Eight people who spent much of their childhood living in a Jesuit school in Omak as wards of State filed a lawsuit against the Department of social and health services on Tuesday to put them under the care of people who they say they are abusing them.
In March, the Jesuits in Northwest agreed to pay $ 166.1 million for about 500 victims who were persecuted for decades. Most victims of abuse, which happened in remote Alaska villages and boarding schools in the tribal Northwest, is a native American, and the Jesuits, their perpetrators are overseen by the priests.
Yakima Attorney Blaine Tamaki, who represents dozens of casualties in the Jesuit settlement, now representing eight alleged victims of the St. Mary's mission boarding school in and Omak.
The three alleged victims at boarding school St Mary's story-telling them during a press conference in Seattle on Tuesday.
Dwayne Paul, 53, of Omak, consider storing bottled up memories of the attack in recently. Sexual abuse that she said she had started almost as soon as he arrived at the school, according to Paul and the civil complaint for damages filed in the case.