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NEW SEX ABUSE LAWSUITS COULD COST CATHOLIC CHURCH $ 4 BILLION.

AP investigation finds potentially more than 5,000 new cases and payouts topping $4 billion

By BERNARD CONDON and JIM MUSTIAN | The Associated Press

NEW YORK — At the end of another long day trying to sign up new clients accusing the Roman Catholic Church of sexual abuse, lawyer Adam Slater gazes out the window of his high-rise Manhattan office at one of the great symbols of the church, St. Patrick’s Cathedral.
“I wonder how much that’s worth?” he muses.

Across the country, attorneys like Slater are scrambling to file a new wave of lawsuits alleging sexual abuse by clergy, thanks to rules enacted in 15 states that extend or suspend the statute of limitations to allow claims stretching back decades. Associated Press reporting found the deluge of suits could surpass anything the nation’s clergy sexual abuse crisis has seen before, with potentially more than 5,000 new cases and payouts topping $4 billion.

It’s a financial reckoning playing out in such populous Catholic strongholds as New York, California and New Jersey, among the eight states that go the furthest with “lookback windows” that allow sex abuse claims no matter how old. Never before have so many states acted in near-unison to lift the restrictions that once shut people out if they didn’t bring claims of childhood sex abuse by a certain age, often their early 20s.

That has lawyers fighting for clients with TV ads and billboards asking, “Were you abused by the church?” And Catholic dioceses, while worrying about the difficulty of defending such old claims, are considering bankruptcy, victim compensation funds and even tapping valuable real estate to stay afloat.

“It’s like a whole new beginning for me,” said 71-year-old Nancy Holling-Lonnecker of San Diego, who plans to take advantage of an upcoming three-year window for such suits in California. Her claim dates back to the 1950s, when she says a priest repeatedly raped her in a confession booth beginning when she was 7 years old.

“The survivors coming forward now have been holding on to this horrific experience all of their lives,” she said. “They bottled up those emotions all of these years because there was no place to take it.”
Now there is.

AP interviews with more than a dozen lawyers and clergy abuse watchdog groups offered a wide range of estimates but many said they expected at least 5,000 new cases against the church in New York, New Jersey and California alone, resulting in potential payouts that could surpass the $4 billion paid out since the clergy sex abuse first came to light in the 1980s.

Lawyers acknowledged the difficulty of predicting what will happen but several believed payouts could exceed the $350,000 national average per child sex abuse case since 2003. At the upper end, a key benchmark is the average $1.3 million the church paid per case the last time California opened a one-year window to suits in 2003. That offers a range of total payouts in the three big Catholic states alone from $1.8 billion to as much as $6 billion.

Some lawyers believe payouts could be heavily influenced by the recent reawakening over sexual abuse fueled by the #MeToo movement, the public shaming of accused celebrities and the explosive Pennsylvania grand jury report last year that found 300 priests abused more than 1,000 children in that state over seven decades. Since then, attorneys general in nearly 20 states have launched investigations of their own.

“The general public is more disgusted than ever with the clergy sex abuse and the cover-up, and that will be reflected in jury verdicts,” said Mitchell Garabedian, a Boston attorney who was at the center of numerous lawsuits against the church in that city and was portrayed in the movie “Spotlight.”

Said Los Angeles lawyer Paul Mones, who has won tens of millions in sex abuse cases against the church going back to the 1980s: “The zeitgeist is completely unfavorable to the Catholic Church.”
For Mones, the size of lawsuit payouts under the new laws could hinge on whether most plaintiffs decide to settle their cases with dioceses or take their chances with a trial.

“The X-factor here is whether there will be trials,” he said. “If anyone starts trying these cases, the numbers could become astronomical.”

Since the 15 states enacted their laws at different times over the past two years, the onslaught of lawsuits is coming in waves.

This summer, when New York state opened its one-year window allowing sexual abuse suits with no statute of limitations, more than 400 cases against the church and other institutions were filed on the first day alone. That number is now up to more than 1,000, with most targeting the church.

