California Gov. Jerry Brown signs legislative bill AB639 that will ask voters to repurpose $600 million of existing veterans' housing bonds for use in building veteran housing Thursday, Oct. 10, 2013, in San Diego. Twenty-five percent of homeless veterans in the United States live in California. (AP Photo/Lenny Ignelzi)
SAN FRANCISCO -- Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed a bill Saturday that would have allowed some sex abuse victims who are now barred by the statute of limitations to file lawsuits against private institutions that employed their abusers.
Brown said he vetoed the bill because it unfairly expanded on a similar measure passed in 2002 amid the Catholic Church sex-abuse scandal.
The current bill from Sen. Jim Beall, D-San Jose, would have lifted the statute of limitations for a group of alleged victims who are 26 or older and missed the previous window to file lawsuits because of time and age restrictions.
Catholic Church leaders and representatives of other organizations in opposition, such as private schools and the State Alliance of YMCAs, said the proposal to allow claims is unfair because it does not allow accusers to sue public institutions. Brown agreed.
"This extraordinary extension of the statute of limitations, which legislators chose not to apply to public institutions, is simply too open-ended and unfair," Brown said in his veto message.
Abuse victims can still file lawsuits against their abusers, Brown said.
Assembly Republicans tried to amend the bill to include school, universities and other public institutions but were defeated. They said the bill would not provide equal justice unless all victims of childhood abuse can seek relief, regardless of where their abuser was employed.
Furthermore, Brown said in his veto message that statutes of limitations are in place for a reason.
"There comes a time when an individual or organization should be secure in the reasonable expectation that past acts are indeed in the past and not subject to further lawsuits," Brown wrote in his veto message.
The National Center for Victims of Crime, which sponsored the bill, and other supporters say victims might take years to acknowledge they were molested.
Alleged childhood abuse victims currently can file a lawsuit in California until they are 26 years old.
laws, jerry brown, california news
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