Abuse survivors defend WA law that feds slam as ‘anti-Catholic’

Shauna Sowersby | Seattle Times | May 12, 2025


The sponsor of the legislation, Sen. Noel Frame, D-Seattle, said the DOJ’s argument that the law is “anti-Catholic” is “false on its face by any plain reading of the legislation.”

“It just feels political in that regard because it is clearly not specific to the Catholic Church,” Frame said.

In fact, she said, the law was crafted three years ago after she read an article in InvestigateWest detailing how Jehovah’s Witnesses covered up sexual abuse for decades in Washington.

Frame added that one of her predecessors in the 36th legislative district, former Rep. Mary Lou Dickerson, introduced similar legislation decades ago and encouraged Frame, herself a survivor of childhood sexual abuse, to introduce the bill.

Marino Hardin, a survivor of clergy abuse and a whistleblower regarding abuse within the Jehovah’s Witnesses, also pushed back on the Catholic Church and DOJ’s claims that the law is targeting Catholics. He said that Jehovah’s Witnesses, Latter-day Saints and Scientologists have used confessional privilege to argue internal investigations of abuse are similar to Catholic confessional. Therefore, if the Catholic confessional is exempt, so are internal investigations at other churches.

Hardin also argued all other mandated reporters outlined in state statute such as therapists and doctors must report child abuse despite confidentiality rules. Hardin noted the law does not require clergy to testify in courtrooms.

“The DOJ’s choice to describe this bill as ‘anti-Catholic’ is particularly frustrating, as the Catholic Church was never the target of this bill and have inserted themselves into the narrative,” Marino said. “Regardless, the bill does protect Catholic children, as several Catholic victims that testified explained why they felt this would have protected them.”

Still, others disagree with the new law and are grateful the DOJ is stepping in.

Jean Hill, executive director for the Washington State Catholic Conference, said although she did not know much about the DOJ investigation, the organization was grateful.

Hill and others who work for the organization have frequently testified against the bill at the Legislature since it was introduced several years ago.

“We again support clergy being mandatory reporters, but our priests are not able to reveal what’s said in the confessional,” Hill said. “We’ve worked for the past three years to have that limited exception in the legislation, and had hoped that the state would recognize that the majority of states are able to have clergy mandatory reporters and keep an exception for those limited circumstances.”

While many states designate clergy as mandated reporters, Washington now joins seven other states, such as New Hampshire, North Carolina and West Virginia, that do not have exemptions for confession.

Correction: An initial version of this article mistakenly stated Sharon Huling is a survivor of clergy abuse. Huling is an advocate for survivors.

Shauna Sowersby: 206-652-7619 or ssowersby@seattletimes.com. Seattle Times political reporter.

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