LEGISLATIVE DRAFTING INSTITUTE for CHILD PROTECTION
This new and unique organization has come to the fore in the ongoing fight against the predators who prey upon our young and vulnerable. The Mission Statement below --- from none other than Andrew Vachss, who has been on the front line of this battle for many years --- explains things better than I can. After you've read through it, please click on the LDICP link to learn still more and to hopefully support them any way you can.
Link: http://www.LDICP.org
MISSION STATEMENT
The
Legislative Drafting Institute for Child Protection (LDICP) is the natural
evolution of a collective anger, frustration, and disappointment. I believe all
of us involved share those feelings, but here I speak only for myself.
After decades on the front lines
of what I regard as the only “Holy War” worthy of the name, I accepted that I
could fight individual child abusers ... sometimes with a success that shocked
the cynical ... but I wasn’t laying a glove on child abuse itself. I could
change individual lives, but I wasn’t making change.
So I tried drafting legislation,
only to see those bills “tweaked” into less powerful versions, versions
demanded by the truly powerful. Some were so larded with “earmarks” that their
original intent was buried under heavy layers of patronage and payoffs. I tried
to form a child-protective lobby, but watched it become nothing I wanted to be
part of. I once taught Continuing Legal Education courses, but eventually
realized I was revealing strategies and tactics to those I had spent my life
opposing.
I learned that the overwhelming
majority of American voters want children to be protected. But I also learned
that this isn’t a high enough priority to impact politics. No one can run for office
in America without taking a position (even if that position is to adroitly
straddle fences) on hot-button topics such as abortion, gun control, capital
punishment. The voting public demands no less. But when it comes to child
protection, a vapid blanket statement that the candidate “loves children and
supports the American family,” is all that is ever required.
So what’s left? At their core, all
courts are courts of equity. Simply speaking, that means courts exist to
produce justice. This result is to be achieved by interpretation and
enforcement of existing law. But when the neutrality that justice requires is
hamstrung by fundamentally unfair laws, this result is at best elusive, and at
worst unobtainable.
What is needed are laws that actually
accomplish their intent. Laws which are clear on their face, with no vacuous
“open to interpretation” language, no handicapping earmarks, and no loopholes
through which perpetrators can slither. Laws so clearly written that the public
can demand their passage. And demand that in such a way that politicians – who
are as reactive as amoebae to harsh light – do the right thing. Laws that allow
grassroots organizations not only to create their vision of child protection,
but to fight for that vision. Laws which clearly reveal who is serious about
this “issue,” and who is serious only about seeking grants.
Why this emphasis on specific
legislation? Because virtually all “child advocacy” is just that: flabby
adjectives, devoid of actual content. There is no value to being “pro child,”
because that label can fit virtually anyone or anything. That which allows for
endless interpretation is, by definition, an empty vessel. Instead of being
“pro child,” what if people could be “pro” a specific piece of legislation?
What if, instead of demanding our politicians “care,” we could demand they pass
such specific legislation? What if we could force the legislature to act?
Confronted with an actual piece of
legislation, there’s no place to hide. The reality is that no answer is a “no”
answer. Confronted with an actual bill ready to be enacted, no action is action
... the action of being against that very bill. Instead of the welcoming shade
of rhetoric, we could put all legislators in a single bright spotlight:
Behavior is the Truth.
Behavior is the Truth.
After a long period of planning
and the sacrifices of many too modest to be named here, the Legislative
Drafting Institute for Child Protection is now a reality. The LDICP has
partnered with Southern University Law Center in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, which
has contributed its own funds to internships and its own resources to drafting
courses. However, the LDICP is free-standing in all respects, meaning its
budget will not become part of the law school’s coffers, and will be
administrated separately and independently at all times.
The LDICP is not a lobby – it exists solely as a resource.
The purpose of the LDICP is to
create, upon request, highly specific legislation to accomplish the goals of
self-organized, grassroots organizations which intend to achieve a child
protective objective. The passage of each piece of legislation is the goal,
each time. So: no legislation to “form explanatory groups,” or “fight child
abuse” or “raise public awareness.” Examples of what legislation might be
requested include: Closing the loophole in the Child Abuse Prevention and
Treatment Act that allows non-lawyer volunteers to “represent” children in
abuse/neglect cases. Raising the stakes for “circle of trust” crimes. Requiring
victim reparations in child pornography cases. Extending the statute of
limitations in “vulnerable victims” cases. Establishing a Secure Treatment Unit
for “the worst kids in the state” – any state, as the plan would be to
construct and operate such an institution as a model, and to allow for
independent monitoring and evaluation of its effectiveness. But these are
illustrative examples, not suggestions.
The technique is straightforward
and simple: the LDICP will draft research reports and ready-to enact
legislation. All the research will be done prior to release, including
constitutionality, statistical analysis of need/benefit, and conflicts with
existing laws. The legislation will target an impact area that may range from
the federal level down to the municipal, depending on the requesting group. The
LDICP will then make the drafted legislation public. Publication ensures that
there would be no “tinkering” with the bill. An example of such tinkering
occurred in the passage of the National Child Protection Act of 1993. In its
final form, legislators had deleted a provision that had been in the original
draft, which would have held an organization that allowed access to children
strictly liable if it had failed to check its employees or volunteers against
any criminal registries and the employee or volunteer was later found to have
been registered. Publication of LDICP legislative drafts will deter tinkering,
by making it clear if anyone attempts to alter, add, or delete provisions from
the legislation as originally drafted.
So the test is not just for
politicians, it is for all of us. When the right tools are provided, how those
tools are used reveals the truth.
Any group requesting LDICP work
products will have to commit its own resources to passage. This doesn’t mean a
mere Facebook page (although one would not be barred); it means actual
bodies-on-the-line, volunteer commitment. It means lobbying behind a “my vote
depends on your support for this bill” campaign. The LDICP is not a think tank,
and will respond only to requests that outline a specifically-defined child
protective goal.
We have a working group
established, and have already sketched out fund-raising goals. At this time, we
believe two million dollars ($2,000,000) is necessary to bedrock-establish the
LDICP. That amount will allow it to run for a 2-3 year trial period beyond the
initial “proof of concept” phase, in which we are now engaged. If you want to
contribute, you are welcome. And we need money, sure enough. But there are many
other ways to participate, including, but not limited to, putting together your
own grassroots group and requesting the legislation you believe will make a
difference in the protection of our children ... all our children.
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