Bill allowing lawsuits after child sex assaults at school could be narrowed
A letter from Taylor Woods of Lincoln, a survivor of sexual assault at 19 years old while she was in a transitionary Lincoln Public Schools program for adults with disabilities, to State Sen. Danielle Conrad of Lincoln, which sits on Conrad's desk in the legislative chamber on Jan. 13, 2025. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)
LINCOLN — The ongoing legislative fight to allow lawsuits against Nebraska schools for alleged negligence in cases of child sexual assault faces a tough road in 2025, as indicated by a Wednesday hearing.
Legislative Bill 156, by State Sen. Danielle Conrad of Lincoln, was the result of months of work to find 'the most narrow approach possible' to revive a successful measure that passed 28-17 on the last day of the 2024 legislative session. Gov. Jim Pillen vetoed the bill after lawmakers had adjourned, arguing the measure was too broad and would unfairly burden taxpayers. Lawmakers had no opportunity to respond.
Conrad said LB 156, and a second proposal that mirrors the 2024 bill, represent a 'promise' to a Lincoln family to keep fighting for the issue: Loree, Roger and Taylor Woods.
Taylor Woods was sexually assaulted in 2016 while in a program through the Lincoln Public Schools. Her mother, Loree, had frequently testified urging letting families sue, even though it wouldn't have affected the Woods family. Loree and her husband, Roger, died in a September accident.
'We shouldn't afford special favors and protection because little kids are getting raped or sexually assaulted at schools … on public grounds or in a public institution,' Conrad said. 'I think if there was ever a need to have a waiver for sovereign immunity, it's for cases like Taylor.'
The issue revolves around 'sovereign immunity' and tort claims, or the idea that the government should be insulated from certain lawsuits and liabilities, in effect guarding taxpayer dollars.
Pillen said he vetoed the measure, stating it would 'substantially erode' decades-old sovereign immunity protections and was too broad.
'We must hold perpetrators accountable and protect children from abuse by enforcing the criminal laws that exist and by targeting the wrongdoer,' Pillen said in his veto letter. 'Taxpayers should not bear this burden.'
Conrad said LB 156 is in direct response to Pillen's veto.
The Nebraska Supreme Court, in contentious rulings in 2020 regarding the death of an inmate and 2024 regarding foster care youths, the latter just after Pillen's veto, has ruled that the prohibition on civil tort claims includes any claim where an 'assault' has occurred, barring most litigants from even getting in the courthouse doors, Conrad and other senators have said.
Conrad's bills, and the legislation from 2024 spearheaded by former State Sen. Justin Wayne of Omaha would create a narrow exception to sovereign immunity for crimes against children. Wayne helped usher through that bill as chair of the Judiciary Committee.
'We were so close': Nebraska mother responds to veto of child sexual assault and abuse bill
LB 156 would allow negligence lawsuits in cases of sexual assault of a child that occurred:
On school grounds.
In a vehicle owned, leased or contracted by a school and being used for a school purpose.
In a vehicle being driven for a school purpose by a school employee or designee.
At a school-sponsored activity or athletic event.
The 2024 bill and this year's copy of it, LB 236, would have allowed lawsuits beyond direct ties to a school, including child abuse, when such harm was the 'proximate result' of the failure of any political subdivision or an employee to exercise 'reasonable care' to protect the child.
Private entities, including private schools, can already be sued and held liable in these cases.
Elizabeth Eynon-Kokrda, general counsel for Education Rights Counsel, said she was in 'truly vigorous support for LB 156 because, frankly, too many children are being sexually violated at school.'
Lauren Micek Vargas, chief executive officer of Education Rights Counsel, supported the narrowed bill, stating that for more than 10 years she has represented several children who have been sexually trafficked.
'Unlike the movies,' Vargas said, traffickers rarely kidnap kids and sell them into sex work. Instead, she said, predators groom children and are in positions of authority, targeting students' vulnerabilities.
'We are asking for our most vulnerable students to be protected, and we're asking for your assistance,' Vargas said.
Eynon-Kokrda said the organization represented two clients in the last year who were raped at school. Both were unmonitored, she said, and each predator had a 'worrisome history.' Each survivor was also a child with significant special needs.
