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Jehovah's Witnesses sued over sex abuse claims
Judging Amy ?: Jehovah's Witnesses Sued for Allegedly Protecting Members Who Abuse
http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1083328831112
Mark
Donald
Texas
Lawyer
05-05-2004
Talking about it seemed easier with Kimberlee Norris -- a woman, a lawyer, someone
with whom they could entrust their deepest confidences, their fragile psyches.
Norris recounts that the two prospective clients told her strikingly similar
s tori es of betrayal: Both women alleged that, as minors, they were members
of the same Jehovah's Witnesses (JW) church when each was sexually assaulted
by a different male congregant. After each reported the incident to church elders,
as members are instructed to do to help cleanse the church of "sin,"
these lay ministers initiated an investigation. But these investigations, which
applied an Old Testament burden of proof, enabled the same result -- the alleged
perpetrator was protected, and the victim not believed. In fact, the women said
elders told them that if they repeated the allegations to church members or
secular authorities, they risked possible "disfellowshipping" -- excommunication
from the church and God.
Norris found these allegations so
"outrageous" she searched the Web site www.silentlambs.org, a group
that assists the survivors of alleged JW abuse. She then contacted silentlambs'
founder, Bill Bowen, a former church elder. Bowen says that the religion's organizational
structure is so intricate, its apocalyptic vision so unconventional, "it
takes up to six months to get a lawyer up to speed." In Norris, a self-described
"preacher's kid" who had briefly attended Bible study sessions with
Jehovah's Witnesses as a teenager, Bowen found someone ahead of the curve.
A partner in the Fort Worth
, Texas , firm of Love & Norris, she had some success suing institutions
for their negligent supervision of sexually abusive employees. After Bowen began
referring prospective clients to her from silentlambs and she enhanced her "Internet
presence," Norris was staggered by the number of calls she received from
would-be plaintiffs -- so many that her practice now is exclusively dedicated
to molestation litigation.
"I began evaluating these cases in July 2002 and talked to my 1,500th alleged
victim on March 28, 2003 ," she says. "After I reached 2,000, I stopped
counting."
Culling these numbers meant coming
up with a rigid profile of what kind of case to take and where.
With a plethora of cases to choose
from, Norris and partner Gregory S. Love could afford to be picky. Immediately
they "tossed out 80 to 90 percent" of the JW cases, she says, because
they did not fall within the "numerical statute of limitations."
In Texas, when conduct involves the sexual assault of a child, § 16.0045 of
the Civil P ractice and Remedies Code requires that a person must bring a suit
for personal injuries no later than five years after the victim's 18th birthday,
the date of majority.
Love & Norris also decided only
to take cases where they could prove the church knew its member was a perpetrator
and placed him in a position of authority anyway. "Sexual molestation cases
are like dog bite cases," Norris says. "Every dog gets one bite, every
perpetrator gets one kid. We only take extreme cases where molestation has been
reported to the congregation and the organization gives him its blessing by
giving him authority."
The firm has filed 57 suits across
the country, including two in Texas , joint venturing the litigation
with Houston 's Fibich, Hampton & Lee bron. One petition often reflects
another, alleging that the church structure is so strictly hierarchical, its
control over its elders and members so absolute, that each level of the JW organization,
from top to bottom, should be treated as the "alter ego of the other."
Pleading causes of action that include vicarious liability and negligence, Love
& Norris hopes to prove that the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, the
official name of the New York-based Jehovah's Witnesses organization, negligently
performed the duty it had undertaken to investigate reports of child sexual
abuse and discipline offenders.
Although Love & Norris filed cases in other states first, a case in Amarillo
, Texas , has progressed the fastest. On March 29, Judge Patrick A. Pirtle of
the 251st District Court in P otter County allowed Norris & Love's client
to partially survive a motion for summary judgment in Amy B. v. Watchtower
Bible and Tract Society of New York Inc., et al . ( Amy B.'s last name
has been protected by the court from disclosure.)
Marvin W. Jones, a shareholder in Amarillo 's Sprouse Shrader Smith who represents
the Jehovah's Witnesses organization at the congregational (Amarillo-Southwest
and Dumas) and national ( New York and P ennsylvania ) levels, has offered a
spirited defense against Amy B.'s suit. Collectively representing all the "Watchtower
defen dan ts," he wrote in a motion for summary judgment that his clients
owed no duty to protect Amy B. from the crime of a congregant. Besides, he argued,
the First Amendment also bars the suit.
Ronald T. Spriggs, an Amarillo solo, represents defendant Larry Kelley, who
pleaded guilty to a charge of indecency with a child ( Amy B.). In answering
Amy B.'s petition, Spriggs filed a general denial on his client's behalf. But
before Spriggs began his representation, Kelley filed a pro se answer to Amy
B.'s civil suit in which he wrote "there were only two (2) instances of
sexual contact" with the plaintiff.
