A Minnesota state senator plans to revive her push to give the state the ability to terminate the parental rights of alleged rapists, ending a seldom used loophole that has been closed in every other state save one: Alabama.
Sen. Kari Dziedzic, DFL-Minneapolis, said Tuesday that she intends to press for the change in next year's session of the Legislature, reviving one of several proposals that have fallen by the wayside over the years.
Dziedzic will likely count on renewed focus on the issue after a recent Washington Post article about Alabama, where lawmakers recently banned abortion for rape victims. Alabama and Minnesota are unique among the states in that they have no statute ending parental rights for fathers found to have conceived a child by rape or incest.
Her effort comes after Minnesota lawmakers recently approved a task force to examine the state's sex assault laws to make it easier to investigate and prosecute rape cases. The Legislature also recently removed special legal protections for spouses and domestic partners accused of sexual assault.
Dziedzic first drafted a bill terminating parental rights in rape cases in 2012. The measure was seen as a lower priority than attempts at the time to reduce rape kit backlogs and never got introduced. Although Minnesota — unlike Alabama — protects abortion rights, Dziedzic said it may be time to join the majority of states with a statute revoking rights when a child is conceived because of rape.
"I think it's an eye-opener for many and I think it could be and should be discussed as part of that [sex assault] task force," Dziedzic said. "It gets into that whole issue of rape being still very underreported and prosecutors deciding whether to prosecute the cases. We need to have this conversation because if they're not charged, if they're not convicted, then what?"
Many states adopted laws terminating parental rights in rape cases after Congress passed the federal Rape Survivor Child Custody Act in 2015, providing financial incentives for states that help sexual assault victims and prevent alleged rapists from pressing for custody or other parental rights.
Some of those states allow for a judge to revoke parental rights if there is "clear and convincing evidence" that the child was conceived as a result of rape. That legal term — a lower standard than that required in securing criminal convictions — is defined as evidence that is "highly and substantially more likely to be true than not."