
Could a new appeal prompt Maine's supreme court to reconsider its decision on decades-old child sex abuse cases?
Earlier this year, 70-year-old George Eaton of Washington County won a lawsuit against Peter Boyce, 81, who Eaton said sexually abused him in the early 1970s. Eaton won by default because Boyce didn't respond to the complaint, according to court records.
Boyce was ordered to pay Eaton $1.1 million on Feb. 26 — a month after the Maine Supreme Judicial Court overturned the 2021 law that made Eaton's lawsuit possible by "reviving" claims previously barred. Maine eliminated its statute of limitations for new claims in 2000, but until the 2021 law change people still couldn't sue for abuse that happened before 1987,
Boyce, who now has an attorney, appealed that decision. Now, the same court that overturned the law will be asked to consider the issue again — but with one new justice confirmed in March and two justices who signed a dissenting opinion, some advocates hope the outcome will be different.
Eaton's lawyer, Michael Bigos, declined to comment on the case. Boyce's attorney, Jed Davis, did not respond to requests Thursday to discuss the appeal and allegations against his client.
Bigos represents more than a dozen people who sued the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland after the 2021 law passed, and whose cases were at the center of the court's decision. He and Timothy Kenlan said in February that their firm was representing at least 100 people whose claims were made possible by the overturned law, although not everyone had filed a complaint in court.
The lawyers asked the high court a couple of weeks after the ruling to reconsider. Bigos recently told lawmakers that request was summarily denied.
He told the Legislature's Judiciary Committee that he hopes this appeal will end differently. He cited the court's new composition and the arguments made by the dissenting justices, who "raised issues that we believe are unsolved."
He said the court's majority opinion overlooked Mainers' rights to substantive due process under the state constitution, instead favoring principles dating to the 1600s "as a rationale for the majority to declare this unconstitutional."
He was testifying on LD 1978, which would allow people to sue governmental entities whose employees sexually abused them as children. (Such employers, including public schools and law enforcement agencies, are immune from most lawsuits. There is no exception for child sexual abuse.)
Rep. Ellie Sato, D-Gorham, noticed that the bill would eliminate a statute of limitation for those claims even after the supreme court's ruling in January.
"How is this language different from that language, to make sure that the Law Court doesn't strike it down again?" Sato asked.
Bigos said he believes the Legislature still has the right to pass laws that serve their constituents.
"It is this practitioner's belief, and many others,' that the Maine judiciary exceeded its authority by impinging on the legislative authority, by declaring that (2021 law) unconstitutional," Bigos said.
DEFAULT JUDGMENT
Bigos and Davis have until later this summer to file briefs with the court outlining their arguments.
In his civil complaint, Eaton said Boyce abused him around July 1970, when Eaton was 15 years old.
He said Boyce had hired him to do odd jobs around his workplace at Johnson Bay Marine, according to the complaint. Over the following year, Eaton said he was abused several times in Boyce's home, workplace and on a trip to New York, often after being given alcohol.
Eaton said he cut contact with Boyce in 1971 and told his parents what had happened. Now, more than 50 years later, Eaton said he still struggles with the trauma, the shame and betrayal.
In awarding damages to Eaton, Superior Court Justice Harold L. Stewart quoted a psychological expert who testified on Eaton's behalf during a hearing Feb. 5, who said Eaton has difficulty trusting others and still experiences a constant "fear of the world." The expert said it's likely Eaton's medical costs for therapy and other treatment will exceed $100,000 in the next 15 years.
Stewart wrote on Feb. 26 that he was aware of the high court's decision, but that it's the defendant's responsibility to raise the issue of a statute of limitations. This defendant never responded to the complaint against him.
"The incident in this case occurred in 1970," Stewart wrote. "Plaintiff has lived with the effects and trauma of the sexual abuse committed by Defendant for 55 years."
Copy the Story Link
We believe it's important to offer commenting on certain stories as a benefit to our readers. At its best, our comments sections can be a productive platform for readers to engage with our journalism, offer thoughts on coverage and issues, and drive conversation in a respectful, solutions-based way. It's a form of open discourse that can be useful to our community, public officials, journalists and others.
We do not enable comments on everything — exceptions include most crime stories, and coverage involving personal tragedy or sensitive issues that invite personal attacks instead of thoughtful discussion.
You can read more here about our commenting policy and terms of use. More information is also found on our FAQs.
