And just as you say that Watchtower feared to lose the person who accepts the settlement may have feared to lose too.
I don't believe that for a second. Watchtower desperately needs a win over which it can boast and gain back a small amount of public image. If there is any way the Organization thinks it can win it will stick with the case to the end.
When Watchtower lost the Conti case it was the first case the Organization lost since the Olin Moyle case in the late 1930s/early 1940s. In the intervening time sexual abuse cases hadn't surfaced, but now that they have it's a whole different ball game for Watchtower.
In the Conti case, in fact, it was a victory for watchtower. It showed that Watchtower did not have a duty to warn or a duty to protect.
No, the Conti case was a loss for Watchtower. Your reference is to the punitive damages only, not to the compensatory damages which were in the millions by themselves. What did Watchtower and Conti settle for? No one knows, but it is always Watchtower that insists on the non-disclosure agreement, indicating that if the amount was known it would be humiliating for the Organization.
Again name one case.
Again you are being disingenuous (but I've grown accustomed to it).