ANNAPOLIS, Md. —
Some Maryland state lawmakers hope to impose criminal sanctions on people who do not report report suspected child abuse or neglect.
Current state law requires reporting, but the state does does not have the power to prosecute when someone doesn't follow the law. Prompted by events that unfolded at Penn State University involving Jerry Sandusky last year, lawmakers in Maryland are taking action to protect children, but members of the General Assembly are divided...
..."We should make it a civil offense where you could be forced to pay a fine and not actually face jail time. Let's see if that works before we create another crime," said Montgomery County Sen. Jamie Raskin, D-District 20.
"I think it is better to try and work on prevention issues than necessarily criminalize things," said Montgomery County Delegate Kathleen Dumais, D-District 15.
Competing legislation pending in the General Assembly does include criminal penalties.
Deborah Baldwin said she supports criminal penalties. Baldwin said her daughter's cheerleading coach declined to do anything when the girl revealed she was assaulted by a referee.
"We are required by law to send our children to school, and we expect them to be safe," she said. "There should be a law that requires teachers to protect children from these situations."
The General Assembly has declined to pass similar legislation introduced four times in the past eight years...
All the champions of justice
ReplyDeleteWhere do they all come from?
All the lofty legal scholars
Where do they all belong?
This is from 2012. It is now 2018, 6 years on. How did Del. Dumais and Jamie Raskin's model work out for MCPS?
ReplyDelete"Current state law requires reporting, but the state does does not have the power to prosecute when someone doesn't follow the law."
ReplyDeleteTypical inherent loophole.
They are masters of artful dodging.
Our dear learned scholars:
ReplyDelete"An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure" applies only to inanimate objects!
Business as usual:
ReplyDelete"The General Assembly has declined to pass similar legislation introduced four times in the past eight years..."