Show less
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Politico
2 hours ago
- Politico
New York's Kathy Hochul faces a crime conundrum ahead of reelection
Hochul has successfully pressed fellow Democrats to change the law with provisions expanding the criminal charges in which a person can be held and giving more discretion to judges . This year, she won alterations to the state's discovery law that district attorneys wanted in order to reduce the number of dismissals in criminal cases. Hochul would also rather talk about an all-time low in New York City shootings and drop in felony crimes on subways — statistics she can tout as evidence her public safety approach is working. 'The Legislature has made three necessary fixes to bail since 2019, many crimes are at a historic low and Elise Stefanik is disconnected from reality,' said Democratic state Sen. James Skoufis, who also pointed to a recent New York Post frontpage trumpeting the sharp drop in shootings. (A Stefanik spokesperson called him 'clueless.') But New York Democrats are also warily watching the president's takeover of the Washington police department and move to deploy the National Guard to the streets of the nation's capital. Hochul this week also condemned the possibility that Trump, a Stefanik ally, would deploy the National Guard to New York City. 'If he crosses that bright line and decides that the 32,000 dedicated members of the NYPD are not doing their jobs — he's going to stand there and insult our law enforcement officers — I think people would be in outrage of that alone,' she said. The governor approved her own limited deployment of the New York National Guard to the city's subway system. The troops do not have arrest powers, but the move was meant to reinforce the perception of safety on mass transit. 'I've used them as a deterrent effect to stand there and just be a presence,' Hochul said. Democrats, though, are in something of a political cul-de-sac on crime, despite the steep drops in violent offenses. 'It's an issue that Democrats have failed to take any serious action on,' Erie County GOP Chair Michael Kracker said. 'The Republican Party has pledged to make the nation and the state safer. If Democrats fail to take action, Republicans will.' Citing crime statistics won't be enough for New Yorkers who don't feel safe in their own neighborhoods, he added. 'Ask your average New Yorker if they feel safer than they have over the last few years,' Kracker said. 'The answer is going to be a resounding no.' A version of this story first appeared in New York Playbook.


The Hill
4 hours ago
- The Hill
California voters widely prefer keeping independent redistricting panel: Poll
California voters widely prefer keeping the state's independent redistricting commission, new polling shows, as Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) threatens to bypass it to counter GOP gerrymandering in other states. A Politico-Citrin Center-Possibility Lab survey found that just 36 percent of California voters support returning congressional redistricting authority to the state Legislature, compared to 64 percent who back the independent redistricting commission. Newsom has pledged to move forward with plans for redistricting in the Golden State as a direct response to Republican-led redrawing efforts elsewhere. President Trump and others in the GOP have been urging several red states to do mid-decade redistricting and expand the party's midterm pickup opportunities. In Texas, state Democrats fled to break quorum this month over a proposal that would net five GOP House seats. To counter would-be Republican gains, Newsom has proposed putting forward a ballot measure that would bypass the independent redistricting commission for the 2026, 2028 and 2030 election cycles, before reverting to the existing system. His aim is to get the matter before California voters during a special election this fall, stressing that the redistricting would only be triggered if other red states move forward. The campaign is launching in earnest with a 'Liberation Day' event on Thursday, 'We're gonna fight fire with fire,' Newsom said, pledging to 'neutralize' whatever happens in Texas. Some experts have suggested that, despite Democrats' advantage in the blue stronghold, Newsom may have to heavily campaign to make sure such a measure gets the support it needs, due to the popularity of the independent redistricting commission that voters approved in both 2008 and 2010. The Politico poll question notably didn't specify whether a return to Legislature-drawn lines would be temporary, as Newsom has stressed. But the wide support for the commission underscores why Democrats would want to make sure any plans to bypass it would have an expiration date. The poll was taken July 28-Aug 12 among 1,445 California registered voters. The modeled error estimate is plus or minus 2.6 percentage points.


