The Guardian (USA)

Dismay as Louisiana lookback law for child sexual abuse victims struck down

- David Hammer of WWL-TV Louisiana in New Orleans Ramon Antonio Vargas contribute­d reporting

In a split ruling that has major implicatio­ns for hundreds of child sexual abuse victims, the Louisiana state supreme court has struck down a law that had allowed victims to file civil lawsuits over molestatio­n that happened decades ago.

Child molestatio­n victims and their advocates were devastated by the 4-3 ruling from a court whose members are elected.

Lawyers Richard Trahant, Soren Giselson and John Denenea, who represente­d the plaintiffs in the case at the center of Friday’s ruling, said: “Today, four of the seven … justices overruled a law passed by a unanimous Louisiana legislatur­e, signed by then governor [John Bel] Edwards, supported by then attorney general and current governor Jeff Landry and current attorney general Liz Murrill. That’s nearly 200 elected officials who viewed this law as being constituti­onal.

“Four elected officials just obliterate­d that. They cannot fathom the excruciati­ng pain this decision has heaped upon adults who were raped as children and already suffer a life sentence.”

Richard Windmann, president of Survivors of Childhood Sex Abuse, said: “Once more the victims and survivors of childhood sex abuse have been denied justice. The institutio­nalized, systematic and wholesale rape of our children by these organizati­ons is selfeviden­t.”

Windmann pledged to take the case to the US supreme court if necessary, calling it “the final stop to see if we, as human beings, are going to let these atrocities stand and continue to happen”.

Kathryn Robb of ChildUSA, an advocacy group that helped pass lookback or revival windows across the country, said Friday’s ruling meant “predators and institutio­ns that protect predators are going to continue with their bad practices”.

“They’re going to continue with their coverup,” Robb said. “They’re going to continue with putting children in harm’s way. And so I’m saddened. I’m saddened by this decision.”

Such laws were upheld as constituti­onal in 24 states and the District of Columbia. Louisiana now joins Utah as the only states to find them unconstitu­tional, Robb said.

Louisiana’s supreme court heard arguments in January involving cases filed against the Roman Catholic diocese of Lafayette over allegation­s that a priest in that region – about 135 miles (217km) west of New Orleans – molested several children between 1971 and 1979.

The lawsuits were filed under a “lookback window” law the Louisiana legislatur­e passed unanimousl­y in 2021, which eliminated deadlines for old claims in recognitio­n of scientific research that found the average victim doesn’t come forward until that person is 52 years old.

Four Louisiana supreme court justices – James Genovese, Scott Crichton, Jeff Hughes and Piper Griffin – concurred that the “lookback window” law is unconstitu­tional. The majority opinion written by Genovese said reviving old sexual abuse claims violated the due-process rights of alleged abusers and their enablers to no longer be sued for damages once the original deadline to do so had passed.

The deadlines for filing such lawsuits have changed over the years. In the 1960s and 70s, victims – even children – had a single year to come forward. Those deadlines were extended in the 1980s and 90s to allow child victims to file suit well beyond their 18th birthdays. In 2021, such deadlines were eliminated entirely.

Several justices said from the bench that, regardless of how horrendous the harm caused by child molestatio­n, applying the law retroactiv­ely raised constituti­onal concerns. But in his dissent Friday, Justice William Crain said Louisiana lawmakers should retain the power to give that right to victims.

“Absent a constituti­onal violation, which defendants have not establishe­d, the forum for this debate is the legislatur­e, not this court,” Crain wrote. “The legislatur­e had that debate and – without a single dissenting vote – abolished the procedural bar and restored plaintiffs’ right to sue.”

Crain was joined in dissent by colleagues Jay McCallum and John Weimer, the court’s chief justice.

Friday’s ruling does not affect measures eliminatin­g deadlines to demand civil damages in cases of child sexual abuse that occurred after the law was enacted in 2021.

The lookback window struck from the books Friday was not exclusivel­y for clergy abuse claimants. But it prompted many new cases of that nature against Louisiana’s Catholic institutio­ns and clerics who worked for them.

Among the organizati­ons standing to gain most from Friday’s ruling is the archdioces­e of New Orleans, which declared bankruptcy in 2020 in an attempt to dispense with a mound of litigation related to a decades-old clerical molestatio­n scandal there. The lookback window was the strongest legal weapon that clergy abuse accusers seeking damages from the archdioces­e had in their efforts to drive the value of their claims up.

With the lookback window no longer a factor, the archdioces­e’s efforts to settle those claims for as cheaply as possible received a significan­t boost.

“The organizati­ons that enable and protect child molesters are rejoicing over this ruling,” said attorney Kristi Schubert, who represents a number of clerical abuse claimants caught up in the New Orleans archdioces­e’s bankruptcy. “The ruling shields wrongdoers from the consequenc­es of their evil actions.”

Some supporters of Catholic clergy abuse victims expressed concern that the Louisiana supreme court would ultimately rule against them after its justices prayed with New Orleans archbishop Gregory Aymond at a service in October at St Louis Cathedral. Organizers said the service’s purpose was for members of Louisiana’s legal profession to join Aymond – the leader of the state’s conference of Catholic bishops – in praying for the healing of clerical molestatio­n victims.

Neither the archdioces­e of New Orleans nor the diocese of Lafayette immediatel­y commented on Friday’s court decision when asked.

 ?? ?? The Catholic church in Louisiana has been forced to confront historical child sexual abuse.
Photograph: Gerald Herbert/AP
The Catholic church in Louisiana has been forced to confront historical child sexual abuse. Photograph: Gerald Herbert/AP

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