New Jersey’s two-year window opens this week and California’s three-year window begins in the new year, with a provision that allows plaintiffs to collect triple damages if a cover-up can be shown.

Arizona, Montana and Vermont opened ones earlier this year. Even one of the biggest holdouts, Pennsylvania, is moving closer to a window after legislators voted last month to consider amending its constitution to make it easier to pass one.
Already, longtime clergy abuse lawyer Michael Pfau in Seattle says he’s signed up about 800 clients in New York, New Jersey and California. Boston’s Garabedian says he expects to file 225 in New York, plus at least 200 in a half-dozen other states. Another veteran abuse litigator, James Marsh, says he’s collected more than 200 clients in New York alone.

“A trickle becomes a stream becomes a flood,” Marsh said. “We’re sort of at the flood stage right now.”

Church leaders who lobbied statehouses for years against loosening statute-of-limitations laws say this is exactly the kind of feeding frenzy they were worried about. And some have bemoaned the difficulty of trying to counter accusations of abuse that happened so long ago that most witnesses have scattered and many of the accused priests are long dead.

“Dead people can’t defend themselves,” said Mark Chopko, former general counsel to the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. “There is also no one there to be interviewed. If a diocese gets a claim that Father Smith abused somebody in 1947, and there is nothing in Father Smith’s file and there is no one to ask whether there is merit or not, the diocese is stuck.”
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Slater’s Manhattan offices may have views of St. Patrick’s Cathedral, spiritual home of New York City’s Catholic archdiocese, but ground zero for his church abuse lawsuit operation is a call center, of sorts, about an hour’s drive away in suburban Long Island, in an office building overlooking a parking lot.
There, headset-wearing paralegals in a dozen cubicles answer calls in response to ads on talk radio and cable TV news channels pleading: “If you were sexually abused by a member of the clergy, even if it happened decades ago … you may be entitled to financial compensation.”

That pitch spoke to 57-year-old Ramon Mercado, who had long kept silent about the abuse he suffered in the 1970s, in part because he didn’t want to upset his devout Catholic mother. Since her recent death, he’s ready to talk about the New York City priest who invited him into his Plymouth sedan to warm up on a cold day and ended up molesting him hundreds of times over the next three years.

“I was sitting in my living room and someone came on TV, ‘If you’ve been molested, act now,’” Mercado said. “After so many years, I said, ‘Why not?’”
When such calls come in, the paralegals are trained to press for details but to do so gently.

“What age would you say you were?”
“Ten or 11? OK. Would you remember the face if you saw it?”

“He would take you out of your bed? What did he say when he came to get you?”

“Do you want to take a break? Are you OK? Are you sure?”

The next step is to get a lawyer on the line to see if it’s a case they can take to court. Slater says that out of the more than 3,000 calls his firm has taken leading up to and since the opening of New York’s one-year window, it has signed up nearly 300 clients, and expects another 200 by the middle of next year.

One recent day, lawyers talked to at least a half-dozen potential plaintiffs by lunchtime, with one saying she was raped at a first communion party and another saying a priest sodomized him after he was told to pull down his pants so his temperature could be taken.

In a windowless break room over pizza, the lawyers recounted some of the other horrific claims they’ve heard in just the past few months: A young girl penetrated by a finger, then a fist; a boy raped by three priests at the same time; an altar boy told to perform oral sex and then swallow because it would “absolve him of his sins.”

One plaintiff still smells the alcohol on the priest’s breath decades later. Another says he can still hear the priest approaching his classroom as he came to get him, the squeak of shoes in the school hallway.

One man called with his story and later killed himself. A terminally-ill woman called from a hospice care center — “I’ve been holding this in my whole life.”
Many of the accusations involve those already identified by dioceses as “credibly accused” — there are 5,173 priests, lay persons and other clergy member that meet that standard, according to a recent AP tally. Those are the easy cases.

But many others are like Mercado’s, involving priests never accused publicly before, some long dead. And so that turns lawyers into cold-case investigators, calling retired Catholic school teachers and retired rectory staff, combing through yearbooks and, in Mercado’s case, tracking down missionary workers who went on the priest’s overseas trips.
“This type of case isn’t for every law firm.

