Cupertino Courier

District to pay $7.5M to 5 in sex abuse case

- By Robert Salonga rsalonga@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SAN JOSE >> A South San Jose school district will pay $7.5 million to five men to settle a lawsuit alleging the district allowed a predatory teacher to sexually abuse them in the late 1970s and early 1980s, failing to intervene even in the face of ample evidence of the wrongdoing — even as the teacher seemingly took no steps to conceal his actions.

The lawsuit contended that Dennis Thomas sexually assaulted the plaintiffs — crimes for which he would be criminally convicted — over a span of several years at an array of locations, including Cinnabar Elementary School, his home, motels in Santa Cruz and on overnight and multiday getaways, many of which were known to school administra­tors.

At most, the plaintiffs say, Thomas was only told to stop bringing the boys to his apartment.

Max Allen, one of the plaintiffs who was willing to speak publicly, said the monetary settlement is secondary to obtaining some acknowledg­ment of how school and district administra­tors failed to protect him and his other abused classmates. Most of the victims were in the fourth and fifth grades.

“For me, it's more about having the school district take responsibi­lity,” Allen said in an interview with the Bay Area News Group. “That's the biggest thing to me.”

Another plaintiff, who is identified in the lawsuit as John Roe 3 and asked that his name be withheld to protect his family's privacy, said the settlement offers some closure to what had been an unresolved stain on their lives.

“In speaking out, we are also talking to those people who find themselves in the moral dilemma of protecting an institutio­n versus protecting a child,” Roe said. “If you witness or are informed of sexual abuse, you must guide that child to a place where they can get help.”

The settlement is the second multimilli­on-dollar payout for a teacher sexual abuse case in the Union School District this year. In March, a Santa Clara County civil jury awarded two women a total of $102.5 million in damages after they sued over the unchecked sexual grooming and abuse they suffered from a music teacher who later was convicted and sentenced to more than 50 years in prison. The district is appealing the amount of the jury award.

“It's just unbelievab­le it was happening then 40 years ago, and it's happening now,” said Lauren Cerri, the plaintiff's attorney with the firm Corsiglia Mcmahon and Allard, which specialize­s in school-abuse litigation. “What these men did was speak out and tell the district and all districts it's unacceptab­le to sweep these things under the rug and not protect kids.”

In a statement, Superinten­dent Carrie Andrews voiced support for the settlement in the Thomas case.

“We hope this settlement agreement brings closure for the victims,” Andrews said. “These events occurred decades ago, and we have made significan­t progress in our training, reporting procedures and methods for investigat­ing alleged sexual abuse.”

Thomas, now in his early 80s, was convicted in 1982 of lewd and lascivious behavior with children under 14 and was admitted to Atascadero State Hospital in lieu of a seven-year prison sentence. He was admitted as a “mentally disordered sex offender” and received outpatient treatment while serving probation, records show. Mike Leninger, a former sexual assault detective with the San Jose Police Department who works with Cerri's law firm as a private investigat­or, says he interviewe­d Thomas for the litigation and that Thomas did not express remorse for his actions with the boys.

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