S-3966-119
Held at the desk.
What it does
TREY'S Law would make nondisclosure and confidentiality clauses in contracts void and unenforceable — as a matter of public policy — to the extent they prevent victims, alleged victims, or witnesses from disclosing sexual abuse of a minor. The bill applies retroactively to all such agreements, regardless of when they were signed. It would preempt any state law that permits enforcement of such clauses, while allowing states to pass stronger protections, and it preserves the ability of parties to keep other settlement details (such as payment amounts) confidential.
Who benefits
Survivors of child sexual abuse who signed NDAs as part of civil settlements and are currently legally barred from speaking about their abuse. Alleged victims who have not yet settled but may face NDA pressure. Witnesses and third parties with knowledge of abuse who are bound by confidentiality clauses. Law enforcement agencies and prosecutors who may receive more tips and cooperation. Child protection authorities who would gain access to previously suppressed information. Future potential victims who may be protected if serial abusers are exposed sooner. Journalists and advocates investigating institutional abuse (e.g., in schools, churches, sports organizations).
Who is hurt
Individuals and institutions that entered into settlement agreements in good faith relying on NDA enforceability — including accused persons, corporations, schools, religious organizations, and sports bodies — who may face renewed public disclosure or litigation exposure. Attorneys who negotiated such settlements may face professional complications. Parties who paid higher settlement amounts in exchange for confidentiality may find that consideration partially voided. Insurers who priced policies or settled claims based on confidentiality expectations could face unanticipated liability. Defendants in cases where allegations are disputed may lose a tool that also protected them from unverified public claims.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that NDAs in child sexual abuse cases have demonstrably enabled serial predators to continue abusing minors — pointing to high-profile institutional scandals (e.g., USA Gymnastics, the Catholic Church, Penn State) where confidential settlements concealed ongoing abuse for years or decades. They contend that no legitimate contract interest outweighs a child's safety, and that the bill carefully preserves permissible confidentiality (such as settlement amounts) while only voiding clauses that suppress disclosure of criminal conduct. They further argue that courts have long recognized agreements that obstruct justice or suppress crime reporting as void against public policy, making this bill a codification of existing common law principles.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's retroactive application raises serious due process concerns, as it voids contractual obligations that parties entered into — and may have paid significant consideration for — in reliance on their enforceability. They contend that settlement agreements, including NDAs, are a cornerstone of civil dispute resolution, and that undermining them retroactively could deter future settlements and drive more cases to costly litigation. Critics also argue that the bill's broad definition of "sexual abuse against a minor person" — which includes alleged conduct — could expose defendants to public disclosure of unproven accusations, implicating reputational due process interests before any finding of guilt.
Constitutional context
Congress invokes three constitutional bases: the Commerce Clause (Heart of Atlanta Motel v. United States, 1964, supports federal regulation of contracts made through interstate commerce), the Necessary and Proper Clause (to protect enforcement of federal criminal statutes on child exploitation), and Section 5 of the 14th Amendment (to remedy state court enforcement of NDAs as unconstitutional state action). The Section 5 basis is the most legally contested: under City of Boerne v. Flores (1997), Section 5 legislation must be congruent and proportional to actual constitutional violations, and courts would scrutinize whether state NDA enforcement rises to the level of a 14th Amendment violation requiring federal remedy.
Checks and balances
Congress gains authority to void private contracts nationwide; federal courts would serve as the primary check by reviewing constitutional challenges to the retroactivity provision and the Section 5 enforcement rationale, while states retain authority to enact stronger — but not weaker — protections.
Historical precedent
Several states (including New York, California, and New Jersey) have enacted laws limiting NDAs in sexual misconduct cases, though federal legislation voiding such clauses retroactively and specifically for minors has no direct prior analogue at the federal level.