Vargas gave the committee a list of such arrests in 2024 alone, including school officials in Omaha, Madison, Maywood and North Platte. Earlier this year, a principal in Stapleton was arrested, and a Papillion-La Vista school psychologist was arrested Tuesday.
One mother writing to the committee, who planned to appear in person but had a family emergency, said her daughter in middle school was raped this school year. The mother said her daughter's individual education plan was not followed, and the mother alleged that the boy who raped her daughter 'was known to prey upon children with disabilities.'
'I trusted the school and they failed me,' the letter said. 'They failed my daughter, and I still don't know all the consequences of that failure.'
Opposing both of Conrad's bills was Brandy Johnson, on behalf of the Nebraska Intergovernmental Risk Management Association; Chuck Wilbrand of Knudsen Law Firm in Lincoln, representing a public entity school insurance pool (ALICAP); Elaine Menzel, on behalf of the state associations for county attorneys, sheriffs and county officials; and Jennifer Huxoll, civil litigation bureau chief for the Attorney General's Office.
Menzel also opposed LB 236 on behalf of the Nebraska League of Nebraska Municipalities.
Huxoll, as she said in August when Wayne tried to revive the legislation in the summer special session on property taxes, said that few days go by without a headline regarding child pornography, sex trafficking or child sexual assault. She said law enforcement, local governments and lawmakers are working to combat those crimes.
'These two bills, however, will not reduce crimes against children,' Huxoll said. 'They will simply make our friends and neighbors of Nebraska financially responsible for judgments resulting from harms caused by criminals.'
Johnson and Wilbrand said their organizations provide training and work to be proactive, not out of fear of being sued but to genuinely help children.
'The bad actor is the one that caused this, and that's what the trainings are supposed to be addressing,' Wilbrand said.
Johnson said she has learned that local governments do try to do all they can to be proactive, yet the 'evil perpetrator is often hiding in plain sight, doing their best to conceal their actions.'
'It's not as easy as it might seem for a government or school to be able to foresee or prevent those situations,' Johnson said.
Huxoll, echoing Pillen, said that if LB 156 were to become law, even narrowly, it would become easier for lawmakers to chip away and allow more lawsuits against local governments.
Heather Schmidt, a Lincoln mother who supported the bill, said she understands and appreciates the concern that taxpayers would be liable for costs related to crimes they didn't commit.
'That being said, there has to be a mechanism to hold enablers accountable,' she said.
Conrad also pointed to comments from former State Sen. Julie Slama of Dunbar who challenged opponents of the 2024 bill who argued the change would raise taxes.
'How many child molesters is your school district employing if it's going to impact your bottom line?' she asked during the 2024 debate.
Other supporters of the law have said the lawsuits would allow an attempt, but not a guarantee, at financial rewards that could help a child with medical care or counseling that they might need for the rest of their lives.
Conrad and Wayne, both lawyers, have said attorneys have an ethical duty against filing frivolous claims.
Cameron Guenzel, representing the Nebraska Association of Trial Attorneys, supported the same measure as last year but opposed Conrad's LB 156 being narrowed to schools.
He said the bill doesn't go far enough and that the rule as interpreted by the Nebraska Supreme Court just five years ago 'makes no sense.'
Guenzel gave an example of a school hiring a bus driver where officials knew something was wrong but negligently hired the bus driver anyway.
If the driver had a pattern of being drunk and later injured students while driving under the influence, the district could be sued for negligence. But if the driver was known to be prone to violence and later assaulted students, Guenzel said, the school could not be sued, because it included an 'assault.'
Guenzel said the current law shields bad actors and discourages accountability.
Guenzel also tried to appeal to the conservatives on the Judiciary Committee. Guenzel explained he is a concealed carry permit holder who has 'choose life' license plates, and who hasn't voted for a Democrat since when he was a 'wide-eyed college kid' voting for Barack Obama in 2008.
Jennifer Turco Meyer, president-elect of the Nebraska Trial Attorneys Association, had a similar message.
'If we think justice and accountability work in the criminal context, we can't skip over and leave out civil justice in terms of how it will affect the way that school districts and law enforcement agencies take care of the most vulnerable people in our society, which are children,' she said.
The departure of a large class of lawmakers this January, many in favor of Wayne's past bill, could add to the uphill climb to get a similar measure moving this year, even if narrowed.
