Bipartisan legislation introduced in the state Senate may bring an end to child marriage in Missouri.
raised the minimum age for marrying from 15 to 16 and prohibited anyone over 21 from marrying a minor. That means that 16- and 17-year-olds can still legally marry with parental consent.
Democratic Sen. Tracy McCreery and Republican Sen. Rick Brattin have introduced two bills with identical language that would prohibit the practice entirely by raising the age of marriage to 18 in all circumstances.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 the realization, as a father of three daughters,鈥 Brattin said. 鈥淵ou know, I see that we鈥檙e not what we were 60, 70, 80 years ago. So I think now is the time that we鈥檝e got to update the law.鈥
McCreery鈥檚 legislation, , had an initial hearing Wednesday before the Senate Families, Seniors and Health Committee. Identical legislation passed the Senate last year but died in the House.
鈥淐hild marriage is the legalization of child rape,鈥 McCreery said. 鈥淚f a 21-year-old were to have sex with a 16-year-old, that would be second-degree statutory rape. Just because one parent gives permission for the child to be married doesn鈥檛 make it not rape.鈥
McCreery and other supporters of the bill spoke about child marriage putting teenage girls at greater risk of abuse, sexual assault, sex trafficking and poverty. No one spoke in opposition to the bill.
Several women who were married as teens spoke in support of the legislation. Brandi Dredge, who married a 25-year-old man at age 17, said she hoped the bill would protect other girls from experiencing what she did.
鈥淚 can look back at that starry-eyed teen, and I can say, 鈥楾hat wasn鈥檛 the right thing, and I鈥檓 sorry no one protected you,鈥欌 Dredge said. 鈥淚 lost my childhood, and along the way I lost myself.鈥
Because married teenagers do not have the legal rights of adults, it is far more difficult to divorce, get a restraining order or access other resources in the event of abuse.
Sheena Eastburn, who married when she was 15, was convicted of killing her abusive husband after her attempts to divorce him or run away from home failed. She was released from prison in 2017.
鈥淭hey said I was emancipated, but I wasn鈥檛,鈥 Eastburn said. 鈥淚 still had no rights, because I was not 18. I could not escape.鈥
Former Sen. Holly Thompson Rehder, who married at 15 to escape an abusive home life, also spoke in support of the bill. Thompson Rehder, who did not run for reelection last year, was the bill鈥檚 Republican sponsor in the Senate last session.
鈥淚 was 15, but I was [considered] an adult,鈥 Thompson Rehder said. 鈥淏ut I was a child.鈥
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