Calls by U.S. Catholics demanding swift and concrete action on allegations of clergy sexual abuse across the United States have grown steadily louder since the release of a horrific grand jury report by Pennsylvania last month.
In an interview with The Epoch Times, Dolce repeatedly emphasized a key sticking point in bringing perpetrators of child sex abuse to justice: the statute of limitations. The statute stops prosecutors from having the power to charge someone a certain number of years after a crime is committed. He said it has “prevented many criminal or civil actions from going forward,” calling it the “main legal impediment.”
Pennsylvania’s 900-page report accused more than 300 “predator priests” in Pennsylvania of sexual abuse, and claimed that the clergymen were protected as part of a decades-long cover-up by church officials. At least 1,000 child victims were identified by the report, but many of the identified priests won’t face prosecution because some of the allegations date back up to seven decades.
“Law enforcement in the state of Florida no longer has to worry when somebody comes in and says, ‘Hey, this is what happened to me.’ They no longer have to worry that their investigations become dead in a month, because of an exception in the statute of limitations,” he said.
“I'll tell you from my personal law practice that I’m able to bring civil claims to support criminal claims. We just tried a case in August that would have absolutely failed under the old law but, based on the repeal, we were able to bring the case forward again, try the case, and win.”
“The doom-and-gloom predictions were that liability insurance premiums would skyrocket, certain schools would shut down, we would lose day-care centers and that hasn’t happened. I’m not aware of anything that has closed as a result.”
He said the repeal helped him in the civil sector to gather evidence or prove cases more easily. “Let’s also keep in mind that the majority of child sexual-abuse victims never disclose publicly what happened.”
“When you look at the number of cases where children are abused in connection with an institution, whether its a school or a church, the institutions can’t really be charged criminally for failing to have a safe environment,” he said. “But in the civil sector, we can expose them for that and provide a financial setup over the failure to protect kids.”
It’s unclear how many states have repealed the statute. Some have made partial adjustments, while others, like Florida, have made a full repeal. Dolce explained how it varies on a state-by-state basis since some choose the age of the victim as the limit, while others adjust the window of time to report the crimes.
It’s Personal
Dolce was just 7 years old when he became a victim of sexual abuse.“One of my neighbors abused me and at least one other child that I’m aware of. It was violent—what happened to me was very violent,” he said. “I was bound and raped before I even knew what that meant.”
“[I’m] still affected. You don’t shake that. Do I have a day when I don’t think about it? Absolutely not. Part of that’s from the work I do but ... it continues to haunt you,” he said.
“You think about the things that trigger someone. ... Any kind of human intimacy can take you back to the first time.”
Dolce said child sexual abuse in the United States is “absolutely an epidemic.”
“I’ve handled cases where my client has been abused 100, 200, 500 times by the same perpetrator. That only gets counted once in the data.”