Sixteen Child Sex Abuse Lawsuits against Jehovah’s Witnesses Are Settled

by Dogpatch 166 Replies latest watchtower child-abuse

  • DannyHaszard
    DannyHaszard

    Church pledges thorough child abuse investigations
    Guardian Unlimited, UK - 5 hours ago
    Other religious denominations, including the Jehovah's Witnesses, have also also been charged with ignoring complaints or even victimising the young ...

  • sass_my_frass
    sass_my_frass

    I hope the victims got BIG bucks, and that they use it to improve their lives long-term.

  • XJWNB
    XJWNB

    The end is near...get out of her, for the Watchtower is falling. I hope justice comes quick for all those who are guilty of protecting child abusers. I too, hope to see the day when the walls WTBTS comes crumbling down.

  • DannyHaszard
    DannyHaszard

    High rank on the wire

    Jehovah's Witnesses CONVENTION ALERT
    Tehachapi News, CA - Jun 16, 2007
    By Rose French-AP BROOKLYN HEIGHTS — “A victims’ rights group has released documents showing that the Jehovah’s Witnesses, also known as the Watchtower ...

  • DannyHaszard
    DannyHaszard

    Litigious Jehovah's Witnesses like to sue too Razzoo's settles lawsuit over religious firing
    Dallas Morning News (subscription), TX - 15 minutes ago
    Sabrina Balentine, a Jehovah's Witness, declined to participate in birthday cheers at the Mesquite location of Razzoo's in 2006 because her faith doesn't ...

    Razzoo's settles lawsuit over religious firing

    09:25 AM CDT on Wednesday, June 20, 2007
    By ERIC TORBENSON / The Dallas Morning News Irving-based Razzoo's Cajun Cafe settled a religious discrimination lawsuit Tuesday for $38,750 after the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission sued the chain on behalf of a fired employee. Sabrina Balentine, a Jehovah's Witness, declined to participate in birthday cheers at the Mesquite location of Razzoo's in 2006 because her faith doesn't recognize birthdays. The 19-year-old said she offered to do other activities when servers sang to customers, but was fired. Razzoo's agreed to a two-year consent decree as part of the settlement and will adopt an anti-discrimination policy for religious accommodation. Razzoo's said it disagreed with the suit and said it did not fire Ms. Balentine. A spokeswoman said Ms. Balentine never told the restaurant about her concerns.
  • DannyHaszard
    DannyHaszard

    http://www.latimes.com/news/local/los_angeles_metro/la-me-priest9jul09,1,942072.story?track=

    Archdiocese seeks a settlement as 500 sex abuse cases head for trial

    The payout could go as high as half a billion dollars, the largest in the country. 'The day of reckoning is near,' says a lawyer for plaintiffs. By Joe Mozingo, Times Staff Writer
    July 9, 2007
    After more than four years of negotiation, pressure is mounting fast to settle some 500 claims that the Los Angeles Archdiocese failed to protect children from clergy abuse, before the first trial begins this month.

    "We know it's soon. We know it's inevitable. The day of reckoning is drawing near," said Jeffrey Anderson, a Minnesota lawyer who represents hundreds of alleged victims of clergy abuse in California and elsewhere.

    The potential payout is staggering, at more than half a billon dollars by far the largest of any diocese in the country resulting from the Roman Catholic Church abuse scandal.

    Already, the archdiocese, insurers and several Catholic orders have agreed to pay more than $114 million to settle 86 claims.

    If the remaining cases go to trial, jury awards could be much larger, particularly when claimants seek punitive damages.

    A jury in New York , for instance, ordered the Diocese of Rockville Centre in May to pay $5.9 million to one victim and $5.5 million to another. If an agreement can be reached before trial in Los Angeles , victims are expected to garner an average of slightly more than $1 million each, based on the cases that have been settled so far.

    Going to trial would also force top officials, including Cardinal Roger M. Mahony, to testify publicly about what they knew about the abuse and what, if anything, they did to stop it.

    Mahony is expected to be called to the stand in the first trial, involving two decades of alleged abuse by the late Father Clinton Hagenbach, who died in 1987, two years after Mahony became archbishop in Los Angeles . Thirteen more trials are scheduled to begin by January.

    "It's still my goal to reach an agreement before the first trials begin, but many, many pieces have to come together before that can happen," said J. Michael Hennigan, who represents Mahony and the Los Angeles Archdiocese .

