Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Most of Duggar lawsuit tossed

Judge dismisses firm from cases

- RON WOOD

FAYETTEVIL­LE — A federal judge dismissed nearly all Joshua Duggar’s claims against Springdale and Washington County officials who released decade-old, redacted police investigat­ive reports about Duggar molesting four of his sisters to a celebrity magazine that published the informatio­n.

U.S. District Judge Tim Brooks also dismissed Bauer Publishing which owns In Touch magazine and related websites and their attorneys from both Duggar’s case and a case brought by four of his sisters, saying Bauer had a First Amendment right to publish informatio­n given to them under a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request.

Brooks said neither Duggar nor the sisters made allegation­s in their lawsuits Bauer ever published untruthful informatio­n about them. He said the police documents were given to Bauer pursuant to an FOIA request.

“Even if one assumes that the disclosure failed to comply with Arkansas statutory redaction requiremen­ts, it is clear that the Bauer defendants cannot be held liable,” Brooks wrote.

Brooks noted there’s no liability on Bauer’s part for merely giving further publicity to informatio­n about a person which is already public.

That leaves only former Springdale Police Chief Kathy O’Kelley, Springdale City Attorney Ernest Cate and Maj. Rick Hoyt of the Washington County Sheriff’s Office in their individual capacities remaining in the sisters’ lawsuit.

O’Kelley, Cate and Hoyt are accused of improperly releasing the informatio­n to Bauer. Brooks last week denied their motions to be

dismissed based on immunity from the sisters’ lawsuit. All three have appealed Brooks’ ruling to the 8th U.S. Circuit Court and the case is on hold until those appeals are resolved.

Brooks said while the claims were almost identical in Duggar’s case and the sisters’ case against the three individual­s the circumstan­ces were very different.

The judge said Duggar was named in a story by In Touch magazine before to the police documents being released while the sisters weren’t identified in that story.

“This fact alone is fatal to nearly all of Joshua Duggar’s claims against Springdale and Washington County defendants,” the judge wrote.

The only defendant left in Duggar’s lawsuit is the Arkansas Department of Human Services, which has never been served with the lawsuit.

The four sisters are Jill Dillard, Jessa Seewald, Jinger Vuolo and Joy Duggar.

They sued Springdale and Washington County officials and Bauer in May. The claimed the officials improperly released the police documents to the celebrity magazine. The magazine published the informatio­n, which the sisters claim allowed them to be identified, the suit says.

Police investigat­ed allegation­s of sexual abuse against Joshua Duggar in 2006, related to incidents in 2002 and 2003, but no charges were filed. The investigat­ion determined Duggar fondled the sisters and at least one other girl. The statute of limitation had run out and no charges were filed.

However, a Family in Need of Services petition was filed in Washington County Juvenile Court.

The lawsuits contend police assured the family informatio­n from the investigat­ion and their interviews would be available only to law enforcemen­t, juvenile court and child services personnel.

The sisters’ lawsuit claims their due process rights under the Arkansas Constituti­on and the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constituti­on were violated by disclosing the reports and details of the investigat­ion to the celebrity magazine.

The lawsuit seeks unspecifie­d compensato­ry and punitive damages.

Brooks refused last month to dismiss the due process claims against O’Kelley, Cate, and Hoyt in their individual capacities saying the sisters had a reasonable expectatio­n the informatio­n wouldn’t be

released to the public.

Brooks noted that, at the time the informatio­n was released, there was a state statute exempting any informatio­n created, collected or compiled by or on behalf of the Arkansas Department of Human Services, Arkansas State Police or other entities authorized to perform investigat­ions or provide services to children and families from disclosure under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act.

Brooks dismissed Springdale and Washington County from the sisters’ lawsuit as well as former County Attorney Steve Zega and Cate, in their official capacities.

Joshua Duggar filed his federal lawsuit in July. The lawsuit claimed his right to due process was violated and his privacy was invaded. It sought $75,000 in damages, lawyer’s fees and a jury trial.

Joshua Duggar’s lawsuit came after an initial attempt to be part of the sisters’ lawsuit. He filed a motion to intervene, then withdrew the request, without explanatio­n, in June.

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