The
U.S. Supreme Court ruled today, 5-4, that a California
law that changed the statute of limitations for some sex
offenses was unconstitutional.
The high court ruled that a 72 year-old man who
had been charged with committing child sexual
molestation almost 50 years ago could not be prosecuted.
At stake were the ex post facto and due process
provisions of the Constitution.
Commenting on the decision is Catholic League
president William Donohue:
“The only surprise in today’s decision is the fact
that four Supreme Court judges thought it
constitutional to retroactively change the statute of
limitations.
Were this to happen, it is not certain how
fundamental due process rights could ever be
safeguarded.
Sex crimes against children are abhorrent and
should be aggressively pursued.
Moreover, the guilty should be severely
punished.
But none of this justifies the suspension of
elementary civil liberties.
“Innocent
until proven guilty carries with it certain
predicates, one of which is that claims made decades
after an alleged offense can never be settled in a
satisfactory manner.
Thus, the court must err on the side of the
accused.
What the high court did today was to restore
the clock to the criminal justice system.
“The
implications for the Catholic Church, especially in
California, are grave.
This now means the Church will properly be
safeguarded from steeple-chasing lawyers and their
Johnny-come-lately clients.
While some of the clients may have indeed been
victimized by a priest, others are obviously playing
the ‘repressed memory’ game.
No matter, the Catholic Church is not an open
cash register that stays in business for an indefinite
period of time.
It, too, has closing hours.”