Kevin Bryant

Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina

Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina

 

about  contact 
facebook
twitter

Search

watch the senate

Archives

Powered by Genesis

equal time to the left…very far left

July 31, 2008 by Kevin Bryant

Creaton of rape-dealth penalty statute was bad politics

By BOBBY G. FREDERICK
For the Spartanburg Herald-Journal

Published: Sunday, July 20, 2008 at 3:15 a.m.
Last Modified: Sunday, July 20, 2008 at 9:59 a.m.

In Kennedy v. Louisiana, the U.S. Supreme Court held that the Eighth Amendment bars imposition of the death penalty where the crime does not result in the victim’s death.

Bobby G. Frederick

Only six states, including South Carolina, have statutes providing for the death penalty in child rape cases. The enactment of South Carolina’s statute was a perfect example of bad politics controlling legislation. In the wake of some horrific and high-profile child rape cases followed by the media, some legislator decides that it will be great PR to campaign for the death penalty for these monsters. Once the legislation has been introduced, no politician wants to vote against it because, hey, it is pretty good PR, and you are either for it or you are in favor of the child rapists, which certainly does not win you any votes.

Although the politicians and some victim advocates speak out about how they want the death penalty for child rapists, and it makes a good sound byte during election time, the Supreme Court of the United States points out that there is a national consensus against the death penalty for child rape.

Since the court’s 1972 decision in Furman v. Georgia, nine states have permitted capital punishment for adult or child rape, and yet no person has been executed for any non-homicide offense since 1963. Louisiana is the only state that has sentenced a person to death for child rape, resulting in the opinion in Kennedy: Despite rape’s permanent and devastating impact on a child, “in terms of moral depravity and of the injury to the person and to the public, (non-homicide crimes including child rape) cannot compare to murder in their severity and irrevocability.”

The court looks at whether the death penalty for child rape would serve the purposes of retribution and deterrence. Looking at retribution, the death penalty will not lessen a rape victim’s hurt, given that capital cases require a long-term commitment to testify for the prosecution over a period of many years. By enlisting a child victim to assist in seeking the death penalty over the course of years “forces a moral choice on the child, who is not of mature age to make that choice.”

The goal of deterrence is not furthered because “evidence suggests that the death penalty may not result in more effective enforcement but may add to the risk of non-reporting of child rape out of fear of negative consequences for the perpetrator, especially if he is a family member.” Also, by making the punishment for murder the same as the punishment for rape, it gives the rapist an incentive to kill the victim.

The court takes note of the “relevant systemic concerns in prosecuting child rape, including the documented problem of unreliable, induced and even imagined child testimony, which creates a special risk of wrongful execution in some cases.”

There are many problems with cases involving child testimony. Child molestation cases often arise in the context of divorces and custody disputes, and there are often problems with the testimony. One problem that arises quite often is the problem of suggestive interviewing techniques with children and the problem of repeated interviews.

I have seen cases where the interviewer asks the child leading questions (suggestive of the answer), the child denies the allegations, and the interviewer continues asking the same leading question in different ways or keeps coming back to the question, until the child gives the answer the interviewer is looking for.

This can be compounded by the effect of multiple suggestive interviews, often beginning with a family member who may be suspicious or have an ax to grind, followed possibly by other family members, followed by an officer and then one or more interviews by a child advocate.

The effect of suggestive interviews on a very young child, particularly when they are repeated, is that the child may begin to believe the allegations, even if they were not true to begin with. The state then has a very credible and believable witness with which to prosecute its case. In South Carolina and other states, laws have been passed that would allow the presentation of videotaped testimony by the child in court – without the opportunity to cross-examine and in violation of the right to confront witnesses.

The dangers of a prosecution for child rape, particularly when there is no corroborating evidence, should be clear. Juries do not want to take any chance on releasing a person who might then hurt more children. Due to the prejudicial nature of the accusations, defendants are often presumed guilty as soon as they are accused, and it is an uphill battle to demonstrate the flaws in the case and to get beyond the preconceived notions of the jury.

The court made the right decision in Kennedy, but it is still disturbing that four of nine justices voted to allow states to kill defendants under these circumstances.

Bobby G. Frederick of Myrtle Beach is a criminal defense attorney

(www.southcarolinacriminaldefenseblog.com).

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Congressman Barrett’s a conservative charm!

July 30, 2008 by Kevin Bryant

Our Congressman, Gresham Barrett, is ranked No. 9 on The Hill’s 50 most beautiful people.
Age: 47; Hometown: Westminster, S.C.; Political party: Republican; Dating status: Married

Rep. Gresham Barrett (R-S.C.) is proof positive that a high school quarterback can marry his cheerleader girlfriend and live happily ever after.

“I know it’s corny,” he says. But “she was a cute little thing.” He and Natalie dated for a year in high school and all through college before getting married in August 1984. Next year they’ll celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary.

Barrett learned the importance of first impressions from an early age.

“My daddy always told me you can tell a lot about a man by the way his shoes look,” says the three-term Congressman. “I try to shine my shoes and keep my tie straight.”

He also credits his time at The Citadel and in the Army for his consistently clean, crisp look.

These days you’ll more than likely see Barrett and his aides walking around the Capitol in matching seersucker suits. He and his staff have adopted a “seersucker Wednesdays” tradition during the summer, attracting both compliments and gentle ribbing from his amused colleagues.

The congressman doesn’t play much football now but boasts of his status as starting catcher for the GOP baseball team. What’s puzzling to him, though, is the idea that others might find him good-looking.

“This is the first time anything like this has ever happened to me, so it’s all kind of new,” he says. “I’m just kind of an average guy.”

