For Immediate Release
March 11th, 2010
Los Angeles, New York, St. Petersuburg
Florida Lawmakers, Authors and
Children’s Advocates Urge Florida Legislature to Pass Critical Bill
That Will Protect Children From Abduction Titled The Child Abduction Prevention Act.
Florida State Senator Eleanor Sobel and House Representative Darryl
Rouson, along with authors and children advocates Peter Thomas Senese,
Ken Connelly, Carolyn Ann Vlk, Bryan Lee McGlothin, Larry Synclair, and
Charles Hamilton urge all Florida legislators to support the Child
Abduction Prevention Act now before Florida’s Senate and House.
Peter Thomas Senese, author of Chasing The Cyclone stated “Any
child or parent who has faced domestic or international parental child
abduction knows the severity of this crime against an innocent child is a
dangerous infraction against the child’s physical safety and emotional
stability. Unfortunately, there still exists a wrong perception that
this worldwide epidemic falls in the realm of a civil custody dispute
rather than the criminal act against innocence that it is. For the
growing number of parents who are unexpectedly thrust into the storms
of having a child abducted, these parents know without question that
their child’s safety is potentially at risk, that child abduction is not
a civil matter, and the lack of legal remedy, including preventative
laws all children have a right to, are poor at best. Each state,
including Florida, must adopt strong preventative laws in the name of
the best interest of their children-citizens.”
A staggering 370,000 children are parentally child abducted on average
every year in the United States. Yet few states have abduction
preventive laws in place.
However, on Tuesday, March 9th, 2010 the State of Florida took a major
first step in protecting that state’s children from the horror of
parental child abduction. In a bill sponsored by Senator Eleanor Sobel, a
unanimous vote of eight ‘Yeas’ and zero ‘Nays’ occurred before the
Florida State Senate’s Children, Families, and Elder Affairs
Committee, the Senate moved through its first committee the
critically important abduction preventive bill titled the Child
Abduction Prevention Act. The Senate’s next step is to have the
bill voted on by its Judiciary Committee, which should happen
in the forthcoming weeks. If the bill passes a Judiciary Committee
vote, it will then move forward to the Civil Justice Appropriations
Committee, before a final vote before the Senate.
Senator Eleanor Sobel commented that “I am pleased with
the unanimous and bipartisan support that the Child Abduction
Prevention Act received in the Senate. This law will help prevent
children from the agony of being abducted from Florida by adding risk
factors for the judge to consider and arming that judge with the
increased preventative measures.”
Florida’s House of Representatives is expected in the near future.
The bill was filed by children’s advocate Representative Daryl Rouson
and has been referred to Florida ’s House of Representatives Public
Safety and Domestic Security Policy Committee. Presently, this
committee's chairman, Representative Kevin Ambler, has expressed concern
in the bill’s language that includes the psychological stability and
risk factors associated with a parent who is considered paranoid,
delusional or sociopathic despite these factors being well recognized
risks associated with potential parental child abductors. Supporting
these risks as factors that must be considered are a host of government
agencies and children advocacies groups. If the bill passes the House’s Public
Safety and Domestic Security Policy Committee, it will then move
on to the Policy Council and then to the Criminal and Civil
Justice Policy Council.
Florida Senate’s SB1862 and Florida’s House of
Representatives adjoining bill (HB787), if passed, will
amend Florida Statute §61.45 by adding certain risk
factors of child abduction and provides a list of preventative measures a
judge may use to prevent these abductions from occurring. Inclusion of
these provisions will strengthen Florida’s week law and bring it into
conformity with the Uniform Child Abduction Prevention Act
(UPACA), which has been enacted by ten states.
In 2002, the Synclair-Cannon Child Abduction Prevention Act was
passed into law in California after Larry Synclair and Josef Cannon
each had their children stolen and taken overseas by their mothers.
Texas was the next state to pass legislation known as the Texas
Prevention Act. Seven additional States have signed into law
similar laws preventing and protecting children.
Through the dynamic efforts of Ms. Carolyn Ann Vlk, a mother desperately
trying to protect her own child from the cruel fate of being
internationally parentally abducted, Florida today has a real
opportunity to protect its own children by passing their Child
Abduction Prevention Act.
At stake is the welfare of tens of thousands of children in the state.
The proposed bill was filed this session (2010) as SB 1862 by Senator
Eleanor Sobel, and, by Representative Darryl Rouson in the House of
Representatives under HB787.
Representative Rouson stated “I am horrified that child abductions by
family members are occurring at such a high rate. This legislation gives
judges more discretion and the ability to fight family child abductions
so our children remain safe. We can prevent these abductions.”
