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  • 2019-02-28 (xsd:date)
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  • Did California Pass a Law Protecting Pedophiles Who Rape Children? (en)
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  • In January 2019, California state senator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) introduced a bill (SB-145) to modify the state penal code to allow certain individuals convicted of sex offenses involving minors to apply for discretionary relief from having to register as sex offenders. The bill was passed by the legislature on Aug. 31, 2020, and signed into law by Gov. Gavin Newsom on Sept. 11. The aim of the revised statute, according to a 2019 press release from Wiener's office, is to redress the disparity between how heterosexual and LGBT sex offenders were treated under existing law: A Feb. 21, 2019 article on The Washington Pundit website put a decidedly different spin on the proposal and foreshadowed the tone of the debate to follow. That article, entitled CA Democrats Introduce LGBTQ Bill that would Protect Pedophiles who Rape Children, claimed: These claims were at best misleading and at worst false, beginning with the headline. The new law does not, under any reasonable interpretation, protect pedophiles who rape children. Although the crimes addressed in SB-145 fall under the heading of statutory rape (given that the victims are under 18, the statutory age of consent), they do not include forcible sex crimes of any kind, as a spokesperson for Sen. Wiener, Victor Ruiz-Cornejo, explained in an email: Moreover, it is not the case that the new law would, per the article's claim, allow a sex offender who lures a minor with the intent to commit a felony (i.e., a sex act) the ability to escape registering as a sex offender as long as the offender is within 10 years of age of the minor. The law doesn't allow anyone to escape registering. Rather, it allows people found guilty of unforced oral or anal intercourse with a minor 14 or older, if there is no more than 10 years' age difference between them, to apply to the court for the same discretionary relief from mandated sex-offender registration that is already afforded to those found guilty of vaginal intercourse with a minor. That is to say, a court will decide whether the offender must register, based on the facts of the case. Also, according to Ruiz-Cornejo, luring a minor for purposes of sex is not one of the crimes covered in the bill. Senate Bill 145 does not protect anyone from luring children (under 14 years old) or teenagers (above 15 years old) with the intent to commit sexual assault, he told us. Luring a minor is treated differently and does not fall under the consensual relationships this bill is addressing. We asked Ruiz-Cornejo for further clarification on this, given that the text of the bill did state that it applies to Section 288.3 of the Penal Code, which addresses contacting a minor with intent to commit a felony (including certain sex offenses), but he didn't elaborate. We followed up with Los Angeles County Deputy District Attorney Dan Felizzatto, who confirmed what Ruiz-Cornejo told us and explained that when a defendant is prosecuted for luring a minor (including children under 14) they would be charged with [Penal Code] Section 272 because that is the luring section. Conviction under Section 272 requires mandatory sex offender registration if it involves lewd or lascivious conduct (with no provision for discretionary relief). Additional charges are often filed in such cases, which could include, for example, a violation of Section 288.3 (contacting a minor with intent to commit a felony) or any substantive sex offense that would be appropriate, but any discretionary relief from mandatory registry provided for under Section 288.3 would not apply to the luring charge under Section 272. Nothing in SB-145 precludes a district attorney from filing a case in such a way as to prevent an individual who commits a sex offense against a minor under 14 from taking advantage of the discretionary relief provision, Felizzatto said. Those types of sex offenders are predatory and would not benefit from the changes in SB-145. Given that the second quoted paragraph of the Washington Pundit piece references existing law which already excludes lewd acts with children under 14, the paragraph that follows contains a blatant falsehood, citing the example of a 22-year-old luring a 12-year-old to show how the proposed legislation supposedly shields child predators. The bill does not apply to anyone under 14 years old, Ruiz-Cornejo said when we showed him the passage. Nor does the bill shield anyone, it simply grants the judge discretion. (The Washington Pundit deleted the example and noted the correction after we contacted them to point out its inaccuracy.) Finally, the sentence SB-145, as currently written, appears to allow certain sexual predators to live among the population without anyone being aware simply repeats the erroneous claim that discretionary relief will be granted to sexual predators. We sought comment on the discrepancies in the article from The Washington Pundit's publisher, who defended the website's overall characterization of the bill. By eliminating the different treatments for vaginal vs oral and anal assaults, it doesn’t change the nature of the bill, he said in an email. It actually expands on it and applies more protection to the pedophile. (Our definition of pedophile is an adult who sexually preys on children). He also stood by the claim that the bill would protect pedophiles who rape children, citing California's age-of-consent law as a reason to ignore the distinction between forcible rape and consensual sex acts such as those that fall under the heading of statutory rape: In March 2019, Wiener's office issued an amended version of SB-145 to clarify its intent and allay public confusion about which types of offenses were and were not included in the bill. After the bill finally became law in September 2020, its provisions were once again widely misrepresented and assailed as pro-pedophilia. Wiener called these claims grossly disingenuous. (en)
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