That was evident in multiple back-and-forth conversations Wednesday with freshman State Sens. Tanya Storer of Whitman, who succeeded former State Sen. Tom Brewer in north-central Nebraska, and Bob Hallstrom of Syracuse, who succeeded Slama. Conrad said she would be willing to further narrow her bill. Brewer and Slama both supported last year's measure.
In response, Conrad said she could consider reducing allowable relief (already a maximum of $1 million), capping attorney fees or increasing the negligence standard for such a case.
'A step forward is better than status quo,' Conrad told the committee.
The 2024 measure had received bipartisan support.
Among key conservative supporters were former State Sens. Lou Ann Linehan of the Elkhorn area, Steve Erdman of Bayard and Halloran, as well as Brewer and Slama, who helped pass the bill, as did Wayne, raising the proposal for weeks before the final votes.
The new chair of the Judiciary Committee, State Sen. Carolyn Bosn of Lincoln, led opposition to Wayne's bill. Either of Conrad's bills would require at least five votes on committee to advance. This year, four senators are new.
Conrad has selected the narrow LB 156 as her 2025 priority bill, increasing the chances it could be debated if advanced from committee.
'Our job and the law's job is to ensure justice for people who are without justice, which is where we find ourselves today in regards to little kids of sexual assault at their schools and their schools had a hand in it,' Conrad said. 'Whatever we need to do to figure out, make it work better, I hope that we can do that together.'
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen activates National Guard ahead of statewide immigration protests
Pillen formally declared a state of emergency to activate the Guard so it can assist local law enforcement should any demonstrations escalate. (Courtesy of the Governor's Office) LINCOLN — Gov. Jim Pillen has activated the Nebraska National Guard ahead of scheduled protests this weekend. Late Friday, the governor issued an emergency proclamation that activated the Guard and prepared Guard and state law enforcement resources for immediate deployment if needed, a governor's spokeswoman confirmed. Typical National Guard activation can take up to 24 hours, but the proclamation shortens that time. Nebraska has seen several protests in recent days over a federal immigration raid that hit an Omaha food plant, in what immigration officials said was the largest Nebraska enforcement operation since President Donald Trump took office. Most of the protests have been peaceful – though federal officials arrested four protesters from the original raid site, Glenn Valley Foods, alleging 'aggressive' behavior and damage to federal property. Pillen and Nebraska joined other states with conservative governors, such as Texas and Missouri, that have activated their National Guard in advance of planned protests. Texas has deployed 5,000 Guard members. Pillen formally declared a state of emergency to activate the Guard so it can assist local law enforcement should any demonstrations escalate. 'Free speech will be respected and protected in Nebraska,' Pillen said. 'But the lawlessness, chaos, and rioting seen in other cities in past weeks will not be tolerated here.' Pillen said he took the steps to boost 'security and order' for the visitors of the College World Series in Omaha, the NCAA's baseball championships, and across the state. 'Any person who poses a threat to life, health, or property will be arrested,' Pillen wrote in his emergency proclamation. State Sen. Ashlei Spivey of Omaha, in a post on Facebook, called the Governor's emergency declaration an 'extreme overreach' and an attempt to silence dissent.' 'This is not leadership,' Spivey said. 'It's fear-mongering.' The heartland protests come against the backdrop of larger, tenser protests in Los Angeles as a result of ICE raids there over the past week. The Trump administration and California Gov. Gavin Newsom have been butting heads as Trump federalized and then deployed 4,000 members of the California National Guard and 700 Marines to the second-largest U.S. city in response to protests without the permission from the Democratic governor. Newsom responded by accusing Trump of choosing 'theatrics over public safety' and escalating the 'chaos.' The California Governor sued the Trump Administration over the deployment of the state National Guard. Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers this week joined 18 other Republican attorneys general in a brief in support of Trump's deployment of National Guard, arguing that Trump has the 'authority' to do so. 'We stand with law enforcement, we support President Trump's action, and we will not let chaos take hold in our states,' Hilger said in a joint statement. Los Angeles has sparked similar protests in Texas, New York City, Chicago, and other Democratic-leaning parts of the country. More protests are planned nationally against Trump this weekend, including in Nebraska, part of the 'No King' protests, as Trump plans a military parade to celebrate the Army's anniversary in Washington D.C, and Flag Day on Saturday, both of which overlap with his 79th birthday. Organizers behind the nationwide 'No King' protests include Indivisible, the American Civil Liberties Union, and the 50501 Movement. Organizers have branded Saturday as a 'day of defiance' against what they call authoritarian overreach by the Trump administration. There are 13 planned protests around Nebraska, including Lincoln, Omaha and Hastings. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Yahoo
