Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2023
Abstract
In the United States, 1 in every 5 women and 1 in every 13 men report being sexually abused as a child. Of the child sexual abuse that occurs during the K-12 years, much of it is aided and abetted by those in positions of authority who look the other way when abuse is known or suspected. This article uses the novel approach of holding not just the perpetrators of child sexual abuse accountable for these crimes, but also those who enable their criminal acts by failing to report suspicious behaviors or witnessed accounts of abuse. No case in more indicative of the tragic repercussions of failing to report abuse - particularly by those who are mandated to do so - than the case of Jeremy Bell, a child who had been sexually abused and ultimately murdered by his teacher, Edgar Friedrichs, in 1997. By recounting the story of Jeremy’s murder, the circumstances surrounding the crime, and the damage inflicted on Friedrichs’ many victims and their families, this article seeks to make a compelling argument for criminalizing enablers beyond the relatively mild penalties written into the laws that currently address this issue across the 50 states.
Recommended Citation
Amos N. Guiora, et al., Holding Enablers of Child Sexual Abuse Accountable: The Case of Jeremy Bell, 59 No. 4 Crim. Law Bulletin ART 3.