Norris, Gardenhire push legislation to battle elderly abuse
The bills are intended to expand "systemic protection" for victims of physical, mental and financial abuse, imposing tougher penalties on perpetrators convicted of the offices.
Among other things, the three bills would add elder abuse as an aggravating factor for juries to consider in death penalty cases involving death.
Bankers and financial advisors would gain new protections in blowing the whistle for authorities to step in cases where they suspect elderly Tennesseans are being taken advantage of.
"We have to address abuse," said Norris at a news conference today with lawmakers, prosecutors, bankers and advocates for the seniors.
Noting seniors represent "one of the fastest demographic segments in our country," Norris said physical, sexual and financial fraud shot up by some 20 percent in the
All three measure come out of an
The teams operate in all 31 of
"Financial exploitation robs elderly victims of their money and their dignity," said Gardenhire, a retired financial advisor. "It also can rob them of their independence and can even force them into depending on government assistance despite their best efforts to save for their golden years."
Gardenhire said that when he was a financial advisor, he personally witnessed instances of abuse, sometimes by seniors' own children, adding "they come in and suck the money out of their [parents] accounts."
The senator is co-sponsoring the bill dealing with financial abuse, which he said "gives someone immunity to pick up the phone and call somebody to say 'I think grandma is being taken advantage of.'"
District Attorney General
Components of the three bills would elevate how some crimes are classified, thereby increasing amounts of fines and prison time, turning some current misdemeanors into felonies, Zavogiannis said.
Norris called elderly abuse a "silent crisis. The majority leader also said the crimes "often go unreported, leaving its helpless victims to suffer silently. And, far too frequently, it happens at the hand of those whom they trust the most."
Incapacitation, shame, fear of losing independence or "simply being unaware of available resources, discourages victims from reporting abuse," Norris said. "Often, because the abuser may be a family member, the individual may also be fearful of reprisals."
Lawmakers say studies show that reported cases of assault and financial exploitation of vulnerable adults have increased by 20 percent or more over the last decade.
According to estimates, as many as one in 14 cases of elder abuse are unreported. Other estimates indicate 41.4 percent of offenses were committed by a family member. Another 13.3 percent of victims were described by law enforcement as having close relationships with the perpetrator.
The legislation is being supported by
"It's time that we stop it," said
To boost protection and penalties, the lawmakers introduced the following bills:
* Senate Bill 1230, the "Elderly and Vulnerable Adult Protection Act", which adds on existing criminal laws impacting elder and vulnerable adult abuse and exploitation.
* It creates class C and D felonies for those found guilty of committing these crimes and requires state agencies to submit offenders' names to the
* Senate Bill 1192 makes various changes to state regulation of securities. That includes granting the commissioner of the
* Senate Bill 1267 requires the state
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