Currently, Maryland and 30 other states afford rapists full parental rights under the law.…
The repugicans continue to show us just how inept and
barbaric they are. No matter how many courses on how to talk to women
they take, leave it to a repugican to pontificate on the “beauty”
of rape. One could argue that they are slowly evolving in the sense
that at least they are ready to acknowledge the biological fact that
women can get pregnant as a result of rape.
Currently, Maryland and 30 other states afford rapists full parental rights under the law.
Sponsored by Senator James Raskin, The Rape
Survivor Family Protection Act, will bring an end to the nightmare that
too many women (5% of rape victims
of child bearing age) and their child are forced to endure in the name
of protecting a rapist’s parental rights. The proposed bill has 29
co-sponsors.
As The Cecil Daily
points out, a previous bill like this one passed through the Senate in
the 2013 and 2014 sessions. However, the House of Delegates versions
died in the House Judiciary Committee without being voted on. Let’s hope
for the rape survivors and their children in Maryland, this time the
bill becomes law.
The bill requires a court hearing with 20 days of the mother’s request to terminate the parental rights of her alleged rapist.
There is a concession to those who fail to recognize
that rape is NOT just another method of conception in that the law
applies the “clear and convincing” evidence standard. That means rape
victims will have to apply the same standards that are used in other
cases that seek to terminate parental rights.
In other words, for the purpose of terminating a
rapist’s parental rights, there is no distinction between rapists and
parents who conceived a child together with the consent of the other
parent.
Of course, that still doesn’t go far enough for the “rape is just another method of conception” crowd.
The government relations director for the public
defender’s office claimed: ”Both the standard of proof and the standard
of evidence that’s being proposed by this bill is less than what is
required in our criminal justice system.”
Well yeah, perhaps because the criminal justice
standard isn’t applied in other parental termination cases, including
the majority that involve crimes like child abuse and child neglect. To
suggest that there must be a criminal justice standard in this
instance, in fact, calls for a higher standard of proof to terminate the
parental rights of a rapist than a parent who is alleged to have
committed a different crime.
The suggestion that women seeking to terminate the
parental rights of her rapist should have to meet a higher standard than
other cases of parental termination involving alleged criminal acts is
another consequence of rape culture.
Rape is the only crime in which the victim is put on
trial, which in part, explains why relatively few rapes are reported.
Moreover, rape is the only crime in which the victim is all too often
made to feel guilty or ashamed for being victimized, while the criminal
is defended. In fact, rape is the only crime in which the victim faces
outright hostility from third parties under the illusion that SHE ruined
HIS life. It’s the only crime where there is a presumption by some
(most notably in the repugican cabal) that the victim lied or somehow
deserved it. It’s the one crime that the cabal of “law and order” not
only persists in claiming that it isn’t “really” a crime but goes on to
reward the crime by recognizing the rapist as a parent with all the
rights (but none of the responsibilities) that entails.
When a rape results in pregnancy, rape is also the
only crime in which it is possible for the criminal to blackmail their
victim into not reporting the crime. Think Progress wrote about Shauna Prewitt’s experience in this regard back in 2013.
Prewitt was speaking from personal experience. She made headlines last year when she wrote an open letter to Todd Akin — who became infamous during the 2012 election cycle for claiming that women cannot be impregnated from a “legitimate rape” — about becoming pregnant after being raped. As she pursued charges against her rapist months later, he suddenly filed for custody rights over her daughter, sending her into a long and expensive court battle.
Prewitt when on to study law and write a paper on the subject for the Georgetown Law Journal in
which she describes the life sentence that rape survivors and their
child endures when, under the law, rape is treated as just another
method of conception.
The reality is that rape is a crime. Almost 5% of
rape victims who are of child bearing years get pregnant as a result of
rape. These survivors of rape and their children deserve better than
having forced legal ties to a violent criminal. They shouldn’t have to
meet higher standards than victims of other crimes be it within the
criminal justice system or when seeking to terminate parental rights
when the crime in question is rape.
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