Because Amy B. presents compelling factual, procedural and constitutional
questions , its resolution likely will have repercussions in JW molestation
litigation across the country. But the Watchtower defendants claim they should
not be held liable for doing more than most churches would do under similar
circumstances: making good-faith efforts to discipline congregants who succumbed
to sin. With so much at stake, each side has, in essence, declared war on the
other.
"It's going to be a long, bloody
battle," Bowen says.
THE A P
OSTASY OF AMY B.
The facts alleged in the case of Amy B. appeared to fit within the
parameters Norris and her litigation team wished to pursue. The plaintiff alleges
the following in her Third Amended Petition: Kelley held the position of elder
in the Jehovah's Witnesses congregation in Dumas until 1985 when he exploited
that position by sexually abusing children in the congregation. When the Watchtower
defen dan ts learned what Kelley was doing, the Dumas congregation disciplined
him, although the defen dan ts "concealed the crime from law enforcement."
Kelley later moved to an Amarillo congregation, which knew about his past, but
kept the information confidential.
Spriggs denies his client held any church authority in Amarillo , but the plaintiff
contends that Amarillo elders appointed Kelley to the position of "leading
out for service," the door-to-door proselytizing for which Jehovah's Witnesses
are most visible. An 8-year-old Amy B. did her "service" with Kelley,
and was instructed to help his disabled wife at their home, as alleged in the
petition. While there and in service, Amy B. testified in her deposition, Larry
Kelley "sexually molested me ... on numerous occasions."
Amy B. "told the church elders about the abuse," says Hartley Hampton,
a partner in Fibich, Hampton & Lee bron who leads the plaintiff's Amarillo
trial team. "She also reported it to the Amarillo P olice Department."
In 1992, police filed a case of indecency with a child related to Amy B. to
which Kelley pleaded guilty. He was sentenced to "shock probation,"
getting a "taste of prison," Spriggs says, and then received a 10-year
probated sentence.
In his pro se answer, Kelley also
wrote, "When I committed my only offense in Dumas, indecency with a child,
it was not with a young girl from the Dumas Congregation." He wrote that
the day after the incident, he felt such "disgust for my behavior that
I went to the Elders of the Dumas congregation ... and confessed what I had
done."
Internal church documents that reflect
the discipline taken against Kelley have become the subject of a hotly contested
discovery battle in Amy B.'s civil suit. Norris believes these will support
her client's claim of negligence against the congregations and vicarious liability
against the higher church authority.
If church practice is any indication,
she may have her proof.
After a Jehovah's Witness is accused
of child abuse, "a judicial committee of three elders meets to consider
the accusation," says Watchtower Society associate general counsel Mario
F. Moreno who also is an elder. "According to scripture [Deuteronomy 19:15
], for a person to be disciplined, there needs to be at least two witnesses
to substantiate the charge or an admission of sin."
"I don't know many perpetrators
who come with their own witness in tow," deadpans Norris. "And if
they don't have a second witness and the perpetrator denies the accusation,
from a disciplinary standpoint, that's the end of it." They are allowed
unsupervised access to children, she contends, and are free to molest again.
If the perpetrator admits the sin
and claims he is repentant, he will be "reproofed" -- placed on religious
restriction during which he is prevented from taking a lead role in church matters,
Moreno says. Although the congregation may announce that someone has
been reproofed, he adds, "it won't tell who, and it won't tell why."
Again, an abuser is allowed to remain in the church, claims Norris, while the
rest of the laity remains ignorant and unprotected.
Despite the two-witness rule, Moreno
says, the Watchtower legal department instructs elders to report child abuse
to law enforcement in states where clergy are legally obliged to do so. "Victims
and their families also have the absolute right to report abuse to the authorities."
Norris counters that church practice
is just the opposite. In each of the JW suits, her clients allege that Watchtower
defendants enforce an "organization-wide policy preventing the reporting
of child sexual abuse to law enforcement."
Section 261.101 of the Texas Family Code puts all persons including clergy under
a legal duty to report child abuse to the authorities, and the failure to do
so is a Class B misdemeanor under § 261.109. But in the case of Amy B., Hampton,
her attorney, claims church elders made no such report. "They can say they
report all they want to, but in this case, they didn't." Their silence,
alleges Amy B. in a pre-trial motion, "allowed Kelley to abuse at least
two children, including the Plaintiff."
The Watchtower defen dan ts withheld, amon g other items, their judicial committee
files, claiming in their Motion for a Protective Order that the First Amendment
and the clergy-penitent privilege shield their disclosure. "If the court
is required to look at scripture to see if a certain church procedure falls
within the clergy privilege," says Watchtower attorney Jones, "the
very act of looking into scripture to make that determination is a violation
of the First Amendment."
