More than 40 years after being sexually abused by a Catholic priest in St. Paul, Jon Jaker claimed a groundbreaking victory for himself and other abuse victims Wednesday.
Accompanied by his 84-year-old mother, Jaker, 54, announced he had reached a financial settlement with the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, the first payout under a new law that temporarily extends the time in which such clergy abuse lawsuits can be brought to court.
"This has been a long battle," said Jaker, who now lives in California, at a news conference in the offices of Minneapolis attorney Patrick Noaker.
"I would encourage other victims and survivors to come forward," Jaker said. "Know that you are not alone. There are hundreds of you still in the shadows. There's a chorus of us building as strong survivors. I want that chorus to grow."
The settlement amount was not revealed by Jaker or the archdiocese.
Jaker sued the archdiocese last year, charging he had been sexually abused more than 10 times by the now-deceased Rev. Thomas Stitts while serving as an altar boy at St. Leo's Church in St. Paul during the 1970s.
He said he was 11 years old when sexually molested by Stitts, who has been accused by at least a dozen other men over the past year.
Jaker's suit, filed in October, was one of the first actions under the Minnesota Child Victims Act passed by the Legislature last year.