OH- Ohio civil offender registry isn’t working; SNAP responds

OHIO
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 566 9790, SNAPclohessy@aol.com )

A “civil registry” of child molesters set up eight years ago by Ohio lawmakers has never been used, the Columbus Dispatch reports today.

[Columbus Dispatch]

The “civil registry” isn’t working because it’s an obscure, untested, and likely unconstitutional process that would require suffering child sex abuse victims to pay thousands of dollars to a lawyer, with no chance to even recover their costs, little chance of exposing their predator and no chance to expose the colleagues and supervisors who concealed their predator’s crimes.

It was a desperate move designed to give lawmakers ‘political cover’ and enable them to pretend they were doing something to stop child molesters.

On the contrary, the “civil window” that we’ve long advocated has since been adopted – and successfully used – in Delaware, Hawaii and Minnesota to protect kids by exposing those who commit and conceal heinous sex crimes against kids and deterring such wrongdoing in the future.

Now that it’s clear Ohio’s half-baked “civil registry” hasn’t helped expose a single predator, we hope lawmakers will reconsider reforming the state’s archaic, predator-friendly child sex laws and make it less difficult for those who were raped and sodomized as kids to take legal action against their perpetrators.

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