread that runs through both of cases is the multiple institutions
that failed to address very visible warning signs for protecting young girls at risk.
In the Epstein case, a lenient federal non-prosecution agreement in 2008 resulted in Epstein serving only 13
months in jail, during which he was allowed out on a daily basis for work release. Police had called for more
serious changes involving sexual abuse of underage girls, but the deal resulted in those charges being wiped
clean.
In a recent congressional report focused on the Nassar case, investigators found that multiple institutions failed to
take proper action to stop sexual abuse by Nassar. These included USA Gymnastics, the U.S. Olympic Committee,
Michigan State University and even the FBI. They all failed to protect victims and enabled their abuse through
institutional inaction.
According to research from the Crimes Against Children Research Center an estimated one in five girls and
one in 20 boys is a victim of child sexual abuse. A Centers for Disease Control study found that this and other
traumatic childhood experiences can have serious implications for long-term health, leading to greater risk of
suicide, substance abuse and physical ailments such as heart disease.
When the Commission to Eliminate Child Abuse and Neglect Fatalities, on which I served, released
its report in 2016, we determined that no single agency can fully address the circumstances that impact
troubled families and children facing abuse. We called for a multidisciplinary approach that includes the
involvement of health care and public health agencies, educators, law enforcement, judiciary and more in
order to assure the safety of children.
One of the examples we found of a multidisciplinary approach was Child Advocacy Centers, which were introduced
in the 1980s. By placing various institutions of law enforcement, child protective services, mental health,
medical health and victim advocacy under one roof, their aim is to reduce the trauma experienced by young victims
in telling their story to multiple agencies. There are currently more than 1,000 Child Advocacy Centers across the
U.S. serving more than 300,000 children.
EFTA00077245
The Commission has also called for greater access to prevention and earlier intervention services and
supports, meaning doing much more to identify children at risk.
Another key component in the healing process for victims is closure and redress. Here, New York State
shows the way forward.
Just this past January, the state passed the Child Victims Act which greatly extends the statues of limitations
for a number of sex crimes, letting victims sue those who abused them. Previously, victims had to file civil
suits by their 23rd birthday. Because so many children of abuse fail to come forward initially, the Child Victims
Act enables victims to file civil suits until age 55. And we are currently in the midst of a one-year window in
which victims can bring lawsuits for molestation predating passage of the law.
Three more states have proposed similar legislation.
Finding justice is one important step for victims of sexual abuse. Ensuring our institutions are prepared to
protect children is equally important. As world class gymnast Simone Biles noted in a recent interview when
asked about the accountability of USA Gymnastics, "It's hard coming here for an organization having had
them fail us so many times. And we had one goal and we've done everything that they've asked us for, and
even when we didn't want to, and they couldn't do one damn job. You had one job. You literally had one job
and you couldn't protect us."
It's time to change our federal laws to enable victims, regardless of the state they live in, to have the
opportunity to face their abuser in court and make it harder for those who target children to get away with their
crimes with impunity. We owe it to our children to better ensure their safety from predators like Jeffrey Epstein
and Larry Nassar.
Covington is director of the Within Our Reach office at the Alliance for Strong Families and Communities.
Michael Polenberg
Vice President, Government Affairs
New York, NY 10007
michael.polenberg@safehorizon.org
Pronouns: He, him, his
Twitter: @PolenbergM
EFTA00077246
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moving victims of violence from crisis to confidence
EFTA00077247
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Document Details
| Filename | EFTA00077244.pdf |
| File Size | 198.2 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 6,563 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-11T10:26:55.633888 |