Washington Democratic leader gets second chance at key post with national party
Washington state Democratic Party chair Shasti Conrad (left) and Democratic U.S. Rep. Pramila Jayapal of Washington (right) at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago on Aug. 19, 2024. (Shasti Conrad/WA Dems) Washington state Democratic Party chair Shasti Conrad is getting another shot at a leadership post with the Democratic National Committee and a voice in retooling the political strategy for the national party. Conrad is one of three women vying for a vice chair position in a do-over of the Feb. 1 election won by Malcolm Kenyatta. In that bid, Conrad made the case to voting delegates that the formula that brought Democrats success in Washington last year — a sweep of nine statewide executive posts, gains in their majorities in the Legislature and defeat of three conservative-backed ballot measures — is one the party can use to win back control of Congress and the White House. Her message hasn't changed heading into balloting this weekend. 'We've won elections year after year. Today, through recruitment efforts and organizing, we're gaining ground in red communities,' she says in a one-minute video sent to the roughly 400 people who will vote. If elected, she vowed to 'focus on winning elections, constituency organizing, and changing lives for the better.' In February, Kenyatta and David Hogg were elected as vice chairs. But those contests were invalidated after a complaint that contended the party failed to follow its own rules on gender parity in officer elections. DNC members decided this week to rerun elections for those seats. Only candidates who made it to the final round of voting in February and are eligible for each seat under party rules, can compete. The new elections are being conducted separately, with ballots cast virtually. Hogg, a 25-year-old gun-control activist and the party's first Gen Z vice chair, isn't running to keep his seat. He's faced backlash from fellow Democrats for his plans to support challengers to incumbent Democrats with his group, Leaders We Deserve. His critics contend that party officers need to be neutral in primaries. Hogg's exit left Kenyatta as the only eligible candidate in the first election because the position must be filled by a male under the DNC rules. Voting began Thursday and ends Saturday for the spot held by Hogg. Conrad, Kalyn Free, a national committee member from Oklahoma, and Jeanna Repass, chair of the Kansas Democratic Party, are competing to be second vice chair. A candidate of any gender can hold this seat. For this position, voting begins at 7 a.m. Sunday and runs through 2 p.m. Tuesday. Free filed the complaint that set the new elections in motion. Conrad led the King County Democrats for four years before being elected chair of the state Democratic Party in 2023 and re-elected in January. She is the first South Asian woman to lead a state party. She enjoys strong ties to DNC Chair Ken Martin, who appointed her in March to be an associate chair for the national party. In this role, she said she's strived to spotlight issues of importance to Asian Americans and to work with influencers on ways to better engage younger voters.
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Yahoo
Patty Pansing Brooks announces 2026 bid to return to Nebraska Legislature
Former State Sen. Patty Pansing Brooks of Lincoln. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska News Service) LINCOLN — Former State Sen. Patty Pansing Brooks announced her 2026 candidacy Friday to return to the Nebraska Legislature, a day after the current officeholder said she would not seek reelection. State Sen. Jane Raybould of Lincoln announced her decision not to run again Thursday, leaving the central Lincoln seat open, as first reported by the Nebraska Examiner. Just 24 hours later, Pansing Brooks 'enthusiastically' threw her hat in the ring with Raybould's support, one of more than 70 current and former officials to endorse Pansing Brooks. 'People keep calling me saying, 'What should I do?'' Pansing Brooks told the Examiner. 