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Legislation Closes Loophole In Indiana's Campus Assault Law

Legislation awaiting the governor’s signature – and approved unanimously by both houses – closes a loophole, giving victims on campus the privacy they have everywhere else.
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Legislation awaiting the governor’s signature – and approved unanimously by both houses – closes a loophole, giving victims on campus the privacy they have everywhere else.

INDIANAPOLIS -- New legislation extends more privacy rights to sexual assault and domestic abuse victims on college campuses. It also closes a legal loophole that didn’t protect personal information given to victims’ advocates.

Current law provides what’s called “testimonial privilege” to sexual assault and domestic violence victim advocates, such as people who work at rape crisis centers.  Democratic Rep. Christina Hale said that means an advocate can’t be compelled to reveal a victim’s personal details in court.

“Personal details about their health care, about previous encounters, intimate details that they consider to be very personal – all of that could come out in a court of law," Hale said, "things that might not even be relevant to the case; things they might not want their parents to know, their friends to know.”

But an unintentional loophole in state law doesn’t provide that testimonial privilege to victims advocates on college campuses.  Hale said she’s worried that loophole creates a barrier for some victims.

“People might not want to tell their story, to report these crimes, if they know that everything they say could come out,” she said.

Legislation awaiting the governor’s signature – and approved unanimously by both houses – closes that loophole, giving victims on campus the privacy they have everywhere else.

Brandon Smith has covered the Statehouse for Indiana Public Broadcasting for more than a decade, spanning three governors and a dozen legislative sessions. He's also the host of Indiana Week in Review, a weekly political and policy discussion program seen and heard across the state.
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