It’s not a hit-in-the-rear car accident,” Slater said. “There is work to be done.”
And money to be made. For his fee, Slater said he plans to ask for a full third of any awards his clients collect and he’s been spending in anticipation, hiring a half-dozen new paralegals, opening an office in New Jersey and breaking a wall in Long Island to make more room.
One of the lawyers eating pizza, Steven Alter, pushed back when asked if the people coming forward are just in it for the money.

“It’s not a cash grab,” he said. “They want to have a voice. They want to help other people and make sure it doesn’t happen again.
“I haven’t had one person ask me about the money yet.”

This is the day the Catholic Church has long feared.

The church spent millions of dollars lobbying statehouses for decades, arguing it would be swamped with lawsuits if time limits on suing were lifted. That battle now lost, it is girding for Round Two, by turning to compensation funds and bankruptcy.

Compensation funds offer payment to victims if they agree not take their claims to court. They offer a faster, easier way to some justice, and cash, but the settlements are typically a fraction of what victims can get in trials. And critics say the church is just using them to avoid both a bigger financial hit and full transparency.

New York Archbishop Timothy Dolan set up the first fund in 2016, pitching it as a way to compensate victims without walloping the church and forcing it to cut programs. It has since paid more than $67 million to 338 alleged victims, an average $200,000 each.

The idea has caught on in other states. All five dioceses in New Jersey and three in Colorado opened one, as did seven dioceses in Pennsylvania and six in California, including the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, the largest in the U.S.
Such funds, Dolan said in a newspaper op-ed piece last year, “prevent the real possibility — as has happened elsewhere — of bankrupting both public and private organizations, including churches, that provide essential services in education, charity and health care.”

Bill Donohue, president of the Catholic League and a longtime critic of the new statute-of-limitations laws, said their effect — if not their intent — “is to disable the church.”

“When a diocese goes bankrupt, everyone gets hurt,” he said.

But bankruptcy has become an increasingly more common option. Less than a month after New York’s one-year lookback window took effect, the upstate Diocese of Rochester filed for bankruptcy, the 20th diocese or religious order in the country to do so, listing claims from alleged abuse survivors and other creditors as much as $500 million. Assets to pay that are estimated at no more than one-fifth that amount.
The Diocese of Buffalo may be next. It has begun paying victims of the 100 priests it considers “credibly accused” of abuse, tapping proceeds from the sale of a lavish $1.5 million mansion that once housed its bishop who is facing pressure to resign.
When a diocese files for bankruptcy, lawsuits by alleged abuse survivors are suspended and payments to them and others owed money — contractors, suppliers, banks, bondholders — are frozen while a federal judge decides how much to pay everyone and still leave enough for the diocese to continue to operate. It’s orderly and victims avoid costly and lengthy court cases, but they often get less than they would if they were successful in a trial.

A recent Penn State study of 16 dioceses and other religious organizations that had filed for bankruptcy protection by September 2018 found that victims received an average settlement of $288,168.

Bankruptcy can also leave abuse survivors with a sense of justice denied because the church never has to face discovery by plaintiff lawyers and forced to hand over documents, possibly implicating higherups who hid the abuse.
For many of his clients, Slater said, the fight in court is crucial because they want to expose the culture behind the crime, not just out a single priest.

“They want to see how the church allowed them to be abused, how they ruined their lives. The church is solely in possession of the information and there is no other way to get it,” he said. “It’s a different process in bankruptcy — you don’t get discovery and you don’t get it in compensation programs. The truth never comes to light.”

Other church tactics in the past few months could be a harbinger for the future.

In July, the Archdiocese of New York sued 31 of its insurers, fearing they would balk at paying all the new alleged victims.
And just last month, church officials on nearby Long Island sought to throw out New York’s new statutes of limitations law in sex abuse cases, arguing it violates the due process clause of the state constitution. The Diocese of Rockville Centre contends time limits to file suits can only be extended in “exceptional circumstances,” such as when plaintiffs are unable to file because they are abroad in a war zone.

