Dallas Jury Awards $119.6 Million Against Catholic Diocese for Decades of Clergy Abuse and Cover-Up
Won by Turley Law Firm.
A Dallas jury returned a $119.6 million verdict against the Catholic Diocese of Dallas after finding it grossly negligent and fraudulent in concealing years of sexual abuse by priest Rudy Kos; eight of the eleven plaintiffs, represented by Windle Turley, later settled for $23.4 million.
What happened
Between roughly 1981 and 1992, Rudolph 'Rudy' Kos, a Catholic priest assigned to three Dallas-area parishes, sexually abused a string of young boys who had been drawn into his orbit as altar servers and parish volunteers. Church officials received warnings about Kos spanning more than a decade: seminary supervisors flagged concerns before his ordination, a social worker described him in writing as a 'textbook pedophile,' and colleagues reported seeing boys sleeping in his rectory room. The diocese did not remove Kos from ministry until 1992, when a victim's family finally complained directly to leadership. By then, Kos had abused as many as 50 boys, according to later accounts.
Eleven plaintiffs, ten young men and the family of one victim who had died by suicide, brought civil claims against the Diocese of Dallas in the 134th Civil District Court, Dallas County. Eight of the eleven plaintiffs retained Windle Turley; the remaining three were represented by attorney Sylvia Demarest. The plaintiffs argued that diocesan leadership had known about Kos's conduct for years, had moved him between assignments to suppress complaints, and had actively concealed the abuse from families and parishioners.
Trial concluded on July 24, 1997. Judge Anne Ashby presided. The jury found the diocese liable for gross negligence, fraud, and conspiracy, and returned a verdict of $119.6 million for the eleven plaintiffs. At the time it was reported as the largest civil judgment ever entered against a Catholic diocese in the United States. The verdict drew national attention and was covered under the headline 'Wake Up the Pope' in Texas and national media.
The diocese signaled it would appeal and raised the prospect of a bankruptcy filing. Three of the plaintiffs, those represented by Demarest, reached a separate settlement of $7.5 million in early 1998, funded by the diocese and two insurers. Windle Turley's eight clients held out for additional months. In July 1998, approximately one year after the jury verdict, the diocese settled with those eight plaintiffs for $23.4 million, with the diocese contributing $7.25 million and insurance covering the remainder. CBS News reported the settlement on July 10, 1998, naming Turley as plaintiff's counsel.
Kos was separately convicted on criminal charges and was sentenced to life in prison for molesting four altar boys. The Vatican later barred him from any ministerial role. The civil judgment and its aftermath prompted the Dallas Diocese to adopt new child-protection policies and contributed to broader national debate within the Catholic Church about accountability for clergy misconduct.
Sources
This account is drawn from contemporaneous public reporting and the court record.
- 1.The Texas Lawbook: 'Wake Up the Pope' -- staffed editorial longform on the 1997 jury verdict, Windle Turley's role, and trial record
- 2.CBS News: Diocese Settles in Abuse Case -- news article naming Windle Turley and reporting the $23.4 million settlement (July 1998)
- 3.Freedom From Religion Foundation: Historic $119.6 Million (September 1997) -- contemporaneous editorial reporting the jury verdict amount and case background
- 4.National Catholic Reporter: Three in Kos case settle for $7.5 million (March 1998) -- news article detailing the partial settlement and identifying plaintiff counsel