Mary Ellen Klas, Rick Scott signs child abuse reporting bill into law, Tampa Bay Times

http://www.tampabay.com/news/politics/gubernatorial/rick-scott-signs-child-abuse-reporting-bill-into-law/1227346

TALLAHASSEE — After the Jerry Sandusky saga exposed the flaws in Penn State’s storied legacy, it revealed to victim advocates in Florida the need to fix the state’s child sex abuse reporting laws.

Under the measure, which takes effect on Oct. 1, anyone — from university coaching staff to elementary school teachers to administrators to students — who “willfully and knowingly” fails to report any suspicious sexual abuse they encounter will face fines of up to $1 million per incident and face potential criminal charges.

Current Florida law requires mandatory reporting of child sex abuse only when the suspect is a parent or other caregiver of a child.

“This law will break the culture we have learned so much about in the wake of the Penn State, Syracuse, and Citadel child abuse scandals, where institutions seemed to think the names of their institutions were more important than protecting children,” said Tallahassee lobbyist Ron Book, who, with his daughter Lauren, proposed and pushed for the bill.

Lauren Book is a sexual abuse survivor and the founder of “Lauren’s Kids,” a victims advocacy group. For the past 11 years, she and her father have sought to tighten Florida’s safety net for victims of sexual abuse and to strengthen the laws against child sexual predators.

The Books said they didn’t realize the state’s mandatory reporting laws were so weak until learning of the Penn State child sex abuse scandal. Sandusky was arrested last year on charges that he sexually abused at least eight boys over a period of 15 years. After his arrest, Penn State fired Sandusky’s supervisor, the college’s long-time coach Joe Paterno, who died earlier this year. The college’s athletic director, Tim Curley, was also accused of perjury and failing to report suspected child abuse.

The new law requires anyone to report suspected sex abuse and provides $2 million to promote the sex abuse hotline at the Florida Department of Children and Families and adds 47 additional hotline counselors.

The new law also requires hotline operators to refer abuse reports to law enforcement and requires universities to turn over their abuse reports to prosecutors.

In addition to imposing fines on universities, the bill increases from a misdemeanor to a third-degree felony the penalties for those who knowingly fail to report child abuse. In addition, it raises the prison sentence from one year to up to 15 years and increases potential fines from a maximum of $1,000 to a maximum of $5,000.

Legislators also set aside $1.5 million, or up to $3,000 per victim, to help victims relocate.

Rick Scott signs child abuse reporting bill into law 04/27/12 [Last modified: Friday, April 27, 2012 9:32pm]

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