Anonymous
8/8/2025, 2:40:02 PM No.1425259
https://www.ibtimes.sg/anti-lgbtq-utah-lawmaker-changed-age-consent-laws-help-relative-accused-raping-13-year-old-81101
State Sen. J. Stuart Adams, Republican leader of the Utah Senate, who once said that transgender athletes put biological women at risk, has drawn criticism after he changed state laws to keep his relative out of jail.
Adams helped change a state law to give his 18-year-old accused relative a lighter sentence after the teen was accused of raping a 13-year-old girl. Adams claims he neither requested nor helped draft the 2024 law that aided his relative, but he did ask for the relative's rape charges to be reconsidered in light of the new law.
Utah state law says that people under the age of 14 can never consent to sex, and the old state statute required that 18-year-olds receive a first-degree child rape felony charge for having sex with anyone 13 years old or younger. The felony charge required the rapist to also register as a sex offender.
However, the new law allows accused rapists 18 years old and younger to receive a reduced third-degree felony charge of unlawful sexual activity (and avoid jail time and registration as a sex offender) if they're enrolled in high school.
Adams' Relative Faced 25 Years in Prison Before the New Law Came into Effect, Now He Has Avoided Jail Time
Before the new law passed, Adams' relative was charged with two counts of child rape and two counts of child sodomy (all first-degree felonies), and faced up to 25 years to life in prison as well as a lifetime on the sex offender registry. The relative's plea deal with state prosecutors had reportedly reached an impasse, according to The Salt Lake Tribune.
The new law was drafted by the relative's defense attorney, Cara Tangaro, and sponsored by Senate Majority Leader Kirk Cullimore (R) after Adams reportedly confided in him about his relative's legal charges.
State Sen. J. Stuart Adams, Republican leader of the Utah Senate, who once said that transgender athletes put biological women at risk, has drawn criticism after he changed state laws to keep his relative out of jail.
Adams helped change a state law to give his 18-year-old accused relative a lighter sentence after the teen was accused of raping a 13-year-old girl. Adams claims he neither requested nor helped draft the 2024 law that aided his relative, but he did ask for the relative's rape charges to be reconsidered in light of the new law.
Utah state law says that people under the age of 14 can never consent to sex, and the old state statute required that 18-year-olds receive a first-degree child rape felony charge for having sex with anyone 13 years old or younger. The felony charge required the rapist to also register as a sex offender.
However, the new law allows accused rapists 18 years old and younger to receive a reduced third-degree felony charge of unlawful sexual activity (and avoid jail time and registration as a sex offender) if they're enrolled in high school.
Adams' Relative Faced 25 Years in Prison Before the New Law Came into Effect, Now He Has Avoided Jail Time
Before the new law passed, Adams' relative was charged with two counts of child rape and two counts of child sodomy (all first-degree felonies), and faced up to 25 years to life in prison as well as a lifetime on the sex offender registry. The relative's plea deal with state prosecutors had reportedly reached an impasse, according to The Salt Lake Tribune.
The new law was drafted by the relative's defense attorney, Cara Tangaro, and sponsored by Senate Majority Leader Kirk Cullimore (R) after Adams reportedly confided in him about his relative's legal charges.
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