Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Duggar sisters challenge move to dismiss case

- RON WOOD Ron Wood can be reached by email at rwood@nwadg.com or on Twitter @NWARDW.

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Attorneys for Josh Duggar’s sisters say a motion to dismiss their federal lawsuit is nothing more than a backdoor attempt to relitigate an earlier ruling the remaining defendants lost.

The plaintiffs, as named on the lawsuit, are Jill Dillard, Jessa Seewald, Jinger Vuolo and Joy Duggar. The lawsuit alleges the release of police records by certain officials publicized their trauma and subjected the women and their families to extreme mental anguish and emotional distress.

The records released related to a police investigat­ion that concluded Josh Duggar fondled the sisters and at least one other girl. The statute of limitation­s had run out, and no criminal charges were filed.

The women’s lawsuit claims Springdale and Washington County officials improperly released redacted police investigat­ion documents to celebrity magazine In Touch. The magazine published the informatio­n, which allowed the women to be identified, the suit says.

Lawyers for the remaining defendants, former Maj. Rick Hoyt of the Washington County Sheriff’s Office; Ernest Cate, Springdale city attorney; and former Police Chief Kathy O’Kelley, filed a joint motion asking the judge for a ruling dismissing the case.

The lawsuit was filed May 18, 2017, alleging a number of legal causes of action against a host of defendants. The legal claims have been narrowed as has the pool of defendants.

The three remaining claims — now made against only O’Kelley, Cate and Hoyt — are made under Arkansas law for outrage, invasion of privacy by intrusion upon seclusion and invasion of privacy by public disclosure of private facts.

Lawyers for O’Kelley, Cate and Hoyt argue the claims made by the women are exactly the same as those made unsuccessf­ully by their brother in an earlier lawsuit. Josh Duggar’s case was dismissed by an Arkansas circuit judge on a motion by the defendants for judgment based on arguments made in filings, according to the motion.

That dismissal was affirmed by the Arkansas Court of Appeals in Joshua Duggar v. City of Springdale. Josh Duggar filed an appeal, but the Arkansas Supreme Court refused to hear the case.

The earlier decision by the Court of Appeals should also govern the outcome of the women’s claims because they’re using the same facts and arguments Josh Duggar made in his case, according to the defendants’ motion.

Lawyers for the four women say their claims aren’t the same because the women were victims while Josh Duggar was the assailant and, unlike their brother, they hadn’t been publicly identified before the records were released.

They also contend the defendants’ made the same argument to dismiss earlier in this case. That motion was dismissed by the court and the issue should be precluded from being considered again, their motion argues.

The response also contends a different Arkansas law makes disclosure of the records identifyin­g the women unlawful. Josh Duggar was not protected under that law, which provides a law enforcemen­t agency shall not disclose to the public informatio­n directly or indirectly identifyin­g the victim of a sex crime.

And, unlike Josh Duggar, one of plaintiffs was a minor when the records were released, which also distinguis­hes the cases, according to the response.

The case is set for trial beginning Dec. 9 in federal court in Fayettevil­le.

Josh Duggar, 33, of Springdale is charged in a separate criminal case with two counts involving receiving and possessing child pornograph­y. U.S. District Judge Timothy L. Brooks set that case for jury trial Nov. 30.

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