Remember CANDACE CONTI? Do you want to hear her speak LIVE?
BREAKING NEWS: CANDACE CONTI to be interviewed by major LOS ANGELES network TOMORROW NIGHT!
Wednesday
04/03/2013
8pm EST, 5pm PAC
IF you want to listen in, go to the following link on WEDNESDAY, April 3 at 8 pm EST, 5 pm PAC:
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/bill-murray
Candace Conti AND her lawyer, Rick Simons will be interviewed.
Please show your support. The fight goes on and Candace and Kathleen live this every single day.
The NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF ADULT SURVIVORS OF CHILD ABUSE has picked up the story!
They have almost 100,000 listeners!
Show your support! Listen in! Call in!
Stop Child Abuse Now (SCAN) - 543
Call in to speak with the host, BILL MURRAY
(646) 595-2118
http://www.NAASCA.org
http://www.twitter.com/Bmurray3rd
http://www.facebook.com/Bmurray3rd
Special guest Candace Conti, the first person to successfully to sue a Jehovah's Witness elder for childhood sexual abuse. She'll be joined by her attorney, Rick Simon.
Mr Simon was the lead attorney in the coordinated cases in Northern California known as Clergy 3 (primarily Catholic victims) and has represented over 250 victims of childhood sexual assault (CSA). He tried 5 cases to jury trial verdict. Candace is a survivor who was the first victim to successfully bring a case to trial against the Jehovah's Witnesses, resulting in the largest jury verdict ($28,000,001) for a single victim of child sex abuse in a religious setting in the country. The Jehovah's Witnesses is responsible for the entire punitive damages amount and 40 % of the compensatory damages, explained Rick Simons. Sixty % of the compensatory damages was assessed against Jonathan Kendrick, the man accused of abusing her. "The ultimate goal of the lawsuit was to have a change in policy, to be able to ID these people, child molesters, to the congregation to protect children," according to Ms. Conti. "Secondarily, to have silent ones come forward and tell their stories and to bring to light that overall issue of violence and the hush-hush policy." Both her parents were Watchtower congregation members at the time of the abuse, she said. "I was trying to be the best Jehovah's Witness I could be at that time." The jury found that the elders who managed the congregation in the 1990s knew that Kendrick, a member, had recently been convicted of the sexual abuse of another child, but they kept his past record secret. Kendrick went on to molest the plaintiff over a two-year period beginning when she was 9 years old. Kendrick was eventually convicted in 2004 of the sexual abuse of another girl, and is now a registered sex offender in California.