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Meeting
the Litigation Wave:
The Church Faces a New Threat
By
John Horvat II
They call it the next litigation
gold rush on the horizon and it will be big business. The
issue will be any child sexual abuse and the possibilities
appear endless.
For now, the target is the Catholic
Church which has already poured out $1 billion in damages.
Many see that figure cresting at $5 billion before it is all
over.
While there are cases based on solid
evidence, it is also true that the political climate around
the scandals has put together an explosive mixture of legal
tactics, shrewd media management and public outrage that gives
even the most bizarre cases a chance to win litigation rewards.
The Catholic Church is not the only
target. With the media exposure and legal precedents gained
during the Church scandals, just about anyone dealing with
young children may soon face lawsuits. Boy scouts, day care
babysitters or summer camps may all be targets of plaintiffs
who could file claims based on decades-old cases unearthed
from the past.
A Wild West Climate
In the June 9 cover story of Forbes
magazine, writer Daniel Lyons relates just how big abuse litigation
is. His article Sex, God and Greed relates how
a handful of lawyers turn child sexual abuse into big
business1 with implications that may eventually reach
tens of billions of dollars.
While the article in no way implies
there are no legitimate abuse cases, it does document a legal
Wild West atmosphere where cases that normally
would have been thrown out are now proceeding through the
courts with chances of success.
There are reports, for example, of
lawyers armed with suspected priest abusers names calling
up old altar boys in the hopes of finding plaintiffs. Web
sites with secure victim forms now allow potential
accusers the opportunity to click and paste their confidential
application to special lawyers who will judge the merits of
their cases. Other lawyers will sign up clients like draft
picks providing even plane tickets to plaintiffs who will
consider choosing them.
Patrick Schiltz of St. Thomas University in Minneapolis, Minn.,
likened the litigation frenzy to war. He says: Phase
One was for plaintiff lawyers to maximize bad publicity and
destroy the credibility of the Church. Phase Two is to use
that publicity to push for legislative changes.
Phase Three is simply to reap the fruits
in litigation settlements.
Changing the Law
Indeed, the first two phases are already
well advanced. State legislatures across the country are loosening
up the requirements for making cases. States are lifting the
statures of limitations resurrecting decades-old cases. This
year, California suspended the states statue of limitations
for civil suits for child abuse cases for one year unleashing
hundreds of new lawsuits.
An attempt to push back such statutes
retroactively in criminal cases was struck down as unconstitutional
by the Supreme Court.
In other states, legislative bills
seeking to force priests to break the Seal of Confession for
child abuse cases are also proliferating although there is
absolutely no evidence that such measures will help the crisis.
It will, however, undoubtedly add yet another factor in the
cascade of accusations.
Cases at Court
The result has been cases recounted
by Forbes, some of which border on the bizarre.
The Los Angeles Archdiocese, for example,
is being sued based on an incident in 1931 involving a priest
who does not even appear on Church books.
In Tucson, two women are suing the
diocese not for molestation but because they claim two brothers
were abused who in turn molested them.
In Louisville, a former topless dancer
is suing the Church based on an improper conversation and
kiss from a priest some 20 years ago.
Rockville Center Diocese faces powerball
lawyers asking $1.6 billion for 11 men one of which
admits being molested once.
Five Sioux tribal members have filed
a class-action lawsuit seeking $25 billion in damages from
the federal government on behalf of all students allegedly
physically, mentally and sexually abused at government schools
generally run by Catholics and other religious organizations
from the late 1800s until the 1970s. Most such schools are
now closed or were transferred to tribal control.
Repressed Memory
Mr. Lyons notes the most disturbing
fact that at least 100 sexual abuse cases involve so-called
repressed memory. Many psychologists see this syndrome as
a mixture of junk science and pop psychology of the Freudian
fringe.
The cases involve memories where the alleged victims
suddenly remember clergy abuse after decades being repressed.
Often an old photograph is considered enough to trigger an
accusation.
Leading
psychologists contest the theory as unprovable. Dr. Elizabeth
Loftus, a professor at University of California Irvine
has written extensively debunking the syndrome.
Harvard psychologist Richard J. McNally
likewise writes it off.
The notion that the mind protects
itself by banishing the most disturbing, terrifying events
is psychiatric folklore, he says. The more traumatic
and stressful something is, the less likely someone is to
forget it.
Since so many repressed memory cases
are buried in the distant past, it is particularly hard for
the accused to counter the alleged crimes.
Chaos among the Faithful
The child abuse litigation gold rush
is but another facet of the great crisis confronting the Church
in America.
On one hand, reformers have seen the scandals as a catalyst
to institute systemic change inside the Church. These voices
propose unacceptable democratic reforms that would
change the way the Church has been governed for 2,000 years.
The litigation wave likewise uses the
very real and tragic abuse cases inside the Church as a means
to break open Church coffers with a wave of lawsuits that
will deprive the Church of the means to operate and govern.
Both litigators and reformers ignore
the real moral crisis that gave rise to the scandals in the
first place. Few inside the Church point to a return to authentic
Catholic morality and sanctity as a solution.
Only in the fullness of Church teaching
can the solution to the present crisis be found. Waffling
about key moral issues like homosexuality, celibacy, abortion
or so many unpopular Catholic positions will only make matters
worse. Until there is a true commitment to sanctity by clergy
and faithful, the resulting chaos will continue to wreak havoc
in souls.
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