TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – While the number of reported rapes in the first six months of this year increased 3.8 percent, lawmakers are also concerned about getting justice for victims of crime in years gone by.
Currently, rapists can be prosecuted within eight years of the crime, but new legislation would nearly double the statute of limitations for future cases to 15 years.
Recommended Videos
Meg Baldwin, who runs Refuge House, a rape crisis center, estimates that 20 percent of the calls she receives are about cases 10 years or older.
"Those survivors will have a wider window to come to terms with what happened to them, to appreciate the impact of the attack on themselves as individuals and to make that big decision to come forward,” Baldwin said.
State Rep. Evan Jenne, D-Hollywood, said the extension makes sense, given the capability of modern technology.
“With the advancements that we've had in DNA techniques, it doesn't make sense not to, for me at least personally, not to push back the statute of limitations. Especially on an act as heinous and vile as a sexual assault," Jenne said.
Lawmakers allocated more than $2 million to help reduce a backlog of more than 8,600 rape kits in 2016, yet 1,316 rape kits remain untested. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement has a goal of processing all of them by June of 2019.
To prevent future backlogs, the new legislation would also require FDLE to track the status of rape kits.
“That's a great next chapter to this story,” Baldwin said.
If the bill passes, FDLE would have until 2020 to implement the new tracking requirements.
A second bill filed in the state Senate would abolish any statute of limitations for sexual battery on persons under the age of 18. Currently, those protections are only guaranteed to victims under the age of 16.