MERRICK, N.Y. (AP) 鈥 Starting in the 1980s, New York law enforcement and health officials fielded sexual abuse complaints from the young patients of a respected pediatrician who ran his practice out of a basement office in his home on Long Island.
But Stuart Copperman was never charged with any crime, and it was only as he approached retirement in 2000, at the age of 65, that he was over the complaints.
Now, 25 years later, more than 100 of his former patients have some vindication in their yearslong fight: a court has ordered him to pay a total of $1.6 billion.
The Rev. Debbi Rhodes, who was awarded $25 million, says the completion of the litigation in late March in state Supreme Court brought a mix of relief and frustration.
鈥淚鈥檓 not sure if he鈥檚 facing justice. He kind of got away with it for all these years,鈥 the 63-year-old Episcopal priest in Las Vegas said by phone. 鈥淏ut to have a court say, definitively, 鈥業 believe you.鈥 To hear that -- that鈥檚 heavy medicine right there.鈥
A Manhattan lawyer who has represented Copperman over the years didn鈥檛 respond to multiple messages seeking comment in recent days.
Copperman has steadfastly , suggesting he was simply being 鈥渢horough鈥 in his examinations, which his former patients say were typically conducted after he had ushered their parents out of the room.
A lengthy history of complaints
Some of the women filed complaints with local police and medical boards over the years, but no criminal charges or disciplinary actions were ever imposed, according to Rhodes' lawsuit and others. Then a state medical board revoked his license after hearing from six accusers.
Statute of limitations laws, however, prevented Copperman's accusers from filing lawsuits until passage of New York鈥檚 , a 2019 law that temporarily allowed people to file suits over sexual abuse they suffered long ago as children.
The and other major institutions have reached to resolve sexual misconduct claims, but lawyers for the women say their litigation has resulted in one of the largest cumulative awards against a single individual in the U.S.
"For decades, these women were silenced and dismissed,鈥 said Kristen Gibbons Feden, a Philadelphia lawyer representing the women. 鈥淣ow, they cannot be ignored.鈥
Copperman never responded to the litigation
The Long Island court ruled for the women because Copperman never responded to the litigation. But some of the special referees, in assessing damages, said they believed the women.
鈥淭he psychological scars from the abuse suffered by Plaintiff are profound and permanent," wrote William Bodkin in awarding $27 million to a woman identified as 鈥淛ane Doe T.A.鈥 in April 2024.
鈥淗ere, there can only be outrage at Copperman鈥檚 reprehensible conduct," he wrote in Rhodes' $25 million judgment in December 2024.
The last of the 104 awards were handed down March 28, with amounts ranging from $500,000 to $32 million, according to Michael Della, a Long Island-based attorney also representing the women.
The women also sued local hospitals and health care networks, but those claims were dismissed.
鈥楴obody can grow if they are living in shame鈥
Like many of the accusers, Rhodes says Copperman sexually abused her during routine visits at his home office in Merrick, some 35 miles (56 kilometers) east of Manhattan. She says the abuse started in 1968 when she was 7 years old, and led to an eating disorder and alcohol and drug problems at an early age.
Rhodes says she speaks openly and often about her childhood trauma as part of her ministry, which includes working with prison inmates. She still wrestles with anxiety, depression and other mental health impacts.
鈥淣obody can grow if they are living in shame. Nobody can really change," said Rhodes, who has two now-grown children and whose husband is also an Episcopal priest. "I鈥檓 not even sure you can love if you鈥檙e living in shame.鈥
The Associated Press typically does not name people who say they have been sexually assaulted unless they come forward publicly, as Rhodes has.
Another woman who was awarded $27 million but declined to be named said revisiting childhood trauma during her deposition was painful but, in a way, healing.
鈥淚t feels good to know that someone heard us,鈥 the woman, identified in the litigation as 鈥淛ane Doe A.W.,鈥 said in a phone interview. 鈥淧eople now understand the magnitude of what he did.鈥
Lawyers for the women say they have retained a collections specialist to begin pursuing compensation from Copperman.
But Rhodes and other plaintiffs say they鈥檝e accepted the possibility they may never see much, if any. Copperman is now 89 years old and lives in South Florida.
鈥淚鈥檓 not sure what justice looks like even if I got a million dollars tomorrow,鈥 Rhodes said. 鈥淔or me, it鈥檚 about saying to other women who are facing this that someone will listen to you. I wasn鈥檛 believed for a very long time. Don鈥檛 stay silent. Speak your truth.鈥
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Philip Marcelo, The Associated Press