Current:Home > ScamsBoth sides argue for resolution of verdict dispute in New Hampshire youth center abuse case -Wealth Empowerment Academy
Both sides argue for resolution of verdict dispute in New Hampshire youth center abuse case
TrendPulse Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-10 09:20:45
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — The $38 million verdict in a landmark lawsuit over abuse at New Hampshire’s youth detention center remains disputed nearly four months later, with both sides submitting final requests to the judge this week.
“The time is nigh to have the issues fully briefed and decided,” Judge Andrew Schulman wrote in an order early this month giving parties until Wednesday to submit their motions and supporting documents.
At issue is the $18 million in compensatory damages and $20 million in enhanced damages a jury awarded to David Meehan in May after a monthlong trial. His allegations of horrific sexual and physical abuse at the Youth Development Center in 1990s led to a broad criminal investigation resulting in multiple arrests, and his lawsuit seeking to hold the state accountable was the first of more than 1,100 to go to trial.
The dispute involves part of the verdict form in which jurors found the state liable for only “incident” of abuse at the Manchester facility, now called the Sununu Youth Services Center. The jury wasn’t told that state law caps claims against the state at $475,000 per “incident,” and some jurors later said they wrote “one” on the verdict form to reflect a single case of post-traumatic stress disorder resulting from more than 100 episodes of physical, sexual and emotional abuse.
In an earlier order, Schulman said imposing the cap, as the state has requested, would be an “unconscionable miscarriage of justice.” But he suggested in his Aug. 1 order that the only other option would be ordering a new trial, given that the state declined to allow him to adjust the number of incidents.
Meehan’s lawyers, however, have asked Schulman to set aside just the portion of the verdict in which jurors wrote one incident, allowing the $38 million to stand, or to order a new trial focused only on determining the number of incidents.
“The court should not be so quick to throw the baby out with the bath water based on a singular and isolated jury error,” they wrote.
“Forcing a man — who the jury has concluded was severely harmed due to the state’s wanton, malicious, or oppressive conduct — to choose between reliving his nightmare, again, in a new and very public trial, or accepting 1/80th of the jury’s intended award, is a grave injustice that cannot be tolerated in a court of law,” wrote attorneys Rus Rilee and David Vicinanzo.
Attorneys for the state, however, filed a lengthy explanation of why imposing the cap is the only correct way to proceed. They said jurors could have found that the state’s negligence caused “a single, harmful environment” in which Meehan was harmed, or they may have believed his testimony only about a single episodic incident.
In making the latter argument, they referred to an expert’s testimony “that the mere fact that plaintiff may sincerely believe he was serially raped does not mean that he actually was.”
Meehan, 42, went to police in 2017 to report the abuse and sued the state three years later. Since then, 11 former state workers have been arrested, although one has since died and charges against another were dropped after the man, now in his early 80s, was found incompetent to stand trial.
The first criminal case goes to trial Monday. Victor Malavet, who has pleaded not guilty to 12 counts of aggravated felonious sexual assault, is accused of assaulting a teenage girl at a pretrial facility in Concord in 2001.
veryGood! (96869)
Related
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- 1 dead, several injured in Honolulu after shuttle bus crashes outside cruise terminal
- Jill Duggar Dillard, Derick Dillard reveal stillbirth of daughter Isla Marie in emotional post
- Midwest braces for severe thunderstorms, possible tornadoes, 'destructive winds' on Monday
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Kamala Harris blames Trump for abortion bans during Arizona visit
- Taylor Swift says Ryan Gosling, Emily Blunt's 'All Too Well' cover on 'SNL' was 'everything'
- A Highway in Indiana Could One Day Charge Your EV While You’re Driving It
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- Kamala Harris blames Trump for abortion bans during Arizona visit
Ranking
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce dance to Bleachers, Ice Spice at Coachella
- How much money will Caitlin Clark make as a rookie in the WNBA?
- Doja Cat offers Yetis, mud wrestling and ASAP Rocky as guest in arty Coachella headlining set
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- 13-year-old girl shot to death in small Iowa town; 12-year-old boy taken into custody
- Taylor Swift's No. 1 songs ranked, including 'Cruel Summer,' 'All Too Well,' 'Anti-Hero'
- Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce dance to Bleachers, Ice Spice at Coachella
Recommendation
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
Kansas governor vetoes ban on gender-affirming care for minors, anti-abortion bills
Full transcript of Face the Nation, April 14, 2024
Doja Cat offers Yetis, mud wrestling and ASAP Rocky as guest in arty Coachella headlining set
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
FBI opens criminal investigation into Baltimore bridge collapse, AP source says
Sunday Morning archives: Impressionism at 150
Here's what time taxes are due on April 15