Matt Gaetz pushed for sexual predator legislation. How will that work out for him?

In 2014, long before he became the subject of a federal sex-trafficking investigation, Matt Gaetz pushed Florida to enact what he called a “scorched-earth” policy toward sexual predators.

Gaetz, then 31 years old, served as the chairman of the Florida House of Representatives’ Criminal Justice Subcommittee. He cosponsored legislation that increased the mandatory prison time for convicted sexual offenders, calling it some of the most important work his subcommittee would do.

Gaetz cosponsored legislation that year that would increase Florida’s mandatory minimum sentence for violent sexual offenders to 50 years.

The bill also broadened the definition of “sexual activity” that could qualify as a second-degree felony for a person 24 or older who engages in sexual activity with a 16-year-old or a 17-year-old, according to a staff analysis of the bill.

“If we’ve learned anything from the evidence, it’s that many of these individuals who specifically go out and target the very most vulnerable among us are simply wired differently, and I would like to see them behind bars for 50 years minimum,” Gaetz said

Gaetz, now a 38-year-old Florida congressman, is the subject of a Justice Department inquiry into whether he had a relationship with a 17-year-old girl that violated sex-trafficking laws.

SOURCE

19 thoughts on “Matt Gaetz pushed for sexual predator legislation. How will that work out for him?

  • April 27, 2021 at 1:52 pm
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    Make sure Gaetz holds John Walsh accountable, too. They can both go down together.

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  • April 27, 2021 at 2:02 pm
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    He probably figured since he had a hand in making it law it would never be applied to him. Some of our lawmakers are extraordinarily narcissistic. Matt Gaetz, et. al., are not as uncommon as we should hope. If you can vote, make sure you do so.

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  • April 27, 2021 at 2:04 pm
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    I am thinking …. he is really thinking…Shakespeare….Hamlet… and all possible aspects of the meaning “hoisted on his own petard”.

    Whether he is guilty or not, this will give him pause for self-reflection. Maybe something positive comes from this.

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  • April 27, 2021 at 2:08 pm
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    “If we’ve learned anything from the evidence, it’s that many of these individuals who specifically go out and target the very most vulnerable among us are simply wired differently…” Gaetz said

    Who re-wired your mechanism, Gaetz??
    (Was it really re-wired, or are you just a human being with faults? – like the rest of us)

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  • April 27, 2021 at 2:19 pm
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    I think the real question is, how many other politicians have their own skeletons just waiting to jump out of the sex offender closet?

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    • April 27, 2021 at 7:32 pm
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      Yea Bob i would bet its about 90% of them even if it was when they were 18 on up to the age they are now. They have had sex with someone younger than 18. I would bet on it and probably win!!.

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  • April 27, 2021 at 5:57 pm
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    “Are simply wired differently”??? So, Matt, those who are mentally challenged are “wired differently”, too. Are you gonna put them in prison for that? It seems that since they are “wired differently” then prison should not be an option since their volitional control is the real issue.

    It is rather convenient for you in Florida that sex offenders are held fully responsible for their voluntary choice to commit a crime by being sent to prison, but, once they are done with their sentence they are suddenly found to be unable to control themselves and place in civil commitment. Guess you just like having your cake and eating it, too….

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    • April 29, 2021 at 8:26 am
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      Yeah, that quote bothered me too. It bothered me because it is not true, and I believe is a form of denial. Also considering it came from Matt Gaetz, it is dripping with irony. We have a schizophrenic relationship with sex in this country. It is everywhere, yet it is heavily saturated with guilt.

      This “sexophrenia” (I wish I’d coined the term) evolved at least in part because people tend to hate what they fear most in themselves. Homophobia generally results in persons who have at least a kernel of sexual insecurity and lash out in an attempt to overcompensate. This is not to diminish valid consciously derived rationales such as religious convictions, However, those alone do not explain the vindictiveness, vitriol and violence expressed by some toward homosexuals.

      Consider this broad category of persons termed sex offenders. We all know the spectrum ranges from innocent childhood sex play to the most heinous violent rapists. This begs the question of why society tends to lump all together.

