I’m sure you don’t mean it to be but this is deeply insulting. Do you feel this way about victims of sexual assault by priests, as well?
I think that sexual assault should be reported when it occurs, for the victim’s sake as well as for the sake of protecting society. If one elects to not report for 36 years, not much can be done, except perhaps to destroy a nominee some decades in the future.
In Dr. Ford’s case, during that 36 years she completed college and graduate school and earned a doctorate degree, while her alleged assailant finished college, law school, went to work for the government, and became a Federal judge.
Yet she was not motivated to report him during all that time until the last minute of a court confirmation hearing. She has a PhD, but said she didn’t know how to contact the judiciary committee. She required a lawyer to figure it out. Finally she managed to provide a letter to Sen. Feinstein, who held it in reserve as ace card to be played when needed to delay the vote.
The Philadelphia grand jury report went back 70 years and listed all priests who had been accused of sexual molestation—not convicted but accused. Yes, I think that was also an overreach.
As an aside, I note that it has happened in the past that prosecutorial overreach and public hysteria has resulted in false convictions and innocent people going to jail. After reading Dorothy Rabinowitz’s book “No Crueler Tyrannies,” I have a skeptical view of the justice system.