But to be privileged under Rule 505 of the Texas Rules of Civil Evidence, disclosures
must be made to clergy in their capacity as spiritual advisers. Since the Dumas
and Amarillo judicial committees that adjudicated Kelley's sins would be "investigatory"
and "confrontational," contends Amy B. in her Omnibus Motion to Compel,
the committees were not acting as Kelley's spiritual adviser. More importantly,
any privileged communication is trumped by § 261.202 of the Texas Family Code,
which eliminates all privileges, other than attorney-client, in matters of child
abuse.
After listening to arguments on Jan. 30, Judge P irtle took the plaintiff's
Omnibus Motion to Compel under advisement. But much of the motion was pre-empted
by the defen dan t's subsequent Motion for Summary Judgment.
In it, the Watchtower defendants again raised the First Amendment as a bar to
the litigation, but more to the point, claimed that under Texas law, they owed
no duty to protect the plaintiff from the crimes of a fellow congregant.
Fact is, "this is a pretty conservative area of the law," Hampton
says. "Several [JW] cases have been lost where one church member abuses
another and there is no church action putting victim and perpetrator together.
In those cases, there was no duty of care assumed by the church toward the victim.
But they are different from our cases, hopefully."
The defendants' summary judgment motion cut to the core of the case: Did each
of the Watchtower defen dan ts owe a legal duty to protect the plaintiff? If
there was no duty, there was no cause of action. If there was a duty, the Norris
team would be one step closer to a jury, as well as a precedent it could argue
throughout the country.
JUDGMENT DAY
It would be difficult enough imposing
a duty on the Dumas and Amarillo congregations, where each allegedly
had notice of Kelley's conduct and, through its actions, had put Kelley and
Amy B. together. But the plaintiff's deep-pockets strategy seeks to hold the
entire JW hierarchy liable under a theory of vicarious liability. To prove this,
even for purposes of surviving summary judgment, meant offering facts that would
show that the JW Governing Body in New York owed a duty to protect the plaintiff
from the harm of a fellow congregant. The Governing Body exercises "absolute
authority over every person and all matters in the organization," alleges
Amy B. in her petition, "Through its hierarchical structure, the Watchtower
Defendants assume responsibility for the protection and discipline of its membership."
"To question the Governing
Body or even its appointed elders means possible disfellowshipping," says
Bowen, who was himself disfellowshipped after he began criticizing the church.
"And that means spiritual murder to believers, which will keep you out
of earthly paradise when Armageddon comes." If excommunicated in this fashion,
says Bowen, not only will you be shunned by church members, but church doctrine
also decrees that for those who are "not baptized door-knocking Jehovah's
Witnesses, your salvation is toast."
Because the Governing Body exercises
a degree of control over its congregations not seen "anywhere except the
military," Hampton adds, "that control creates an agency relationship
that makes the corporate church vicariously liable for the negligence of its
congregations."
But with more than 6 million active
Jehovah's Witnesses worldwide, argues Watchtower Society associate GC Moreno,
"the idea that we are robots who do whatever the elders say is not correct."
In the Watchtower defendants'
Motion for Summary
Judgment, they allege that the First Amendment precluded the court from finding
a duty to protect because that would entail assessing the "reasonableness
of the Church Defen dan
ts religious beliefs."
However, in matters of child sex abuse, the trend in the courts is toward finding
a compelling state interest to protect the welfare of children, says University
of Texas School of Law professor Douglas Laycock, who teaches constitutional
law. But, he cautions, "the farther you get away from the abuser
, the less likely
the courts will find a duty and the more likely they are to find a First Amendment
defense."
Closer to the alleged ab user
, however, were
the Dumas and Amarillo
congregations,
close enough that Judge P
irtle didn't trifle
with First Amendment concerns and disposed of the pretrial issues under Texas
law. In his two
March 29 letter
rulings, the judge
offered something for -- and against -- everyone. While he found that a duty
exists "between the P
laintiff and the
congregations," he granted summary judgment for the more remote Watchtower
defendants
in New York
and P ennsylvania
, ruling they had
no such duty. The judge also overruled the claims of clergy-penitent privilege,
which allows much of the discovery to proceed against the remaining defendants.
Although the judge articulated the law, he did not detail its application to
the facts, and Amy
B. filed a motion
for clarification, which the court is entertaining. The remaining defendants
also say they plan
to appeal. What seems clear, however, is that a Texas
court has ruled
that two Texas Jehovah's Witnesses congregations assumed a duty to protect the
plaintiff from the alleged sexual abuse of another congregant. Whether a jury
decides it breached that duty is a matter for another day.
"We are just at the front end of these cases," Norris says. "And
both sides are loaded for bear."