Another pair of long shot cases are being closely watched because of the obvious financial implications. Five men who claim they were sexually abused by priests when they were minors filed suit in Minnesota earlier this year contending some of the responsibility rests with the world headquarters of the church — the Vatican. Then came another abuse suit last month in Buffalo accusing the Vatican of racketeering.

The Vatican is a sovereign state widely seen as off limits to abuse victims, but some lawyers say it’s time, especially now that U.S. dioceses are under attack, that it begins tapping its vast wealth.

Raymond P. Boucher, a veteran Los Angeles sexual abuse attorney, contends the Vatican’s legendary riches include stashes of art in vaults that could not possibly be exhausted “and still pay every single claim that anybody could bring in the United States.”
“They have them just in the vaults. They don’t even have to take anything off the walls.”

PAT SAYS.

This is part of the second round of abuse scandals the archbishop of Malta told us was coming.

Ot brings with it its abuse horror stories and I imagine all the cover up dimensions too.

The coming bill of $ 4 billion may be an understatement.

Even the US RCC must be running out of financial options?

I think that the Vatican and its coffers will be dragged into this eventually. I hope it will.

Eventually the international community will have to realise that not all religious evil comes from Islam.

23 replies on “NEW SEX ABUSE LAWSUITS COULD COST CATHOLIC CHURCH $ 4 BILLION.”

This, surely, is Jesus’ second coming, on a cloud of power and glory to crush an institution ‘corrupt, and riddled with corruption’ he most emphatically did not found. The institutional Roman Catholic Church.
EVERY Romanist priest is a cog in this morally shit-clogged wheel. Your days are numbered priests. I hope you all eventually rot in Hell, where, truly, you belong.Especially the, er, ‘good’ priests. 😆

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The Romanist Mafia will engineer ways to extract more money from the sheep to help offset any costs incurred by its filthy priests actions. It’s leaders live in opulence whilst thousands of victims are suffering mental anguish. It’s time to make them pay up. It’s the only thing that hurts them

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It’s interesting to see the tide of public opinion along with the state apparatus, lawmakers and courts, move against the RCC, now that it’s festering sores are being recognised. Yes there are good caring compassionate pastors in its ranks, and they deserve our sympathy, but as Magna often points out, how many of even the ‘good ones’ realised they crewed a “stinking ship” but remained on board for all sorts of reasons, some not very edifying?
MMM

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The only way for the Catholic Church to truly ‘get it’, to understand the enormity of what has happened and over what they have presided for decades, is to hit them where it really hurts, namely in the pocket. Even + Nichols would truly ‘get it’ then ! There is a real sense, even now, of the Church and its leaders dissimulating and tacking as much as they can, making a few noises of empathy and sorrow, about what has happened, but in reality it is not convincing, and you have a sense that really they are just waiting for this to all blow over so that then they can carry on as normal. They simply do not understand the cry for a root and branch review of the Catholic Church and its clerical hordes and it’s whacky theology and practice. The only way to bring them to their knees is to sue the backside off them, and take away all the lovely things they value so much. Then they might finally ‘get it’. Leadership has been woefully lacking in the Catholic Church, at every level, and it is time for others to step in and oversee and regulate what the Catholic Church and its clergy and bishops get up to, and keep them under close scrutiny. They have brought this on themselves.

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Why has Fulton Sheen’s beatification been postponed ? Something very fishy going on there. Sheen was a prime proponent of the triumphalist Church, and loved poncing around in his bishop’s gear, mouthing all that twee, incredible, nonsense about miracles and sacraments and indelible, ontological signing. Underneath all that, there has to have been a rather odd, weird psycho-sexual pathology that was dying to get out but was covered up by all that Church stuff. But, out it will have got, and I wonder what they have found out in order to postpone what seemed like a done deal ? Watch that space !

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12.02

Something fishy going on there with the postponement of Fulton-Sheen’s beatification? You can bet Peter’s Pence there is.

