ASSEMBLY COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT AND WOMEN'S AFFAIRS COMMITTEE STATEMENT TO ASSEMBLY, No. 4966 with committee amendments STATE OF NEW JERSEY DATED: MAY 05, 2025 The Assembly Community Development and Women's Affairs Committee reports favorably and with committee amendments Assembly Bill No. 4966. This amended bill eliminates the statute of limitations for criminal prosecutions of kidnapping and human trafficking, and extends the statute of limitations under which a victim of human trafficking may bring a civil suit against the perpetrator. Under current law, a prosecution for kidnapping or human trafficking must be commenced, by way of an indictment, within five years after the offense is committed. Additionally, a civil suit brought by a victim of human trafficking must also be filed within five years. Under the bill, a criminal prosecution for kidnapping or human trafficking may be commenced at any time. Also, under the bill, a civil suit may be filed by a victim of human trafficking within 10 years of the conduct, within 10 years of a victim turning 18 years old if the victim is a minor, or within two years of a plaintiff’s discovery of the injury, whichever is later. Extending the civil statute of limitations for human trafficking to 10 years will bring State law into accord with similar provisions under federal law. Under the bill, the civil statute of limitations for human trafficking will not begin to run until a continuing course of conduct relating to the human trafficking of the plaintiff is terminated. Furthermore, the statute of limitations may be tolled for any period of time during which the plaintiff is under a disability, which includes any intellectual disability, hospitalization for mental illness, or finding of mental incapacity. Finally, the bill prohibits a defendant who coerced a plaintiff who is a victim of human trafficking to delay filing suit by means of intimidation, duress, threats, or fraud from asserting a defense that the statute of limitations has already run. COMMITTEE AMENDMENTS : The committee amended the bill to eliminate the statute of limitations for criminal prosecutions for the crime of kidnapping; as introduced, the bill only eliminated the statute of limitations for human trafficking crimes.