Current:Home > NewsMaryland Supreme Court hears arguments on child sex abuse lawsuits -Clarity Finance Guides
Maryland Supreme Court hears arguments on child sex abuse lawsuits
View
Date:2025-04-12 08:25:36
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) — The Supreme Court of Maryland heard arguments on Tuesday about the constitutionality of a 2023 law that ended the state’s statute of limitations for child sexual abuse lawsuits following a report that exposed widespread wrongdoing within the Archdiocese of Baltimore.
The arguments, which lasted several hours and often veered into highly technical legalese, largely focused on the intent of the Maryland legislature when it passed a preceding law in 2017 that said people in Maryland who were sexually abused as children could bring lawsuits up until they turned 38.
A ruling from the state’s highest court is expected in the coming months.
Gov. Wes Moore, a Democrat, signed the Child Victims Act into law last year — less than a week after the state’s attorney general released a report that documented rampant abuse committed by Baltimore clergy spanning 80 years and accused church leaders of decades of coverups.
The report, which is nearly 500 pages, included details about more than 150 Catholic priests and others associated with the Archdiocese of Baltimore abusing over 600 children. State investigators began their work in 2019. They reviewed over 100,000 pages of documents dating back to the 1940s and interviewed hundreds of victims and witnesses.
Days before the new law was to take effect Oct. 1, the archdiocese filed for bankruptcy to protect its assets ahead of an anticipated deluge of litigation. That means claims filed against the archdiocese will be relegated to bankruptcy court, but other institutions such as Catholic schools and individual parishes can still be sued directly.
All lawsuits filed under the Child Victims Act have been placed on hold pending a decision from the Maryland Supreme Court. Lawmakers had anticipated such a challenge on constitutional grounds and included a provision in the law outlining that process.
While the court’s ruling will have wide-reaching effects for child sex abuse cases in Maryland, the oral arguments Tuesday centered on a seemingly small technical issue involving the earlier 2017 law change that established the cutoff at age 38.
The question at hand is whether a provision in the 2017 legislation was written in such a way that permanently protected certain defendants from liability. Answering that question likely requires the court to decide whether the provision should be considered a statute of limitations or a so-called statute of repose.
Attorneys for defendants facing liability claims under the new law contend it’s a statute of repose, which they say can’t be modified because it includes a “vested right to be free from liability.”
“As a general matter, of course, a legislature may repeal existing laws and substitute new ones. But it may not do so in a manner that destroys substantive rights that have vested under the terms of existing law,” the Archdiocese of Washington wrote in a brief filed ahead of oral arguments.
Attorneys representing businesses, insurance companies and Maryland civil defense lawyers also raised concerns in a supporting brief about issues surrounding witness testimony and record retention in cases being filed decades after the fact.
But the most substantive arguments before the court Tuesday focused on legislative intent.
Attorneys for abuse survivors asserted that when the Maryland General Assembly passed the 2017 law, legislators clearly did not intend to prevent future lawmakers from reconsidering the issue and altering the time limits on civil lawsuits. The law may have included the term “repose,” but that doesn’t mean the legislature wanted to make it permanent, attorneys argued.
“There is a debate between that label — statute of repose — and the actual operational function of the act,” attorney Catherine Stetson told the court’s seven justices, arguing that the court should consider the statute’s structure, operation and full text rather than looking at “a word in a vacuum.”
“Child sexual abuse is a scourge on society, and it often takes survivors decades to come to terms with what they suffered,” victims’ attorneys wrote in a brief. “It is hard to imagine a law more rationally related to a legitimate governmental interest than this one.”
Some justices expressed skepticism about whether state legislators in 2017 knowingly chose language with the intention of limiting the powers of their successors.
“If it had that significance, wouldn’t you expect that there would be more explanation in the legislative record?” Chief Justice Matthew Fader asked. “Wouldn’t that have popped up somewhere?”
Attorneys for the Archdiocese of Washington and the Key School, a small private school in Annapolis, asserted that the legislature was clear and unambiguous in its language.
“The General Assembly meant exactly what it said,” attorney Sean Gugerty told the court. “The plain language of the statute is what controls the analysis.”
Justice Brynja Booth pointed out that interpreting the law isn’t always cut and dry.
“Don’t we often look beyond a label ... to look at the characteristics to determine what it actually means,” she said.
veryGood! (9937)
Related
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Workers exit GM facilities targeted as expanded UAW strikes get underway
- Q&A: How the Wolves’ Return Enhances Biodiversity
- 'We still haven't heard': Family of student body-slammed by officer says school never reached out
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- After climate summit, California Gov. Gavin Newsom faces key decisions to reduce emissions back home
- Tropical Storm Ophelia tracks up East Coast, downing trees and flooding roads
- UNGA Briefing: Nagorno-Karabakh, Lavrov and what else is going on at the UN
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- One Kosovo police officer killed and another wounded in an attack in the north, raising tensions
Ranking
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Many states are expanding their Medicaid programs to provide dental care to their poorest residents
- 'Penalties won us the game': NC State edges Virginia in wild, penalty-filled finish
- How Jessica Alba's Mexican Heritage Has Inspired Her Approach to Parenting
- 'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
- The federal government is headed into a shutdown. What does it mean, who’s hit and what’s next?
- Pete Davidson Is Dating Outer Banks’ Madelyn Cline
- A bombing at a checkpoint in Somalia killed at least 18 people, authorities say
Recommendation
Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
Salt water wedge in the Mississippi River threatens drinking water in Louisiana
Crashed F-35: What to know about the high-tech jet that often doesn't work correctly
'We still haven't heard': Family of student body-slammed by officer says school never reached out
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
Historians race to find Great Lakes shipwrecks before quagga mussels destroy the sites
Samples of asteroid Bennu are coming to Earth Sunday. Could the whole thing be next?
UNGA Briefing: There’s one more day to go after a break — but first, here’s what you missed