The children’s advocates, all with deep experience in child abduction
matters, believe it is critically important for the citizens of Florida
to contact their local representatives and urge them to pass the Child
Abduction Prevention Act.
In a statement made before the Senate committee, Ms. Vlk stated, "I
appear before you as not only a parent of an at risk child but as the
voice of the thousands of families affected each year by the heart
wrenching tragedy of child abduction. I implore you to please carefully
consider what we are attempting to implement. In my humble opinion the
biggest obstacle we face is a lack of education across the board . . .
parents, judges, family court personnel, and policy makers. This
deficiency has served to empower potential abductors and compromises the
safety of children. Without risk assessment in determining where a
credible risk exists, decisions are made that could place a child in
unnecessary danger. Parental child abduction is a national tragedy and
an immediate remedy is necessary. Please join us in our efforts to
protect our most vulnerable members of society - our children."
Ken Connelly, author of Throwing Stones; Parental Child Abduction
through the Eyes of a Child states HB-787 is a desperately needed
law. Too many children are abducted annually to ignore such a grave and
growing issue. If this law had been in effect in my home state before I
was kidnapped, it may have prevented not only the abduction by my
father, Kenneth Wayne Connelly, but the lives altered by this dark and
silent crime. I urge Florida’s elected representatives to sign HB-787
into law and save our children before it is too late. There has never
been a greater time in our country than now, given the ease of access to
other nations.
Peter Thomas Senese, the author of Chasing The Cyclone, and,
producer of the documentary film titled Chasing Parents: Racing Into
the Storms of International Parental Child Abduction added, “It is
critically important for the State of Florida to pass this imperative
legislation in the name of not only the children of Florida, but by
doing so, the actions of the state’s policymakers will provide much
greater guidance for other states. This opportunity to demonstrate
leadership in the area of education and prevention is now in Florida’s
hands. Additionally, it is imperative that education associated with
domestic and international parental child abduction continues to
increase. Today, one of my great concerns is the lack of cooperation
from countries around the world who are willing to issue passports to
their adult citizens living abroad on behalf of that individual’s child
despite court orders from a court who maintains jurisdiction of the
child not to do so in cases of abduction risk. For example, if one
parent of a child living in the United States has citizenship to another
country, that parent can obtain a passport from their country of origin
for their child, usually without consent by the other parent. When
this happens, the risk of international parental child abduction
increases exponentially. This is why it is critical for parents
concerned about international parental child abduction to register the
name of the concerned non-U.S. citizen other parent with the Prevent
Departure Program. However, many parents at risk of having their
child abducted are not even aware that this program exists. So in the
end it all comes down to prevention and education. Florida's lawmakers
have an opportunity to make a big difference in the name of children.
Having personally chased into the cyclones of abduction, I urge
Florida’s lawmakers to pass this bill.”
Floridian resident Larry Synclair, the author of our
nation’s first state preventive laws (California) adds, “HB 787
illustrates the need to prevent parental abduction and other states
should take similar action. When I sat down to research and write the
draft of a bill that would later become the Synclair-Cannon Act,
I felt compelled to close gaps in a state’s legal system that allowed
children to fall into the hands of abducting parents. California saw the
need for the bill and quickly incorporated it into their family code.
Today, parents from other states have boldly stepped up to demand laws
that will protect their children from this horrific crime that is often
ignored by judicial officials. Florida’s HB 787 calls for an
implementation of measures that could hinder future acts of abduction.
Children need more legislation like this to protect them from this
escalating crime."
Charles Hamilton, left-behind parent of Dakota Carmen Hamilton, stated
that “If the Synclair-Cannon Parental Child Abduction Prevention Act or a
California version of Florida’s HB-787 had existed when my daughter was
stolen, the courts would have been armed with the evidence to prevent
my daughter’s kidnapping to Spain on December 8, 1996. Failure to sign
HB 787 into law will only allow more children in Florida to become
victims of this horrible and preventable crime just like my daughter.”
Bryan Lee McGlothin, author of Have You Seen My
Mother: True Story of Parental Abduction stated it best, by
reminding the citizens of Florida that "Children have rights and those
rights include having both parents in the child's life.”
Collectively, Florida’s lawmakers and advocates pass urge the citizens
of Florida to contact their local representatives and urge them to
support the Child Abduction Prevention Act now before its legislative
body.
850-487-5097
sobel.eleanor.web@flsenate.gov
Florida State
Representative Darryl Rouson
850-488-0925
Darryl.Rouson@myfloridahouse.gov