Politico
5 hours ago
- Politico
Newsom goes all-in for Texas Hold'em
FIRE WITH FIRE — California is about to take center stage in a national redistricting arms race, as Democratic state leaders gear up to release a redrawn congressional map and mount a statewide campaign to persuade voters to approve it — which new polling suggests could be an uphill fight. Gov. Gavin Newsom, congressional Democrats and legislative leaders will gather in Los Angeles County this morning where they're expected to unveil the next phase of their plan to counter President Donald Trump and Republicans' effort to gerrymander Texas' congressional districts ahead of next year's midterm elections. The event doubles as an unofficial campaign launch as Newsom and Democratic power brokers embark on a herculean fundraising blitz. Political insiders estimate they must raise upward of $100 million — in less than three months — to mount a statewide campaign to sell it to voters. 'Next week the Legislature is going to move this forward .... we're going to get it on a special election on Nov. 4 and we're going to fight fire with fire,' Newsom said on the latest episode of his podcast, which featured former Texas Rep. Beto O'Rourke. POLLING RAISES DOUBTS: But new polling suggests that persuading Californians — who created the state's Independent Redistricting Commission in 2008 — to reverse course and give state lawmakers the power to redraw a map mid-decade will be difficult, as POLITICO's Melanie Mason reports this morning. By nearly a 2-to-1 margin, voters prefer keeping an independent line-drawing panel to determine the state's House seats, according to the latest POLITICO-Citrin Center-Possibility Lab survey. Just 36 percent of registered voters back returning congressional redistricting authority to state lawmakers. 'It's not surprising, in the sense that California has voted twice for this independent review commission not all that long ago,' Jack Citrin, a veteran political science professor at UC Berkeley and partner on the poll, told Melanie. 'And there's a lot of mistrust and cynicism about politicians and the Legislature.' Last week, legislators were briefed on an internal survey by Newsom's pollster, David Binder, which found a redistricting measure with multiple elements that will appear in the Democrats' proposal — including designating the new maps as temporary and valid only if Texas proceeds — started with slim majority support (52 percent). It grew in popularity when the messaging became more overtly partisan, a strategy Democrats have already signaled. Still, as Melanie writes, the wariness of lawmaker-drawn maps captured in the poll suggests headwinds for Newsom and Democrats. DEMS GET IN LINE: But Democratic leaders are confident they have the votes to get a constitutional amendment and proposed map through the California Legislature, as Blake and POLITICO's Lindsey Holden scooped. Lawmakers are expected to vote next week — and Democrats who expressed earlier objections have quickly backed down. Two-thirds of members have to approve the plan within days of returning from recess Monday in order to meet the secretary of state's Aug. 22 ballot deadline. Democrats in Congress have also lined up behind the plan, with Reps. Zoe Lofgren and Pete Aguilar shaping the delegation's early strategy. And Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has already started making fundraising calls to her large donor network, according to a person familiar who was granted anonymity to speak candidly. 'The good thing is you're seeing consolidation among the Democrats,' said Bill Wong, a veteran Democratic consultant. 'They really have to put aside whatever egos or agendas are out there.' Hakeem Jeffries, the Democratic leader in the House, touted California's plan as an example of how Democrats have 'courageously stepped forward in defense of a free and fair midterm election,' he told Playbook in a statement. GOP TARGETS IN SIGHT: Draft maps suggest five of California's nine incumbent Republican House members could be targeted, including Reps. Darrell Issa, Ken Calvert, Kevin Kiley, Doug LaMalfa and David Valadao. Their districts would likely be redrawn to include more Democratic voters — and to counteract the five GOP seats Republicans hope to gain in Texas. 'This is a bad deal for Republicans overall,' said Matt Rexroad, a Sacramento-based Republican strategist and redistricting attorney. Despite voter support for independent redistricting, he said he fears the GOP faces a losing quest fighting Newsom at the ballot box in a low-turnout special election. Rexroad added, 'It's going to be Newsom versus Trump. (Newsom) gets to raise $100 million with unlimited contributions and appear in every TV spot.' GOOD MORNING. Happy Thursday. Thanks for waking up with Playbook. Like what you're reading? Sign up to get California Playbook in your inbox, and forward it to a friend. You can also text us at 916-562-0685 — save it as 'CA Playbook' in your contacts. Or drop us a line at dgardiner@ and bjones@ or on X — @DustinGardiner and @jonesblakej. WHERE'S GAVIN? In Los Angeles County for his redistricting news conference. Watch here at 11:30 a.m. BIG NEWS: On Wednesday, Aug. 27, POLITICO is hosting its inaugural California policy summit. At The California Agenda, some of the state's most prominent political figures including Sen. Alex Padilla, Katie Porter and Xavier Becerra will share the stage with influential voices in