Site icon MageeNews.com

AG Fitch Continues to Fight ALI Proposal to Weaken Laws on Sexual Assault, Human Trafficking, and Sex Offender Registration

Lynn Fitch

Please note that this post contains affiliate links and any sales made through such links will reward MageeNews.com a small commission – at no extra cost to you.

Attorney General Lynn Fitch this week wrote The American Law Institute (ALI) to ask its members to again defer consideration of proposed revisions to Section 213 of the Model Penal Code (MPC) that would weaken the ability of States to prosecute sexual assault, abuse, and exploitation; human trafficking; and sex offender registration.
“Laws against child exploitation, human trafficking, and sexual assault need to be tough to protect the young and vulnerable from predators,” said Attorney General Lynn Fitch. “The ALI is weakening the laws, just when we should be making them stronger. It is a big step backwards, and I will continue to fight to protect victims of these crimes and to ensure citizens are safe from predators.”
On December 9, 2021, General Fitch led a bipartisan coalition of 37 Attorneys General in a letter challenging the proposed revisions. As the Attorneys General wrote then, “The revisions contemplated fail to treat sex predators appropriately and would provide them more freedom to commit these heinous crimes, putting the citizens we represent at greater risk of becoming victims.” As a result, the ALI deferred its planned consideration of these MPC revisions at its January meeting.
Last week, the ALI shared a new draft to be considered at its March 2, 2022, meeting. While these revisions made some of the changes requested by the Attorneys General, it failed to make several critical substantive revisions included in their letter and made additional changes that raise new legal and practical concerns. In her follow-up letter, General Fitch notes that “the revised draft remains extremely problematic and far out of step with contemporary American law and international protocols. Our concerns are not strictly philosophical differences, but also include numerous substantive, legal, and procedural issues….”
Amongst the continuing and new concerns:
Attorney General Fitch will continue to work with her colleagues through the National Association of Attorneys General (NAAG), where she is the co-chair of the Human Trafficking Committee, to fight for a Model Penal Code that gives states the ability to protect citizens from crimes like human trafficking and sexual assault and exploitation and to prosecute thoroughly the predators who commit these crimes.
MageeNews.com is an online news source serving Simpson and surrounding counties as well as the State of Mississippi.
Exit mobile version