AnnOMaly; Again, you are re-hashing the same ol' baloney here as you did on beliefnet, that the WTS and the elders were not liable for Candace's abuse because (according to what your comments were implying in post #1),
I'm simply addressing the respondent’s brief prepared by the plaintiff's attorneys. If that entails bringing up some aforementioned point, so be it.
-eye-witnesses could not corroborate, and Candace did not tell the truth, about the opportunities for and circumstances of her abuse; she wouldn't have been assigned to work with Kendrick in FS; it was not normal to sit on an unrelated grown man's lap at the meetings and so,
What you're stating doesn't make any sense. All a person can go by is the eyewitness accounts of others. Even the “medical professional's” opinion about the plaintiff's PTSD claims is based on observation. There was no physical diagnosis. If the testimony of eyewitnesses is “baloney,” why should I believe in the testimony of the plaintiff and Carolyn Martinez? As for eyewitnesses, I have reason to doubt the plaintiff's claims and that of Carolyn Martinez (Neal Conti's ex-wife), because of their ridiculous nature and the counter testimony of every other eyewitness in this case (several witnesses before the jury trial commenced, nine other witnesses during the actual jury trial). Not to mention, the claims of the plaintiff and Carolyn Martinez conflict with each other.
The claims are not plausible. If a grown man started holding hands with someone's minor daughter in front of a bunch of people, or if something like this was relayed to the parent(s).... that's a good way to get your arse kicked by someone's Dad. If Carolyn Martinez was the only person to witness such a thing and she didn't convey her observations to the right person(s), it's certainly not grounds for liability.
Even if the claims were true, if inappropriate activity (bear hugs, lap sitting, holding hands) in a church auditorium was any kind of deal breaker for a civil lawsuit, you would have seen this as grounds for liability before. All churches have an auditorium.
In criminal law, a violation of the law and associated punishment is defined by statute.
In civil law (whose emphasis is more on dispute resolution and victim compensation than on punishment), legal statutes may be referenced, but grounds for liability is defined by prior lawsuits.
- her parents consented to Kendrick's odd behavior with Candace and facilitated the abuse, therefore they should be liable;
“Odd behavior?” Try highly inappropriate. It is highly inappropriate for any parent to allow their minor daughter to hang out with a thirty to forty year old unrelated man for no good reason. No one in the organization is asking, recommending or even suggesting that a parent do such a thing. Judging from the parent's trial testimony and track record, I don't believe the parents ever did this. I believe the parent's testimony, not the plaintiff's.
If the plaintiff's claims were true and her parents were comfortable leaving their daughter with this man for no good reason, the organization did not contribute to any alleged abuse.
The grounds for liability for any successful lawsuit filed in the United States pertaining to child abuse has always been cut and dry.
A third party can only incur liability if they contributed to any alleged abuse.
- that Rick Simons (and the court system) is targetting JWs; he and the Plaintiff are only doing this for the money.
Familiarize yourself with lawsuit abuse and “ambulance chasers.”
The US is the most litigious county in the world. That's why attorneys have such a bad reputation in this county.