      IMHO, doing so is a way to, metaphorically, push away the mirror. Sexuality is deeply embedded in humans, and is not just a secondary characteristic of the species. Virtually everyone has had some stray thought that made them feel uncomfortable or fearful of their own potential. This could be as simple as a married person having fleeting thoughts about a coworker, a brief speculation about gay sex, or merely taking note of a niece blossoming into a young woman.

      It is very comforting for persons or a society to convince themselves that any potential for sexual impropriety is not internal, but exists only in those “others” who are somehow permanently damaged monsters, or “wired differently.” Then the mirror has receded to a manageable distance.

      Veritas.

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  • April 27, 2021 at 9:30 pm
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    Well….I sure hope that he gets indicted, charged and convicted as such. We all make mistakes, I made mine who landed me in the registry. However, someone who is a lawyer, a lawmaker, and one who crafted a resolution increasing the years behind bars to violent sex offenders to 50 years, is a person who DID NOT made a mistake. He did it just for the pure pleasure of being in power and control…(I know folks, we heard that so many times during the SO treatment) but it is the truth….

    Now, I sure hope that if he gets convicted…his daddy comes to the rescue and help to change all those draconian laws his son helped to craft. Hopefully his daddy, through his connections, will help to make our lives easier….

    That is all a wishy washy dream….but a dream CAN’T become a reality if is not a dream first….

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  • April 27, 2021 at 9:45 pm
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    Source article is behind a pay wall. 🙁

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  • April 27, 2021 at 10:04 pm
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    Corrupt Florida politicians…

    I’ll have trouble being sympathetic to him or any of the rest.,

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  • April 28, 2021 at 7:58 pm
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    Here’s the article in full –

    We watched 11 hours of old Matt Gaetz videos where he pushed for sexual predator legislation. He had much to say.

    Matt Gaetz helped enact Florida legislation to toughen penalties for sex offenses against children.

    He said in 2014 that sex offenders who prey on children were “simply wired differently.”
    Gaetz is now the subject of a sex-trafficking investigation reportedly involving a 17-year-old.
    See more stories on Insider’s business page.
    In 2014, long before he became the subject of a federal sex-trafficking investigation, Matt Gaetz pushed Florida to enact what he called a “scorched-earth” policy toward sexual predators.

    Gaetz, then 31 years old, served as the chairman of the Florida House of Representatives’ Criminal Justice Subcommittee. He cosponsored legislation that increased the mandatory prison time for convicted sexual offenders, calling it some of the most important work his subcommittee would do.

    Now that Gaetz is under federal investigation, his record is getting renewed attention.

    Insider watched more than 11 hours of archived committee hearings in the Florida House of Representatives to understand how the up-and-coming GOP politician talked about issues like sentencing sex offenders and sex trafficking at that time.

    Gaetz said in 2014 that he wanted a “scorched-earth” policy for sexual predators in Florida. He stood in a crowd behind then-Gov. Rick Scott of Florida when Scott signed a sweeping package of sexual-predator legislation that year. Gaetz also ran a campaign ad touting his work on the issue during his brief run for state Senate the following year.

    Read more: Matt Gaetz posed on a playground for a 2015 campaign ad and said he’d ‘always fight to protect our kids’

    Gaetz, a lawyer by training whose father was the president of the Florida Senate at the time, appeared to be a confident young legislator who regularly joked with his colleagues on both sides of the aisle. He drank from a Styrofoam coffee cup and fidgeted with a pencil at hearings that could last for more than two hours under the fluorescent lights of the Tallahassee committee rooms. Gaetz led debates that year on legislation on issues such as identity theft, medical marijuana, and sex offenses against children.

    He told his colleagues at a January 2014 hearing that their effort to revise laws pertaining to sexually violent predators “will be some of the most serious work we do.” Gaetz said the bills the committee was working on would “put our state in a better posture and make our citizens more safe.”