– By Kris Kitto

Filed Under: Uncategorized

S. 897 should be replanted

July 30, 2008 by Kevin Bryant

As I’ve always said, it’s not my intention to do away with government. It is rather to make it work — work with us, not over us; to stand by our side, not ride on our back. Government can and must provide opportunity, not smother it; foster productivity, not stifle it. Well, I’m always quoting Ronald Reagan, anyhoo, here’s a letter from a friend, John Warner about an interesting bill that passed LCI, yet never made it out of Finance Committee. We must pursue these kinds of concepts if we want to climb out of the current economic downturn.
Kevin, I am writing to ask your support for S 0897, the South Carolina Entrepreneurial Success Fund Act, filed by Sen. Jim Ritchie and referred to the Committee on Labor, Commerce and Industry.

An important element of the state’s economic development strategy should be fostering homegrown companies that can grow rapidly, create high wage jobs, and build considerable wealth which can be reinvested back into the state. Examples of these companies include Mt. Pleasant’s Automated Trading Desk, started in the late 1980s and recently sold for $800 million, and Greenville’s ScanSource, founded fifteen years ago and worth $700 million today.

I serve on the SC Venture Capital Authority, which invested $50 million in four venture capital funds to be reinvested in SC companies. We set a specific objective of investing in a seed capital fund, because that is the greatest need of emerging companies in the state. We had a great staff person from SC Commerce, Ian Forbes Jones. He and I looked hard but could not find a seed fund with a profitable track record to invest in. All of the venture funds the Authority invested in are later stage funds which will make investments of $5 million up. That’s an important level of capital that was missing from the state, but it won’t help entrepreneurs start high growth companies to begin with.

I am also knowledgeable of SC Launch!, which is a sponsor of InnoVenture, an annual SC venture capital conference I produce. SC Launch! can invest up to $200,000 in a given company. That’s important too, but usually it’s not sufficient alone to launch a high growth company.

We need a professionally managed seed capital fund in SC, which can invest the initial $1 or $2 million to help start more high growth companies like ATD or ScanSource. Beyond merely investing, this seed fund’s experienced venture professional will also help entrepreneurs develop their strategies, recruit the initial management teams, and pull in other critical relationships. This seed capital fund will often be a partner with SC Launch!, and ultimately with the SC Venture Capital Authority venture funds as companies raise later rounds of capital.

A SC-based seed capital fund will leverage hundreds of millions of dollars the legislature has already invested in programs including the endowed research chairs and the Life Sciences Act. The fund can also leverage the successful industrial recruiting done over decades by the SC Department of Commerce, to grow new companies around facilities of global corporations in the state. Having a SC-based seed capital fund is important to creating companies in cities like Charleston, Columbia, Greenville, and Spartanburg, but it is even more critical to creating high growth companies around anchors like Roche Carolina in Florence, the Savannah River National Lab in Aiken, Robert Bosch in Anderson, or Fuji Photo in Greenwood, where out-of-state venture funds rarely visit.

If a SC-based seed capital fund could have formed without incentives, it already would have. The SC Entrepreneurial Success Fund Act provides a 30% tax credit for investment in a SC-based seed fund that raises a minimum of $10 million, which is a high hurdle. Private investors will be at risk for 70% of the fund’s capital, so they will ensure that a strong fund manager is in place before committing their funds to be at risk.

The SC Entrepreneurial Success Fund Act is included in the legislative agenda of the SC and the Greenville Chambers of Commerce. The Greenville News also recently endorsed the Act.

Thank you for your support. Please let me know if you have other questions, or if there is anything I can do to support the committee’s consideration of this legislation.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Coburn going down kicking and screaming

July 29, 2008 by Kevin Bryant


…Coburn, a medical doctor, is also fairly certain he’ll lose in the end. “I’ll get beat. There’s no question I’ll get beat and I’ll get rolled, but at least we’ll have a debate. At least we’ll show the cowardice of people who want to steal the future from our kids in this country,” he says. “I don’t try to win things in Washington; I try to win them with the American public.”

If he doesn’t get to introduce amendments, Coburn promises, he’ll do what he can to gum up the process. “You can imagine I will use every procedural tactic in the world, especially if they don’t allow any amendments. And we’re going to have a very rough time in July and September,” he says.

“It’ll be fun,” adds Coburn. Read the full article

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Time to act on education funding reform

July 28, 2008 by Kevin Bryant

Mr. Davis, a Beaufort attorney and former chief of staff to Gov. Mark Sanford, is the Republican candidate for Senate District 46.

…As the governor’s senior policy advisor, I was stunned to discover the degree of state control over the allocation of our education dollars. Some dollars are sent to districts, some are sent to schools, some are divided among schools, some are set aside for programs that may or may not be applicable to a school, and so on. There are also pages of line-item education appropriations added into the state budget each year at the behest of lobbyists and special interests.

Adding to the confusion is the huge number of different funding streams for K-12 education that flow from the Education Finance Act, the Education Improvement Act, the Education Accountability Act and the Education Lottery.

A large corps of state bureaucrats manages these expenditures and oversees these complicated funding formulas, and local school districts are forced to employ administrators of their own to comply with all the red tape. Obviously, every dollar spent on these administrative costs is a dollar that isn’t spent educating our children.

It is time to do away with all of the archaic funding streams and the state control of spending and to adopt what is known as “backpack” funding. This type of funding enables public schools to receive a per-student grant for every child they serve, while giving local school leaders control over their budgets in order to fulfill their school’s mission….

Read the full article in The State

Filed Under: Uncategorized

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 288
  • 289
  • 290
  • 291
  • 292
  • …
  • 400
  • Next Page »