NEW YORK
Gothamist
BY JAKE OFFENHARTZ ON JUN 12, 2017
Back in January, Cuomo promised that passage of the Child Victims Act—a law extending the amount of time that abuse victims can seek justice as adults—would be one of his top priorities. But six months later, in the waning days of the state’s legislative session, some survivors of sexual assault are beginning to wonder if the governor has hung them out to dry.
“[Cuomo] looked me in the eye three times while shaking my hand and said to me ‘I got this, Andrew, I got this,'” Andrew Willis, a childhood survivor of rape and the founder of the Stop Abuse Campaign, told Gothamist. “But I’m getting nervous. There’s very few days left for the governor to show that he’s got it, and I keep saying to myself: Why wouldn’t he want to get this bill passed?”
The bill, which passed 139-7 in the State Assembly last week, extends the current statute of limitations for childhood abuse victims seeking to bring civil or criminal charges against their abusers. Under current state law, most victims can only bring charges against their abusers until the age of 23. In the assembly’s version of the CVA, that statute of limitations would be extended between five and fifty years (depending on the nature of the suit). Additionally, the bill would create a one-time “look back” window for one year, in which victims of any age would be permitted to bring civil suits against individuals or institutions.
These changes would throw a life raft to the estimated 43,000 children who are abused in New York each year, Willis says, as research shows that a majority of childhood victims wait at least five years before telling anyone. Willis himself was raped at the age of 10, but says he was too racked with guilt to mention it to anyone until he was almost 50 years old. The teacher responsible was eventually accused of abusing more than 100 other students, Willis told me.
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