    Gaetz cosponsored legislation that year that would increase Florida’s mandatory minimum sentence for violent sexual offenders to 50 years.

    The bill also broadened the definition of “sexual activity” that could qualify as a second-degree felony for a person 24 or older who engages in sexual activity with a 16-year-old or a 17-year-old, according to a staff analysis of the bill.

    “If we’ve learned anything from the evidence, it’s that many of these individuals who specifically go out and target the very most vulnerable among us are simply wired differently, and I would like to see them behind bars for 50 years minimum,” Gaetz said of violent sexual offenders as the subcommittee was considering the legislation.

    After a lobbyist criticized the legislation as an attempt to throw the “kitchen sink” at the issue in an attempt to keep sex offenders locked up for as long as possible, Gaetz agreed.

    “One thing is correct, we’re throwing the kitchen sink at violent sexual predators,” Gaetz said in March 2014. “I think there’s a debate going on in the country right now about whether these individuals can be cured, and I don’t really know if they ever can.”

    Gaetz, now a 38-year-old Florida congressman, is the subject of a Justice Department inquiry into whether he had a relationship with a 17-year-old girl that violated sex-trafficking laws, The New York Times reported last month. There have been no public allegations that Gaetz acted violently.

    Separately, the House Committee on Ethics is investigating Gaetz over several matters, including accusations of sexual misconduct, illicit-drug use, campaign-finance violations, and showing photos of nude women to colleagues while on the House floor.

    Gaetz has acknowledged the Justice Department investigation but denies that he broke any laws.

    “Rep. Gaetz is proud of his work in the Florida Legislature,” his spokesman Harlan Hill told Insider on Friday. “He is innocent of the wild and disgraceful lies leveled at him by the partisan media, without evidence, and with every day that passes, that is increasingly clear.” Hill did not respond to specific questions about whether Gaetz was worried that the allegations would tarnish his legacy as a legislator who’s tough on sex crimes or about whether Gaetz still believed that sex offenders were “wired differently” than other people.

    In addition to his work on sexual-predator legislation, some of Gaetz’s notable moments included his support for legislation to curb sex trafficking, his recognition of his 2008 DUI arrest, and his introduction of his “good buddy,” whom he would describe as his “son” years later.

    Sex trafficking

    In 2014, Gaetz lauded legislation to combat sex trafficking as it moved through his committee, commending the work of state Rep. Ross Spano on a measure that would bar minors from working in adult theaters, among other things.

    Gaetz was among the lawmakers who voted for the bill that passed the chamber by a vote of 115-0. Spano is now Gaetz’s colleague in the US House.

    When human-trafficking legislation passed the US House of Representatives in 2017, Gaetz cast the sole vote against the bill that passed 418-1. Gaetz defended his decision during a Facebook Live session later that month, in which he said he opposed the bill because it would lead to “mission creep” from the federal government by creating more bureaucracy.

    Read more: Inside Matt Gaetz’s office, where surprises — from doing the boss’ TV makeup to cleaning up after messy controversies — are part of the job

    “I think it’s very important that we combat human trafficking, but I do not believe that the correct answer is a new federal agency,” Gaetz said in December 2017. He was filming from his parents’ house, with the family Christmas tree in the background.

    Gaetz upset one of his congressional aides who worked on anti-trafficking issues when he cast that vote in 2017, a former Gaetz staffer who spoke with Insider earlier this month said. “She was not too happy,” this person added.

    That aide, Sara Lefevers, left Gaetz’s office in 2019. She is now the president and CEO of the Nissi Project, an anti-human-trafficking organization.

    ‘I made bad decisions’

    During those Tallahassee committee hearings in 2014, Gaetz also referenced other issues that would later become controversies for him. Gaetz’s past and his relationships were heavily scrutinized as he ascended from the state to national political stage and cemented his status as a conservative firebrand and top defender of President Donald Trump.

    In one committee hearing over legislation to limit the public release of police mug shots for people who weren’t convicted of crimes, Gaetz brought up his own mug shot from a 2008 DUI arrest.

