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Louisiana Supreme Court Makes It Harder For Church Abuse Survivors to Hold Priests Accountable

ballsandstrikes.org Louisiana Supreme Court Makes It Harder For Church Abuse Survivors to Hold Priests Accountable

A new decision from the Louisiana Supreme Court casts down on the ability of survivors to sue the Catholic Church for sexual abuse.

Louisiana Supreme Court Makes It Harder For Church Abuse Survivors to Hold Priests Accountable

. . . Enter the Louisiana Supreme Court. In an opinion written by Justice James Genovese and published on March 22, the court found an absolute property right in the institutions’ right not to be sued. The Louisiana Child Victims Act, wrote Genovese, “cannot be retroactively applied to revive plaintiffs’ prescribed causes of action,” since that would “divest defendants of their vested right to plead prescription”—to defend themselves by asserting that the statute of limitations had run. The decision essentially strikes down the look-back window, leaving survivors once again powerless to hold their abusers accountable. It is a harrowing example of the legal system’s ability to obscure the nature of disputes and turn survivors’ real-life trauma into euphemistic abstractions, while at the same time protecting powerful institutions in the name of otherwise ephemeral property rights.

More: Court to revisit controversial ruling protecting priests from civil suits by adult victims of child sexual abuse

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