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Fairbanks Diocese has agreed to a settlement of $10 million for almost 300 alleged victims of clergy abuse.
Fairbanks Diocese has agreed to a settlement of $10 million for almost 300 alleged victims of clergy abuse.
1) It was a 50 million dollar settlementD1B wrote:300 victims. That's gotta be a record and of course the diocese is now bankrupt, financially and morally.![]()
Fairbanks Diocese has agreed to a settlement of $10 million for almost 300 alleged victims of clergy abuse.
wideright82 wrote:7) how long has this thing been going on for and why did the second article I looked at have D's facts and not mine
8) my bad D
Grizalltheway wrote:Just walk away slowly with your tail between your legs, Wide.![]()
JoltinJoe wrote:While it is proper that the diocese should compensate these victims, this fixation with the Catholic Church on the part of the media, attorneys, and anti-Catholic zealots concerning issues of child abuse is misplaced.
A Catholic priest is actually statistically less likely to be a child abuser than the average married man, as per the research of Philip Jenkins, a Penn State professor of humanities and the principal author of an authoritative study published by the Oxford University Press, Priests and Pedophiles. (Jenkins is not Catholic, by the way).
Children are abused by adults, teachers, civic leaders, and these incidents gather little or no attention because there is no deep pocket to sue, like a Catholic diocese.
wideright82 wrote:Grizalltheway wrote:Just walk away slowly with your tail between your legs, Wide.![]()
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at least I didn't just edit the post like I could have. There's something to be said for that.... I think
Wedgebuster wrote:I for one, have always had a penchant for Catholic girls.
No, you simply cannot sue the government unless the government consents, and you follow burdensome and short notice requirements in a timely fashion.D1B wrote:Yeah, the government, school districts and politicians don't have money.JoltinJoe wrote:While it is proper that the diocese should compensate these victims, this fixation with the Catholic Church on the part of the media, attorneys, and anti-Catholic zealots concerning issues of child abuse is misplaced.
A Catholic priest is actually statistically less likely to be a child abuser than the average married man, as per the research of Philip Jenkins, a Penn State professor of humanities and the principal author of an authoritative study published by the Oxford University Press, Priests and Pedophiles. (Jenkins is not Catholic, by the way).
Children are abused by adults, teachers, civic leaders, and these incidents gather little or no attention because there is no deep pocket to sue, like a Catholic diocese.
JoltinJoe wrote:No, you simply cannot sue the government unless the government consents, and you follow burdensome and short notice requirements in a timely fashion.D1B wrote:
Yeah, the government, school districts and politicians don't have money.
California, for example, has some of the tightest tort claims act deadlines in the nation; but its legislature essentially wiped out all statute of limitations defenses for others a few years back.
With some 98% percent of people claiming to be religious and or christian - boy that's alot of rapist and pedophiles.JoltinJoe wrote:While it is proper that the diocese should compensate these victims, this fixation with the Catholic Church on the part of the media, attorneys, and anti-Catholic zealots concerning issues of child abuse is misplaced.
A Catholic priest is actually statistically less likely to be a child abuser than the average married man, as per the research of Philip Jenkins, a Penn State professor of humanities and the principal author of an authoritative study published by the Oxford University Press, Priests and Pedophiles. (Jenkins is not Catholic, by the way).
Children are abused by adults, teachers, civic leaders, and these incidents gather little or no attention because there is no deep pocket to sue, like a Catholic diocese.
Read up on the concept of sovereign immunity -- which is still essentially the law in the United States today, except as waived by the states by their tort claims act statutes. Then will chat about this. People do not successfully sue school districts nearly as often as you think they do.D1B wrote:JoltinJoe wrote:
No, you simply cannot sue the government unless the government consents, and you follow burdensome and short notice requirements in a timely fashion.
California, for example, has some of the tightest tort claims act deadlines in the nation; but its legislature essentially wiped out all statute of limitations defenses for others a few years back.
People successfully sue the government/school districts all the time.
Bullshit.D1B wrote:JoltinJoe wrote:
No, you simply cannot sue the government unless the government consents, and you follow burdensome and short notice requirements in a timely fashion.
California, for example, has some of the tightest tort claims act deadlines in the nation; but its legislature essentially wiped out all statute of limitations defenses for others a few years back.
People successfully sue the government/school districts all the time.
Always the sign that you've lost the debate: the accusations of "being a lawyer" or "lying."D1B wrote: You did good. Joltin Joe would have lied his way out or worse.
JoltinJoe wrote:Always the sign that you've lost the debate: the accusations of "being a lawyer" or "lying."D1B wrote: You did good. Joltin Joe would have lied his way out or worse.
Peter, remember we torched your ass a while back by reminding you that California aint the world? Remember? It still aint.travelinman67 wrote:Bullshit.D1B wrote:
People successfully sue the government/school districts all the time.
Joe's right.
The CA Civil/Administrative/Evidence Codes are a farce. Generally, a plaintiff filing against a govt. agency is given 1/10th the time to respond to deadlines as the govt.(respondent). Furthermore, the govt. can respond with terse, unsupported denials, and the courts ASSUME the govt's. response beyond challenge. It's really a big joke.
I've been both plaintiff and respondent in torts in CA, and I affirm what Joe stated: As a rule, you will not succeed in a damages claim against a governmental agency in CA unless the agency agrees to a settlement.
And yes, two of the litigations involved school districts as respondent. We never saw one cent.
Joe, when you resort to "being a lawyer" it typically means you lost the debate through poisoning the well, employing smokescreens and red herrings and claiming support from the peanut gallery.JoltinJoe wrote:Always the sign that you've lost the debate: the accusations of "being a lawyer" or "lying."D1B wrote: You did good. Joltin Joe would have lied his way out or worse.
D1B wrote:JoltinJoe wrote:
Always the sign that you've lost the debate: the accusations of "being a lawyer" or "lying."
Joe, you do lie.
We're arguing?JoltinJoe wrote:D1B wrote:
Joe, you do lie.![]()
So you're losing this argument too?
travelinman67 wrote:Bullshit.D1B wrote:
People successfully sue the government/school districts all the time.
Joe's right.
The CA Civil/Administrative/Evidence Codes are a farce. Generally, a plaintiff filing against a govt. agency is given 1/10th the time to respond to deadlines as the govt.(respondent). Furthermore, the govt. can respond with terse, unsupported denials, and the courts ASSUME the govt's. response beyond challenge. It's really a big joke.
I've been both plaintiff and respondent in torts in CA, and I affirm what Joe stated: As a rule, you will not succeed in a damages claim against a governmental agency in CA unless the agency agrees to a settlement.
And yes, two of the litigations involved school districts as respondent. We never saw one cent.
aplogy accepted.wideright82 wrote:Grizalltheway wrote:Just walk away slowly with your tail between your legs, Wide.![]()
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at least I didn't just edit the post like I could have. There's something to be said for that.... I think
rationalizationJoltinJoe wrote:While it is proper that the diocese should compensate these victims, this fixation with the Catholic Church on the part of the media, attorneys, and anti-Catholic zealots concerning issues of child abuse is misplaced.
A Catholic priest is actually statistically less likely to be a child abuser than the average married man, as per the research of Philip Jenkins, a Penn State professor of humanities and the principal author of an authoritative study published by the Oxford University Press, Priests and Pedophiles. (Jenkins is not Catholic, by the way).
Children are abused by adults, teachers, civic leaders, and these incidents gather little or no attention because there is no deep pocket to sue, like a Catholic diocese.