Maine Court Asked to Nix Church Immunity in Abuse Case
Maine’s supreme court is being asked to overturn the concept of charitable immunity in a church abuse lawsuit.
A lawyer told the Maine Supreme Judicial Court that the Roman Catholic bishop knew the Rev. Raymond Melville had “pedophilic tendencies” when he was assigned to work at a parish in Augusta in 1986. While there, he’s accused of abusing William Picher.
As it stands, Maine law protects the bishop under the shield of charitable immunity. That doctrine was cited in a summary judgment against Picher late last year.
Gerald Petruccelli, lawyer for the diocese, says the charitable immunity doctrine was established 98 years ago and reaffirmed as recently as six years ago.
___
Information from: Kennebec Journal, http://www.kjonline.com/
Copyright 2026 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Popular Today
- Why Toyota RAV4s Are Suddenly the Most Coveted Used Cars in America
- Ford Recalling 548,000 US Vehicles Over Defective Center Console
- Amazon Faces Billions in Penalties From Potential FTC Ad Suit
- Trump Transportation Department Rescinds ‘Disparate Impact’ Civil Rights Regulation
Popular This Month