There is now an epidemic of Romanists’ being declared venerable, being beatified or canonised. It is difficult not to see this as a desperate rearguard re- action by senior Romanists to ward off the damage done by the ever-mounting sexual-abuse scandals. But when such men as JPII, a notorious paedophile protector, are declared saints, it not only shows how deep this desperation is, but the crass stupidity of the Vatican for not realising that this canonisation in particular was a very nasty instance of self-harming.

A lawsuit in 2007 (which was dismissed in The States in both federal and state courts) by an ex-priest, Robert Hoaton, alledged that Fulton-Sheen, while an auxiliary bishop in the Archdiocese of New York, caught a priest sexually abusing a female in a New York Church office. Fulton-Sheen ‘called the victim a slut, told the priest to put his pants on, and did nothing to report the crime, or comfort the victim. Bishop Sheen covered up the crime.’

The Diocese of Peoria (ILLinois), where Fulton-Sheen was to be beatified at Mass on 21 December 2019, issued a statement on 3 December and announced, somewhat sniffily, that ‘it has been demonstrated definitively that (Sheen) was an exemplary model of Christian conduct and a model of leadership in the Church. At no time has his life of virtue been called into question.’

Actually, Fulton-Sheen’s life of apparent virtue has indeed been called into question, not least with that 2007 lawsuit.

The word ‘definitively’ in this statement suggests that further evidence against Fulton-Sheen’s life of apparent virtue, however persuasive and compelling, will not affect the already pre-determined decision to progress this vaudeville cleric not just to beatification, but to sainthoid itself.

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Yawn, Yawn, Yawn…….Mags from the Cave and Mick from the Mountain Show…Yawn, Yawn, Yawn. Rotting tomatoes and smelly eggs are in order….get off the stage. Write a new script..

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It must have taken great intellectual ability and perception to write such a well crafted analysis anon@1:32.
Do please continue to inform us with your erudition.

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5.28: What’s your masterpiece of erudition? Illumine our minds with something other than your silly observation. Come on Killyyleagh Ciaran….show us real learning.

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Killyleagh Ciara at 5.28: it took me as much erudition and perception as it took you to write your superb piece…Zero… ha, ha, ha, O Learned One.

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It’s well past the time to pull the trigger on these perverted f***s in collars. Seminarians better get used to forced poverty.

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3.05: Another vulgar prick! Wonderful intelligence at play. Can you prove you have some little bit of education or finesse?

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Perhaps you would care to first?
Pat there’s a theme in the comments today of abuse for Magna and MMM. Keep going, love, you’re annoying the right people and more than a few clerics are getting hot under the collar

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I would just like to add to the above comment about suing the church: if you want to see change stop giving money to the collection.
If you want to support the ministry of an individual priest buy him food, hosts or wine or candles for the altar.
If you want to support a particular church offer to fund (with others if necessary) whatever work needs doing and so on.
It is possible both to starve them out and also direct funds to what you want.
If you want the message to be clear put a message in the collection every Sunday and write to the bishop.
Yes I know they ignore letters but a stated intention to withdraw funding will scare them.

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7.59: You’d have been very much at home in Caucescau’s regime in Romania….burn them or starve them – lovely christianity. Fabulous charity! Great illuminating ideas!! You idiot: All these ideas have been suggested before and for many years. They make no impact on our parish: the weekly collections are amazing and the generosity of parishioners to various special collections is equally astonishing. Hatred doesn’t work.

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9.16
Lovely Christianity? Boy! You have a nerve, priest.
Your defence of this institution, the Roman Catholic Church and her priest-pimps, is grist to the anti-clerical mill, since it confirms what many people are awakening to: the fact that there is no such thing as a truly good priest, because all are obligated to serve an institution that ‘is corrupt, and riddled with corruption’.
Hatred may not work, priest. But justice is, at long last.
You parasites are fast becoming anachronistic to the vast majority of baptised Catholics.
To Hell or Connaught with the lot of you! (But preferably to Hell.)

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In three years’ time when the “windows” shut, the RCC is going to be very harsh – with everyone – everywhere – including idealistic but otherwise decent trainees.

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