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Judge dismisses human trafficking allegations against Marriott

PENNSYLVANIA RECORD

Sunday, December 22, 2024

Judge dismisses human trafficking allegations against Marriott

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Marriott Hotels

PHILADELPHIA – Citing the expiration of the relevant three-year statute of limitations, a federal judge recently dismissed a sexual abuse survivor’s human trafficking allegations against the Marriott International hotel chain under Pennsylvania state law.

On April 22, U.S. District Judge Mark A. Kearney dismissed as time-barred the state-law human trafficking claims made in plaintiff A.B.’s lawsuit, subsequent to the defendant filing an objection to the allegation on March 26.

A sex trafficking survivor named only as A.B., who resides in Florida, alleged that the Marriott turned a blind eye to the trafficking going on at its hotels, both across the country and in Pennsylvania.

A.B. first filed a complaint in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania on Dec. 9 against Marriott International Inc., alleging violation of the federal William Wilberforce Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2008 (TVPRA) and Pennsylvania law.

A.B. alleged in her complaint that she was first trafficked for sex at age 18 and also suffered numerous physical assaults and false imprisonment at the defendant’s hotels, including three in Philadelphia.

During these assaults, A.B. claimed she was forced into sexual servitude at the behest of her captors, physically, verbally and psychologically abused by either her traffickers or people she was forced to sexually service.

In the lawsuit, A.B. alleged Marriott failed to properly train staff to be able to identify indicators exhibited by sex traffickers and their victims, and that its negligence led it to both benefit from and unknowingly participate in such sex trafficking activities.

On Feb. 20, Marriott filed a motion to dismiss the suit for failure to state a claim.

“Among other things, this claim requires making plausible, factual allegations that Marriott International ‘knowingly benefitted from’ and actively ‘participated in’ a sex trafficking venture. The complaint alleges no facts to support either element, instead relying on conclusory labels. And the sparse factual allegations in the complaint contradict those legal conclusions,” the dismissal motion read, in part.

“There is no allegation that A.B. had any contact or interactions with employees at the relevant franchisee hotels (let alone with Marriott International employees) during the relevant time period – which itself is undisclosed. And no factual allegations even remotely suggest that Marriott International somehow ‘participated’ in an illegal sex trafficking venture.”

The hotel chain added the plaintiff’s theory of vicarious liability in this case fails under state law.

“The complaint assumes that Marriott International had a principal-agent relationship with the hotels at which A.B. was allegedly trafficked (and thus is responsible for their acts or omissions) merely because it had franchisor-franchisee relationships with them. But Pennsylvania law makes clear that pleading and proving control over the day-to-day operations of the hotel is necessary to establish vicarious liability,” the dismissal motion continued.

“The complaint fails to plead these requisite facts, and instead relies on Marriott International’s alleged ability to terminate its franchisor-franchisee relationship with hotels for failing to satisfy its brand standards. This is not enough. Federal courts throughout the country, applying similar principles under state law, have dismissed similarly deficient complaints for this reason. This Court should do the same.”

Finally, the dismissal motion criticized the complaint’s “recitation of boilerplate ‘form’ language copied from other complaints involving different victims, different perpetrators, and different hotels, and ‘shotgun’ allegations which vaguely lump Marriott International together with franchisee hotels."

“These pleading practices violate the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, are heavily disfavored by courts, and fail to provide Marriott International with notice of what it is alleged to have done wrong or enabling it to prepare an adequate defense,” the motion stated.

As a result, the plaintiff filed an amended complaint on March 13 as a matter of legal course and to cure any perceived omissions from the original version, rendering the dismissal motion moot.

This led Marriott to file a renewed motion to dismiss on March 26, which also called into play the five-year statute of limitations on human trafficking in the state of Pennsylvania.

A.B.’s allegations stated the conduct occurred between 2009 and 2011, but did not file a complaint until three years after the statutory deadline, in 2019.

In Kearney’s ruling on April 22, he agreed with counsel for the hotel chain.

“Marriott moves to dismiss A.B.’s claim under Pennsylvania’s human trafficking statute for three reasons: (1) The statute’s safe harbor provision expressly exempts Marriott International from civil liability; (2) Even without the safe harbor provision, A.B. fails to state a claim; and (3) The claim is time-barred by the applicable five-year statute of limitations,” Kearney said.

Kearney continued that A.B. did not sufficiently plead Marriott “knowingly” marketed or provided its hotel rooms to A.B.’s trafficker, nor showed the hotel chain had actual knowledge of A.B.’s trafficking through an alleged agency relationship.

“We agree with Marriott and dismiss the Pennsylvania trafficking claim without prejudice for A.B. to move to amend with the benefit of more facts to possibly state a claim under Pennsylvania’s statute and if possible under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11.”

For violations of state and federal law, the plaintiff seeks compensatory damages, special damages, punitive damages, non-economic damages, past and future lost wages, past and future medical expenses, attorney’s fees, costs, pre- and post-judgment interest, a trial by jury, and all other appropriate relief.

The plaintiff is represented by Jerry Kristal of Weitz & Luxenberg of Cherry Hill, New Jersey.

The defendant is represented by Michael P. O’Day, Courtney G. Saleski, Ellen E. Dew and Michael Bakhama of DLA Piper in Philadelphia and Baltimore, Md.

U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania case 2:19-cv-05770

From the Pennsylvania Record: Reach Courts Reporter Nicholas Malfitano at nick.malfitano@therecordinc.com

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