Justice for Maryland Survivors at a Crossroads as The State Supreme Court Prepares to Hear Arguments on the Child Victims Act’s Constitutionality
September 05 2024 - 10:00AM
The Maryland Supreme Court on September 10th is scheduled to hear
oral arguments in an historic civil rights case that will determine
the future of the widely-heralded Maryland Child Victims Act of
2023 (CVA). On September 5, a consortium of three leading
CVA-focused law firms (Jenner Law, Grant & Eisenhofer, and
Baird Mandalas Brockstedt & Federico), is holding a
comprehensive, pre-argument litigation update-news conference
(10:00 a.m., September 5th, at Jenner Law). The attorneys, who were
among the first to file complaints under the CVA – including Bunker
v. The Key School, et al., in which a federal court asked the
Maryland Supreme Court to decide whether the CVA is constitutional
-- will review the litigation and explain the significance of the
Court’s decision for their survivor-clients and countless other
Maryland survivors. Survivors Stories: At The Crossroads of
Justice, a short documentary featuring the voices of several
survivors and their advocates, also debuts at the briefing.
The Maryland legislature passed the CVA in 2023, overcoming
intense opposition from the Catholic Church and other groups
accused of enabling and/or facilitating childhood sexual abuse, to
ensure justice for all Maryland childhood sexual
abuse survivors, regardless of how much time has passed since their
abuse occurred.
The attorneys will be joined by survivors who are also
plaintiffs in pending litigation against the Roman Catholic
Archdiocese of Washington, legislative leaders, and advocates,
including David Lorenz of Survivor Network for of Those Abused by
Priests (SNAP) and others who have battled for years to obtain the
full measure of justice and accountability for survivors.
According to researchers, countless children have been sexually
abused– injured physically and emotionally - by adults and
institutions they trusted, with no legal recourse. To the survivors
– many now elderly, unable to come forward for decades after their
horrific abuse –the CVA is a beacon of hope that represents their
last chance for justice after a lifetime of dislocation and
suffering.
“Upholding the General Assembly’s constitutional authority to
pass the CVA is central to ensuring that all survivors of childhood
sexual abuse can have what a just society owes them-- their day in
court,” said the legal team. “Maryland lawmakers methodically
designed the CVA, guided by legal scholars and experts in childhood
sexual abuse, to address a profound injustice that has largely
silenced our state’s survivors. Many survivors were groomed then
victimized as vulnerable children by assailants in the private and
public sectors, including clergy, school teachers, detention
facility workers, and others. We are hopeful, based on the
comprehensive, fact-based record that the Maryland Supreme Court
will uphold the constitutionality of this vital legislation.”
Cate Stetson, co-director of the Supreme Court and Appellate
Practice at Hogan Lovells US LLP, will present oral argument for
some of the Plaintiffs on September 10. She stated, “We are proud
to stand alongside Ms. Bunker and all survivors who deserve and are
undeniably entitled to justice.”
The Maryland Attorney General filed a brief supporting the
constitutionality of the CVA, and will participate in oral
argument. The legislature passed the CVA largely in response to
revelations by the Attorney General’s office about the Archdiocese
of Baltimore’s cover-up of hundreds of instances sexual abuse
spanning decades. In addition, several organizations filed amicus
briefs by leading civil and children’s rights organizations (Human
Rights for Kids, American Association for Justice, Public Justice,
the Maryland Association for Justice, Child USA, Change The
Conversation, and the Maryland Crime Victims Resource Center).
The CVA repealed the state’s long standing, restrictive statute
of limitations for survivors of childhood sexual abuse, entitling
them to a jury trial and possible restitution from their abusers
and enablers. Named defendants, including the Archdiocese of
Washington and Key School, argue that the new law should be
overturned because it violates the Maryland Constitution’s due
process provision by reviving claims that were time-barred under
prior state law.
At least 30 U.S. states and territories have also passed similar
laws to revive claims of childhood sexual abuse. “Like legislatures
across the country, the Maryland General Assembly was well within
its power to serve the compelling interest in justice for victims
of sexual abuse when it passed the CVA. Without the CVA, victims
and the public would be forced to bear these psychological and
financial hardships on their own, while abusers and institutional
enablers get a free pass for their decades long misconduct and
suppression of the truth,” the legal team added.
ContactsRobert K. Jenner, Jenner
Law / rjenner@jennerlawfirm.com 410-413-2155Steven J. Kelly, Grant
& Eisenhofer / skelly@gelaw.com 410-204-4528Phil Federico,
Baird Mandalas Brockstedt & Federico /pfederico@bmbfclaw.com
410-421-7777For additional background:
https://www.survivorsadvisoryboard.com/
Coverage Note: Media outlets can begin
set up at 8:45 a.m. for the news conference in the large conference
room at Jenner Law. There is on-site parking at the site: 3600
Clipper Mill Road, Suite 240, Baltimore, MD. 21211.