    “If anyone Googles my name, the first image that will appear is my mug shot from my arrest, and I’m of the view that that is part of who I am,” Gaetz told his fellow lawmakers.

    “I made bad decisions, and it resulted in arrest and that is sort of something that we all live with,” he added. “And I think increasingly we’re all living our lives online, particularly this youngest generation going through school now, and the things that occur will be available for the public to see in one form or another.”

    Gaetz’s DUI arrest came up again in 2019 as part of a fiery debate in the US House during impeachment hearings against Trump. The Florida congressman criticized the past substance use by then-presidential candidate Joe Biden’s son Hunter Biden, prompting a retort from Democratic Rep. Hank Johnson of Georgia.

    “I would say that the pot calling the kettle black is not something that we should do,” Johnson told Gaetz, the Tampa Bay Times reported. “I don’t know what members, if any, have had any problems with substance abuse, been busted in DUI, I don’t know, but if I did, I wouldn’t raise it against anyone on this committee.”

    Gaetz wasn’t convicted after his arrest, but his mug shot has been widely circulated since then.

    Gaetz introduces Nestor Galban

    At the end of a March 2014 hearing, Gaetz introduced his “good buddy” Nestor Galban to his committee colleagues.

    The subcommittee chairman asked for a moment of “personal privilege” to recognize Galban.

    “This week, during spring break, my good buddy Nestor Galban is shadowing me. Nestor please stand. Nestor has been in the United States for six months now. His English is improving, and my Spanish is not improving,” Gaetz said.

    Galban’s relationship with Gaetz has been scrutinized since the Florida congressman announced publicly in 2020 that he had been raising Galban — the brother of his ex-girlfriend — as his “son.”

    Gaetz previously referred to Galban as his “helper” in the Facebook Live video from 2017 defending his vote on the human-trafficking bill.

    He wanted to keep Galban out of the limelight because there was “enough on the young man’s plate” as Galban was moving to the US from Cuba, coping with his mother’s death, and learning English, Gaetz told People magazine last year.

    Galban tweeted in June that he hadn’t wanted his relationship with Gaetz to become public previously but that he felt more prepared for it when he was 19.

    Reply
  • April 29, 2021 at 8:16 pm
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    As a reminder, Matty Boy has deep pockets….Daddy sold his Business for a Measly $512 Million wherein Daddy Owned 42% of the Shares…Do The Math!……$200 plus million in the pocket!

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  • April 30, 2021 at 10:03 pm
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    It is that they guilt tripped the girl about lying to them about her age and didn’t contact her any further… Until after she had turned 18. Our therapists would’ve had a field day with that.

    Reply
  • May 2, 2021 at 12:09 pm
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    Okay, so the 2021 Floriduh legislative session has ended [as of 4/30]. Please see updated “2021 Legislation” link at top of this website.

    Although only one of the three most onerous bills will become law, HB 141/SB 932, it will be devastating to registrants with minor children who will be involved in custody battles after June 30 this year.

    All bills, except HB 371

    https://flsenate.gov/Session/Bill/2021/371/BillText/er/PDF

    which would have helped registrants either died at introduction or in committee.

    Several bills this session were re-introduced from previous sessions and failed again, but we must remain vigilant because history has shown us that the sponsors will continue to try to get bills of retroactive, never-ending punishments passed.

    Reply
  • May 6, 2021 at 5:20 pm
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    Local government media shill outlet attempts to fabricate fake push back narrative to encourage new legislation next cycle:

    Florida lawmaker(s) to push again for ‘lookback window’ allowing sex abuse survivors to sue

    SB 946 & HB 23 Would have eliminated the statute of limitations period for civil actions for ALL sexual offenses

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iF8c419kjpc

    Reply
  • May 13, 2021 at 7:47 pm
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    Tomorrow, Matt’s Protege (Joel G.) will be pleading GUILTY to Federal Sex Charges…Matt, will be eventually charged thru Joel’s Mea Culpas!

    Joel has His Little Black Book, sort of Like G. Maxwell on the Epstein Affairs…..

    Reply

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