    Hennigan declined to give details or comment further about the case because it "might have an impact on the ongoing discussions."

    Mahony has waged a protracted court battle to keep church personnel documents from victims, their lawyers, prosecutors and the public. But the courts ruled in a Los Angeles case that grand juries investigating crimes and civil lawyers preparing for trial were entitled to the information.

    Attorneys for the accusers say any settlement agreement would include a stipulation that the church release the files publicly. However, individual clergy could contest the disclosures on privacy grounds.

    Settlement negotiations have been complex, with more than 60 attorneys seeking differing sums for more than 570 claims of abuse occurring over 70 years by 221 accused perpetrators.

    The church has blamed its insurers for failing to pay the major share of the settlements. The insurers, in turn, have questioned whether Mahony willfully withheld information about the abuse from them and say they don't have to pay if the church officials' actions were criminal.

    "This could be a Katrina moment for the insurers," said Pamela D. Hayes, an attorney who served on the National Lay Review Board, established by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops to study the abuse scandal. "They're fighting to the very end."

    In Orange County , insurers and the Diocese of Orange ended a similar standoff in 2005 when they agreed to split a $100-million settlement for 90 victims roughly 50-50.

    But in San Diego earlier this year, Bishop Robert H. Brom announced that his diocese would file for bankruptcy rather than go to trial, putting the cases there on hold while a judge examines diocesan finances.

    A Times analysis published in December 2006 showed that the Los Angeles Archdiocese has vast wealth, owning at least 1,600 properties with an estimated value of $4 billion.

    Victims groups blame the Los Angeles church for continuing to stonewall. "The fact that this trial [Hagenbach] would be the first ever priest-pedophile abuse trial in Los Angeles is very telling," said Mary Grant, Western regional director of Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, or SNAP.

    "I think if there is a way to delay this trial, we believe Cardinal Mahony will use whatever tactics he can to keep the crimes hidden to keep him from having to testify in open court about what he and church officials knew and what they failed to do to protect kids from predators," Grant said.

    Tod Tamberg, Mahony's spokesman, said, "The vast majority of these cases predate Mahony, and many of them have nothing in their files."

    In the case of Hagenbach, he noted that Mahony moved from the Stockton Diocese to Los Angeles in 1985, less than two years before the priest died. "There were 2,000 priests back then," Tamberg said. "He didn't know any of these guys. And the first complaint about Hagenbach came in 2002."

    Tamberg said that the archdiocese has been working to settle the cases but that their sheer number and the complexity of the litigation in Los Angeles are far greater than in any other diocese in the nation.

    He noted that it is not yet clear even what the exact number of claims against the church is.

    "Complex negotiations do take time, yes, especially when you're a Catholic church with limited resources," he said.

    Mahony wants to minimize any loss of services to parishioners, Tamberg added. "Our parishes and schools are not there to produce revenue for us. They're there to educate children and provide spiritual welfare for the Catholic people."

    Many observers expect a settlement before or during the Hagenbach trial, either a so-called global settlement for all the cases or the first of a string of settlements. Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Haley Fromholz last week pushed the trial back a week, saying there were not enough potential jurors after the Fourth of July holiday. But the delay prompted some observers to speculate that the parties were on the verge of a settlement and needed a few more days.

    Jury selection is set to begin July 17.

    Anderson, the plaintiffs' lawyer, said he doubted Mahony would want to wait for opening arguments.

    "That's an opportunity for us to lay out a long, sordid scenario," said Anderson. "Their exposure is extraordinary."



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    --

    (INFOBOX BELOW)

    Clergy sexual abuse settlements

    The Los Angeles Archdiocese and several religious orders have already agreed to pay more than $114 million to settle 86 claims.

    Settlements (millions of dollars)

    Date ofNumberAverage
    settlementAmountof claimsper claim
    JesuitsMay 2007$16.79$1.86
    L.A . Archdiocese*Dec. 200660451.33
    Carmelites**Oct. 20061071.40
    Franciscans***March 200628251.12
    Total$114.786$1.33



    * $40 million paid by the archdiocese, the rest by religious orders and insurers

    ** 5% paid by the archdiocese

    *** Less than $2 million paid by the archdiocese

    Source: Graphics reporting by Joe Mozingo and Vicki Gallay

  • Watchtower-Free
    Watchtower-Free

    So we don't forget

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