Victims of sexual abuse by Catholic clergy won two rather different kinds of victories this week. In Delaware, a court upheld a the state's Child Victim Act against state and federal constitutional challenges. The 2007 law eliminated the statute of limitations in civil damage actions alleging sexual abuse of a minor, and also created a two-year window during which previously barred suits can be brought. In Whitwell v. Archmere Academy, Inc., (DE Super. Ct., April 16, 2008), a state trial court rejected a challenge to the two-year window, holding that "the resurrection of time barred civil remedies does not violate due process." Plaintiff in the case alleged that in the 1980's he suffered 33 months of continuous sexual abuse by a teacher and campus minister at Archmere. Yesterday's Wilmington News Journal reported on the decision.
Meanwhile, in Washington, DC yesterday, Pope Benedict XVI met with five clergy sexual abuse victims. Yesterday's Boston Globe reports on the private meeting that was facilitated by Boston's Cardinal Sean P. O'Malley.