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Georgia Enacts New Law Criminalizing Clergy Sexual Abuse

New Clergy Abuse law - Georgia
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Georgia has enacted a significant new law aimed at addressing clergy sexual abuse. This closes a longstanding gap in accountability for religious leaders who exploit positions of spiritual authority.

On May 11, 2026, Georgia Governor Brian Kemp signed Senate Bill 542 into law. It officially adds clergy members to the state’s list of authority figures who can face criminal penalties for sexual misconduct committed within pastoral or spiritual relationships.

Advocates and survivors have praised the legislation as an important step toward recognizing the unique power dynamics that exist between clergy members and individuals seeking spiritual guidance. These individuals also seek counseling, healing, or support.

Before Senate Bill 542, Georgia law criminalized certain sexual misconduct involving authority figures such as teachers, coaches, therapists, and counselors. However, clergy members were not explicitly included in those protections.

The new law changes that.

Under SB 542, clergy members who engage in sexual conduct with individuals under their “pastoral care or spiritual guidance” may now face criminal prosecution. This applies when they exploit positions of trust, authority, or spiritual influence.

The legislation passed with overwhelming bipartisan support in Georgia’s legislature. This reflects growing national recognition that spiritual authority can create profound power imbalances capable of facilitating grooming, coercion, and abuse.

Survivors Helped Drive the Push for Reform

Survivor testimony played a major role in advancing the legislation.

During legislative hearings, survivors described how clergy members allegedly used religious authority, trust, counseling relationships, and spiritual manipulation to groom and exploit victims.

One survivor testified that clergy abuse often “does not begin with force” but instead begins with trust, emotional vulnerability, mentorship, and spiritual influence.

Advocates emphasized that many survivors seek out clergy during periods of grief, trauma, crisis, addiction recovery, family struggles, or emotional vulnerability. That dynamic can create significant barriers to consent. It can also make it difficult for victims to recognize abuse while it is occurring.

Clergy Sexual Abuse Often Involves Grooming and Spiritual Manipulation

Clergy abuse cases frequently involve grooming behaviors rather than overt violence at the outset.

Offenders may:

  • Present themselves as trusted spiritual advisors
  • Offer emotional support or counseling
  • Isolate victims emotionally
  • Use religious teachings to justify misconduct
  • Blur personal and professional boundaries
  • Exploit shame, guilt, or fear tied to faith

Survivors often struggle deeply with betrayal, spiritual trauma, loss of community, and long-term emotional harm after abuse by religious leaders.

For many victims, clergy abuse damages not only personal safety and trust, but also their relationship with faith, spirituality, and religious institutions.

The Law Reflects Growing National Attention on Clergy Abuse

Georgia’s legislation comes amid increasing public awareness of clergy sexual abuse across multiple religious denominations and faith communities nationwide.

Survivors and advocates have continued pushing lawmakers to recognize that spiritual authority can create coercive dynamics similar to those seen in schools, counseling environments, athletics, and healthcare settings.

Many states still lack laws specifically addressing clergy sexual exploitation involving adult victims under pastoral care, despite mounting survivor advocacy efforts.

Criminal Accountability Does Not Eliminate Civil Liability

While Senate Bill 542 focuses on criminal accountability, survivors of clergy abuse may also have civil legal options available against perpetrators. In some cases, these options also extend to religious institutions.

Civil investigations often examine:

  • Whether institutions ignored warning signs
  • Leadership failed to investigate complaints
  • Clergy members received inadequate supervision
  • Institutions concealed allegations or enabled abuse
  • Policies existed to protect vulnerable individuals

Even when abuse occurred years ago, survivors may still have important legal rights depending on the circumstances. These legal rights also depend on applicable state laws.

Speaking With a Sexual Abuse Lawyer About Your Rights

If you or someone you love experienced sexual abuse, exploitation, or misconduct involving a clergy member, pastor, minister, priest, youth pastor, or spiritual advisor, you may have a civil case.

Andreozzi + Foote is a civil law firm dedicated to representing survivors of sexual abuse and exploitation nationwide.

We offer free, confidential consultations to help survivors learn about their rights. This helps them understand their potential legal options and decide what feels right for them.

You deserve to be heard, and our attorneys are ready to listen.

Contact us today.

(866) 858-3790

info@vca.law

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