Court Overturns $12M Sex Abuse Verdict Against Boy Scouts

File - In this Feb. 4, 2013 file photo, shows a close up detail of a Boy Scout uniform worn during a news conference in front of the Boy Scouts of America headquarters in Irving, Texas. Attorneys for the Boy Scouts o... File - In this Feb. 4, 2013 file photo, shows a close up detail of a Boy Scout uniform worn during a news conference in front of the Boy Scouts of America headquarters in Irving, Texas. Attorneys for the Boy Scouts of America have reached a settlement with a former San Antonio Scout who says he was abused by his adult leader. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez, File) MORE LESS
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HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — The Connecticut Supreme Court on Monday overturned a $12 million jury verdict against the Boy Scouts of America — the largest ever against the organization — in the case of a boy who alleged he was sexually assaulted by an older boy in his troop in the mid-1970s.

Justices ordered a new trial in a split decision, saying the trial judge improperly denied a defense request to instruct jurors on negligence liability. Three of the seven justices said they believed the case should have been dismissed because of a two-year statute of limitations on lawsuits alleging negligence and recklessness.

The plaintiff, identified as John Doe in court documents, sued the Irving, Texas-based Boy Scouts in 2012. He alleged he was sexually assaulted three times beginning when he was 11 by an older Scout in Troop 137 in New Fairfield. He said the abuse sent his life into a downward spiral of suicide attempts, drug abuse and an inability to be intimate with people.

Doe’s lawsuit said national Boy Scouts leaders failed to protect him. He said leaders knew for decades about child sexual abuse during Scouting activities — including many instances of older Scouts sexually assaulting younger Scouts — but didn’t act to prevent it.

Doe’s lawyers, Paul Slager and Jennifer Goldstein, presented evidence introduced at similar trials across the country — that Boy Scouts officials kept confidential files dating back to the 1920s that contained information on alleged pedophiles.

“Rather than use this information to implement basic policies to prevent further sexual molestations, however, BSA … concealed the information from local councils, local troops, parents and scouts themselves,” Slager and Goldstein wrote in a legal brief. “BSA placed its reputation above the well-being of its youth members for decades, resulting directly in the preventable sexual victimization of thousands of young boys, including plaintiff.”

Slager on Monday said he and Goldstein were disappointed with the Supreme Court’s ruling but respected the decision.

Lawyers and a spokeswoman for the Boy Scouts didn’t immediately return messages Monday.

Officials with the Boy Scouts said previously that they disagreed with the jury’s findings and noted the Scouts now have many measures in place to prevent abuse, including criminal background checks, mandatory reporting of abuse allegations and a comprehensive education program.

A jury in Waterbury Superior Court found in Doe’s favor in December 2014 and awarded $7 million in damages, and a judge later added nearly $5 million more. The verdict included compensatory and punitive damages for negligence, infliction of emotional distress and recklessness.

The Supreme Court on Monday also rejected claims by the Boy Scouts that the organization had no “duty” to protect Doe from the older Scout’s actions and that Doe didn’t present sufficient evidence that the Boy Scouts were responsible for what happened to him.

The older Scout accused of abusing Doe was identified in court documents as Siegfried Hepp, who was a Boy Scout leader for two decades before being charged in 2000 with fondling a 15-year-old boy. Hepp pleaded guilty to risk of injury to a minor and was sentenced to 20 years of probation and 10 years of sex offender registration. He wasn’t a defendant in Doe’s lawsuit.

Messages seeking comment were left with phone listings for Hepp on Monday.

Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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