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    You are at:Home»State News»Proposed Kansas bill: Child not ‘aggressor’ in sexual abuse

    Proposed Kansas bill: Child not ‘aggressor’ in sexual abuse

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    By KMAN Staff on February 12, 2019 State News
    Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt, second from the left, makes a point while briefing Kansas House Republicans on a recent school funding decision, Monday, March 10, 2014, at the Statehouse in Topeka, Kan. To his left is Rep. Kyle Hoffman of Coldwater, and to his right, Deputy Attorney General Jeff Chanay and Rep. Shanti Gandhi of Topeka. (AP Photo/John Hanna)

    TOPEKA — Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt wants to change state law to prevent judges from easing sentences for adult sex offenders because a child victim is purportedly an “aggressor” in the crime.

    The legislation proposed Monday was sparked by the decision of Leavenworth County Judge Michael Gibbens to give a 67-year-old man a more lenient sentence after saying the sex abuse victims, ages 13 and 14, were “more an aggressor than a participant.”

    State law now allows judges to reduce sentences below the guidelines by finding the victim contributed to the criminal conduct.

    The proposed bill would prohibit that reasoning when the victim is younger than 14 years and the sex offender is an adult. It also would make it unavailable whenever human trafficking victims are involved regardless of their age.

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