Hidden Predator Act Passes Senate, Heads to Governor

ATLANTA – The Hidden Predator Act, or House Bill 17, received final passage today, the 40th and final day of the 2015 legislative session. Sponsored by State Representative Jason Spencer (R-Woodbine), House Bill 17 was passed in the Senate with slight changes on Tuesday, March, 31; the House then agreed to the Senate changes, sending HB 17 to Governor Deal for consideration. Continue reading “Hidden Predator Act Passes Senate, Heads to Governor”

Camden County Legislative Delegation Announces $1.1 Million for Coastal Pines Technical College

ATLANTA – The Camden County legislative delegation, which includes State Representative Jason Spencer (R-Woodbine), Rep, John Corbett (R-Lake Park), and Senator William Ligon (R-St. Simons Island), announced today that the fiscal year 2016 state budget will include $1.1 million for planning and design costs for the Coastal Pines Technical College campus in Camden County. The funds will be used for planning of the architectural design of the Kingsland campus. Continue reading “Camden County Legislative Delegation Announces $1.1 Million for Coastal Pines Technical College”

Editorial: Childhood Sexual Assault Survivors Falling Victim to Georgia’s Pro-Predator Lobby

By State Representative Jason Spencer (R-Woodbine)
(878 words)

“Liberty and justice for all.” These five words that conclude the pledge of allegiance are recited countless times every day across the United States, including every morning at your State Capitol in Atlanta. This is not a pledge that I take passively. As a member of the Georgia House of Representatives, I have taken an oath – one that I reaffirm every morning – to protect and uphold the liberty of our citizens and their constitutional right to seek justice, especially for our children.

The question that must be asked, though, is do all citizens really have “liberty and justice for all” in our great state? Our political and judicial process is supposed to guarantee that the ideals of liberty and justice are for all, and not for a select few. However, the state of Georgia finds itself at a crossroads today, and we must decide who we are elected to represent: our state’s most vulnerable citizens, our children, or a powerful, well-connected lobby who has inexplicably taken the side of sexual predators.

The debate which I am referring to is centered upon House Bill 17, the Hidden Predator Act. This proposal would extend justice to victims of childhood sexual abuse who currently have no path to seek recourse due to our state’s archaic statute of limitations for these victims, which lags behind nearly every other state in the country. For them, justice has been denied, and that is simply unacceptable. Georgia must now decide if we are going to aspire to the greatest ideal of providing justice for all, instead of selectively providing it to an elite few. We must demand that blind justice be applied, not selective application of our constitutional rights.

There are powerful interests that have chosen to stand in the way of HB 17, favoring instead to protect the almighty dollar over taking a brave, principled stand for our children. Who are these pro-child sexual predator special interest groups that are trying to stop this bill and undermine the promise of justice for all? The Georgia Chamber of Commerce, the insurance lobby and the Archdiocese of Atlanta are all working fervently behind the scenes to see to it that this proposal never becomes law in Georgia. Why? Because these interests have stated that the Hidden Predator Act is “bad for business” and that we have a “business to protect.” For them, opposing this bill is only about the bottom line on their ledgers, when really it should be about what is best for victims of childhood sexual abuse.

Put simply, protecting predators, and those who knowingly employ them, appears to be the sole driving interest of the Georgia Chamber of Commerce and others opposing this bill. I have faithfully tried to work with them and address their concerns, and HB 17 has gone through over 10 hours of hearings, where it ultimately passed the House of Representatives overwhelmingly by a vote of 169-2. The version of the bill that is now in the State Senate provides a path to justice for childhood sexual abuse victims, but the continued pressure from the Georgia Chamber of Commerce to change the bill through the back channels of the political process should now be viewed as a clear attempt to sabotage the bill.

The Georgia Chamber of Commerce is trying to pressure our senators to insert malicious provisions into the bill that would shield employers from accountability for negligently hiring and negligently keeping in their employment individuals who they know to be child molesters. Further, the Chamber has recommended amendments that will provide a level of super-immunity protection to businesses acting in bad faith by conspiring to cover up abuse and protect the sexual predators that they employ. This is disturbing, to say the very least, and these provisions they are proposing undermine the civil jury system that is protected by the Constitution’s Seventh Amendment right to a jury trial that ensures access to justice for all.

Not only is the very fundamental right to seek justice in our civil courts against the most powerful and well-connected in our society under attack through the Chamber’s efforts to sabotage this bill, but so too are our most vulnerable children. The pro-predator lobby will stop at nothing to protect the interests of their businesses, even to the detriment of the victims of childhood sexual abuse in our state.

When our legislature caves to the profit-driven demands of the pro-predator lobby in Georgia, we are no longer working to ensure “liberty and justice for all.” Quite the opposite, in fact. If they have their way, we will only ensure liberty and justice for a select few, none of whom are the innocent children who have been victimized by sexual predators.

It is time to bring liberty and justice back to Georgia’s children, and to reject the efforts of the pro-predator lobby to put profits ahead of morals. Please join me in supporting House Bill 17.

Representative Jason Spencer represents the citizens of District 180, which includes Camden, Charlton, and Ware counties. He was elected into the House of Representatives in 2010, and currently serves as the Secretary of the Special Rules Committee. He also serves on the Game Fish & Parks, Human Relations & Aging, Science and Technology, and Juvenile Justice committees.

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