'And I keep thinking, 'Well, what should I do to help this country right now?' The main thing that I know that I can do is run for office.' Pansing Brooks, 66, said she hopes to be an example for others to run for office and get involved in these 'very strident times.' During her first two terms in office, 2015 to 2023, Pansing Brooks said she worked to be a voice to bring people together, elevate conversations and help people see other sides to issues. If elected back to Legislative District 28, Pansing Brooks said she would continue uplifting juvenile justice reform, combatting human trafficking, defending workers' rights, protecting public education, supporting small businesses, expanding correctional programming for successful reentry and ensuring access to and equity in health care, 'right where I left off in 2022.' Among Pansing Brooks' previous successes: protecting survivors of human trafficking from prostitution charges, mandating new juvenile room confinement standards and reports and shielding survivors of sexual assault and sex trafficking before criminal charges are filed. 'There's still work to do,' she said. Pansing Brooks has a history of working with conservative colleagues, such as with former State Sen. Lou Ann Linehan on dyslexia. The pair toured schools and passed laws to increase interventions for students with dyslexia and require teachers to be educated about the disability. Pansing Brooks also worked closely with former State Sen. Tom Brewer, a member of the Oglala Lakota Tribe and the Legislature's first Native member, notably to help pressure the closing of four beer stores in the village of Whiteclay in Brewer's north-central Nebraska district. For decades, the stores helped fuel alcoholism for the neighboring Pine Ridge Reservation, home to the Oglala Lakota. The duo also worked to add 'Indigenous Peoples' Day' to state law alongside Columbus Day. Brewer is one of many former conservative colleagues of Pansing Brooks to have already endorsed her 2026 campaign. Pansing Brooks, if elected, would join a handful of lawmakers to return after being term-limited. She said she knows there will be 'horrible days,' as there were before and that it might be tough. However, Pansing Brooks said, 'There's goodness and kindness to share, important laws to make and ways to support our fabulous Nebraskans.' Since 2023, the one-house Legislature has been increasingly divided on partisan lines. Pansing Brooks would return as lawmakers have a heightened focus on the LGBTQ community that she advocated for during her time in office. She had proposed legislation attempting to outlaw discrimination based on gender identity or sexual orientation, which other senators picked up after her absence. 'I care about the rights of people to live and to be who they are, to not have prejudice against them, no matter what group they're in,' Pansing Brooks said. 'But I'm also going to be there to learn and listen and try to figure out if there's new steps where I'm needed or new issues where I'm needed, then that's what I'll do.' Another lawmaker who returned after being term-limited, former State Sen. Steve Lathrop of Omaha, declined to seek reelection in 2022, in part because of how much the institution had changed in the four years he was gone. Lathrop endorsed Pansing Brooks, with whom he served. Just one lawmaker has been term-limited twice since the voter-approved restrictions took full effect after 2006: former State Sen. Ernie Chambers of Omaha. Pansing Brooks said that, if elected, she would not return with any assumptions that she would be treated differently than other 'newbie' lawmakers. She said she knows she would need to make new friendships and gain trust, which she's ready to do, and that Nebraska could be a model for Congress on working together. In 2022, Pansing Brooks was the Democratic candidate for Nebraska's 1st Congressional District, falling short to U.S. Rep. Mike Flood, R-Neb. Flood, a former colleague, repeatedly sought to tie Pansing Brooks to national Democratic policies and party leaders. Pansing Brooks in that 2022 congressional race won her legislative district by a slightly greater percentage of votes than Raybould did that year. It is Lincoln's most progressive legislative district. A bipartisan group of former senators endorsed Pansing Brooks, including State Sens. Kathy Campbell, Bob Krist, John McCollister, DiAnna Schimek, John Stinner, Tony Vargas and Lynne Walz. She is endorsed by current State Sens. Machaela Cavanaugh, John Cavanaugh, Danielle Conrad, Wendy DeBoer, George Dungan, John Fredrickson, Dunixi Guereca, Megan Hunt, Margo Juarez, Terrell McKinney, Dan Quick, Raybould, Victor Rountree and Ashlei Spivey. All but Hunt, a nonpartisan progressive, are Democrats in the officially nonpartisan Legislature. Other early endorsements include Bob Kerrey and Ben Nelson (former governors and former U.S. senators), former Nebraska Lt. Govs. Kim Robak and Maxine Moul and Lincoln Mayor Leirion Gaylor Baird. Pansing Brooks, who had been a Republican for much of her life until the 2000s, including a stint as Lancaster County GOP chair, said she's honored by conservative friends she made in the Legislature who have now endorsed her. 'It makes me realize that this is possible. We don't all have to be divided and in circular firing squads, just firing away at each other,' Pansing Brooks said. Pansing Brooks added that the Legislature is special and that she hopes lawmakers can continue to find common ground. 'We've done that in the past,' Pansing Brooks said. 'We can continue to do it.' SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX