Take Care of Maya family wins $261 million in landmark case – Dexerto
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Maya Kowalski and her family, who were at the center of the Netflix documentary Take Care of Maya, have been awarded $261 million in damages in a landmark decision.
Take Care of Maya, directed by Henry Roosevelt, arrived on Netflix in June, telling the heartbreaking true story of the now-17-year-old Maya Kowalski and her family. When she was 10, she suffered from extreme stomach pain – but when her parents took her to the emergency room at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital in Florida, what followed was a series of events that ended in the most heartbreaking outcome.
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The investigative documentary explores how Maya was kept away from her parents Beata and Jack Kowalski after the hospital acquired a state order to keep her in custody. As they fought to get their daughter back, Maya’s mother died by suicide.
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Following the release of Take Care of Maya, the surviving Kowalskis brought their lawsuit against both the hospital and the Department of Children and Families to court, seeking more than $200 million in damages – and yesterday, November 9, a verdict was made.
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Take Care of Maya family wins $261 million in landmark case
Jurors found Johns Hopkins liable on all counts, including false imprisonment, battery, and intentionally inflicting emotional distress on both Maya and Beata. The Kowalskis have been awarded $211 million in damages, according to Tampa Bay Times. A further $50 million in punitive damages was given on Thursday evening, bringing the total to $261 million.
Following the 2016 incident, Maya had been kept in the hospital for three months, during which time Beata took her own life. The jury sided with the family, ruling that Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital wrongfully kept Maya from her family and engaged in “extreme and outrageous” conduct, ultimately resulting in Beata’s death.
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