tech, energy, housing and other areas to chart the path forward for a state at the forefront of critical policy debates. The live and streamed event is free, but advanced registration is required. Request an invite here. MORE ON REDISTRICTING REDISTRICTING RECEIPTS — Democrats' plan to gerrymander Republicans like Inland Empire Rep. Ken Calvert out of office won't come cheap — and local elections officials in Calvert's district say they'll need extra resources to pull it off. The Riverside County Registrar of Voters responded to Calvert's request for details by estimating a special election will cost $15 million to $16 million. It predicted that both the November vote and enacting a new map — if the voters approve it — would mean a 'significantly increased workload' and require more funding. A 2021 special recall election cost about $200 million statewide. — Jeremy B. White Meanwhile … Fresno County Clerk James Kus estimates that the special election could cost his county $4 million, as GV Wire reports. 'My biggest concern is not the deadlines but the state paying for this election,' Kus said. Lucky for local governments … A suite of redistricting legislation being released in the coming days is expected to include reimbursements for their election costs. (Other planned legislative vehicles are said to include a constitutional amendment that would create a Nov. 4 ballot measure and a proposal outlining the new congressional map — which is slated to be released later this week.) Unlucky for California Democrats … A representative for the nascent opposition campaign said Charles Munger — who spent more than $10 million in 2010 to strip California lawmakers of their power to draw House lines — will help supply 'the resources necessary' to 'vigorously defend' independent redistricting. And Munger is listed as an official for an updated opposition committee. CLIMATE AND ENERGY BLOWING A GASKET — Gas prices are back on the legislative agenda, but this year, Newsom and lawmakers have even more proposals to keep refineries open and reduce sticker shock at the pump. Read last night's California Climate to see how energy experts are thinking about all of the concepts — from in-state drilling to new fuel blends — on the table. Top Talkers WORKING WOMEN — ICE is looking for a 'women-owned small business' to create a social media campaign for the agency's 14,050-person recruitment spree, The San Francisco Standard reports. ICE is targeting women-owned small businesses because they 'are historically underrepresented in federal procurement.' NOT-SO-NEIGHBORLY — Some residents of the upscale Palo Alto neighborhood where Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has acquired several homes are losing patience with the compound, SFGate reports. Some neighbors said they've been questioned by his security team while walking around the neighborhood. They also expressed concern about the school that Zuckerberg was operating within one of the homes that allegedly violated Palo Alto city code. AROUND THE STATE — The Los Angeles Unified School District will open the new school year deploying volunteers and school police to protect children in the wake of federal immigration enforcement actions. (The Los Angeles Times) — Huntington Beach police starting next month plan to use drones as first responders rather than officers for some calls. (The Orange County Register) — A federal judge denied San Diego County's request to dismiss parts of a class-action lawsuit over county jails' safety. (The San Diego Union-Tribune) Compiled by Juliann Ventura PLAYBOOKERS SPOTTED: MARTIN AT MANNY'S — DNC Chair Ken Martin was in San Francisco on Tuesday for a fundraising swing, which included a stop at Manny's in the Mission, a popular watering hole for political events. According to an attendee, who was granted anonymity to discuss a private event, Martin expressed support for Newsom's redistricting effort and 'emphasized a need for active resistance and to cast out the consideration of compromise or following the 'old rules.'' MEDIA MOVES — California's capital city has a new local news source! The digital outlet 'Abridged' will launch Sept. 16, publishing daily newsletters and posts on its new website. The Sacramento nonprofit will be supported by local PBS station KVIE and run by a staff dominated by local media alumni. Former Bee reporter and editor Ryan Lillis helped found the venture and will serve as associate general manager, news at the station. Longtime Bee Capitol Bureau Chief Dan Smith will serve as news editor and will be joined by food and drink writer Benjy Egel, who is rebooting his popular newsletter on the local restaurant scene and assuming the role of senior food editor. Contributors will include Bee alums Chris Macias, Phillip Reese and Brianna Taylor as well as ex Bloomberg California tax whiz Laura Mahoney. PEOPLE MOVES — The Plastics Industry Association is adding Hodayah Finman as senior director of regulatory affairs. Finman previously was acting director of the EPA's Office of International Affairs. BIRTHDAYS — former Rep. Tom Campbell (R-Calif.) … Darren Goode … Tiffany Stecker-Gustavson … Spike Whitney … Sara Sadhwani at Pomona College … BELATED B-DAY WISHES — (was Tuesday): Jorge De La Cruz at First 5 California WANT A SHOUT-OUT FEATURED? — Send us a birthday, career move or another special occasion to include in POLITICO's California Playbook. You can now submit a shout-out using this Google form.