By Jessica Dye
NEW YORK, Jan 24 (Reuters) - A Brooklyn judge has rejected
an Orthodox Jewish day school's attempt to settle a civil
lawsuit brought by a boy who said he had been sexually abused by
one of the school's teachers.
Supreme Court Justice Jack Battaglia denied Yeshiva &
Mesivta Torah Temimah Inc's motion to enforce a confidential
settlement because the parents of the alleged abuse victim
changed their minds and rejected the deal after they signed it
in 2011.
"The court cannot say on the record presented that the
refusal of (plaintiff)'s parents to proceed with the settlement
in accordance with the Feb. 15, 2011, settlement agreement is
unreasonable, arbitrary and capricious," Battaglia wrote in a
ruling Wednesday.
The underlying lawsuit was one of several filed by alleged
abuse victims and their parents against Yeshiva & Mesivta Torah
Temimah, which operates Orthodox Jewish day schools in Brooklyn,
the ruling said.
The case was brought in 2006 by a boy who said he was abused
by Rabbi Joel Kolko during the 2003-2004 school year. It was not
immediately clear whether Kolko still teaches at Yeshiva Torah
Temimah.
The boy, who according to the ruling is now 15 years old, is
not named in the decision. His parents are also plaintiffs in
the lawsuit.
The claims include negligence in hiring, supervising and
retaining Kolko and breach of fiduciary duty.
In 2011, the parties reached a confidential settlement
agreement, which was signed by the boy's parents, the ruling
said. Days later, the parents reversed course and said they no
longer agreed to the settlement, which they said had been signed
under "duress," the ruling said.
The parents also said they had come under fire from some
members of their community. A rabbi at the school told them they
would "bankrupt" the yeshiva and destroy it in the way "the
Nazis (have) destroyed" the "yeshiva in Europe," the ruling
said.
Lawyers for the school disputed that the parents had signed
under duress, according to the ruling. They moved for an order
approving an infant compromise, which would allow the court to
approve a settlement involving a claim brought by a minor.
Battaglia rejected the request.
The settlement "might well be found to be in the infant
plaintiff's best interests, but that is not the standard for a
settlement contrary to the judgment of the infant plaintiff's
parent and counsel," the judge wrote.
The school and a lawyer for the plaintiff did not
immediately return requests for comment Thursday.
CRIMINAL CASE
Kolko, a first-grade teacher who taught at the Yeshiva Torah
Temimah in Brooklyn, was indicted by local prosecutors in 2007
for sexually abusing a former student. In 2008, he pleaded
guilty to two counts of endangering the welfare of a child and
was sentenced to three years' probation.
He was rearrested in 2010 after prosecutors accused him of
violating a protective order that barred him from interacting
with the boy who had accused him of abuse. Following a jury
trial last year, Kolko was acquitted of violating the protective
order.
A lawyer who represented Kolko in the criminal case did not
immediately return a request for comment and Kolko could not be
reached for comment.
It is unclear if the boy in the criminal case is the same as
the one in the civil lawsuit before Battaglia. It is unclear
whether Kolko still teaches at Yeshiva Torah Temimah.
Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes has come under
scrutiny in recent years for his office's handling of sex abuse
cases involving members of Brooklyn's Orthodox Jewish community.
In some media reports Hynes has been accused of helping
community leaders cover up high-profile accusations. Defending
his office's actions, Hynes has said secrecy may be necessary in
some cases to help shield victims from harassment and
intimidation.
In 2009, Hynes created a program called Kol Tzedek -- Hebrew
for "voice of justice" -- to help victims of sexual abuse in
Brooklyn's insular Orthodox Jewish communities come forward. The
program has led to 112 arrests and there are about 50 cases
pending, according to Hynes's office.
On Tuesday, a Brooklyn judge sentenced an Orthodox
counselor, Nechemya Weberman, to 103 years in prison for abusing
a young female patient.
The case is John Doe No. 4. v. Yeshiva & Mesivta Torah
Temimah Inc, New York State Supreme Court, Kings County, No.
37492/2006.
For the plaintiffs: Frank Floriani and Glenn Nick of
Sullivan Papain Block McGrath & Cannavo.
For the defendant: Avraham Moskowitz and M. Todd Parker of
Moskowitz & Book.
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