Netflix’s Maya Kowalski says her family is ‘feeling so blessed’ as she breaks her silence after winning $261 million lawsuit against a Florida hospital.
In a post to her story on Instagram, Maya uploaded a picture of herself smiling in court on Thursday after bursting into tears following the blockbuster trial.
‘We are feeling so blessed! I will forever be grateful,’ she wrote online.
Jurors ruled in favor of the teen, whose story is the subject of Netflix documentary ‘Take Care of Maya’, and found that the Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital had falsely imprisoned her.
It took the jury of six close to three days of deliberation before deciding they family would receive $211,451,174 in compensatory damages.
The jury also awarded the family an additional $50 million in punitive damages for false imprisonment and false imprisonment with battery.
In total, the Kowalski family will receive more than $261 million.
Netflix’s Maya Kowalski says her family is ‘feeling so blessed’ after breaking her silence following her $261 million win in a lawsuit against a Florida hospital
Maya Kowalski (pictured with her attorney Nick Whitney) won her landmark trial against Johns Hopkins Hospital, with the jury finding in her favor and awarding millions in damages
Maya, 17, was just 10, when she was removed by the state after doctors accused her parents of faking symptoms for her rare condition – complex regional pain syndrome.
The jury found the emotional distress caused to her mother Beata Kowalski – who was forbidden from seeing her daughter for three months – led to her suicide in 2017.
Maya, her father Jack and brother Kyle broke down in tears as the jury’s findings were read out at the court in St. Petersburg on Thursday.
Jurors found the children’s hospital liable for false imprisonment of Maya, battery of Maya, fraudulent billing of her father Jack, inflicting emotional distress on Beata, wrongful death claim for the estate of Beata and intentionally inflicting emotional distress on Maya.
The family argued that the grief-stricken mom fell into a depression and ultimately hanged herself in the family garage, but Johns Hopkins had vehemently denied that it caused her death or abused Maya.
In a statement after the ruling was handed down, Howard Hunter, attorney from Hill Ward Henderson who represented Johns Hopkins in the case, told DailyMail.com that the hospital intends to appeal the decision.
Jury awards are not final until the end of the appeals process which the hospital is confident they will win. Its unclear how long the appeals process will take.
Hunter said: ‘The facts and the law remain on our side, and we will continue to defend the lifesaving and compassionate care provided to Maya Kowalski by the physicians, nurses and staff of Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital and the responsibility of all mandatory reporters in Florida to speak up if they suspect child abuse.’
Jennifer Anderson, who represents part of the legal counsel for the Kowalski family said: ‘We are obviously grateful for the time and effort of the jury and Court.’
‘The family is completely grateful to be vindicated and truly prays this makes a change for other families in the future.’
The 17-year-old broke down in tears as the verdict was read, while her family hugged their attorneys as the jury’s ruling was handed down
The family were seen embracing their legal counsel who launched the lawsuit in 2017
Jack and Maya were seen unable to hold back tears as the verdict was read out
Jurors found the children’s hospital liable for false imprisonment of Maya, battery of Maya, fraudulent billing of her father Jack, inflicting emotional distress on Beata, wrongful death claim for the estate of Beata and intentionally inflicting emotional distress on Maya
What were Maya Kowalski and her family suing Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital for?
Maya Kowalski and her family launched a $220 million lawsuit in October 2018 suing the Florida medical facility, Maya’s social worker Cathi Bedy and Dr Sally Smith along with her employer, Suncoast Center.
In December 2021, the family settled with Smith and Suncoast for the sum of $2.5 million and the Kowalski family dropped its case against Bedy shortly before the trial began. It remains unclear whether a settlement was brokered.
In 2016, a judge ordered Maya to be sheltered at the medical facility under state custody while allegations of child abuse raised against her parents were being investigated.
At the time, hospital staff believed Beata had been suffering from Munchausen-by-proxy, or medical child abuse.
Munchausen-by-proxy is a mental illness and a form of child abuse in which the caretaker of a child, most often a mother, either makes up fake symptoms or causes real symptoms to make it look like the child is sick.
The Kowalski family was pursuing a $220 million lawsuit against Johns Hopkins All Children’s hospital where Maya Kowalski (left) was held as a child after staff suspected she was a victim of ‘child medical abuse’
For eight weeks, jurors heard from the Kowalskis, doctors, nurses and experts in the $220 million lawsuit that was the focus of the harrowing Netflix documentary ‘Take Care of Maya’
For eight weeks 12 jurors heard from the Kowalski family, hospital staff and experts in the trial. Six jurors deliberated the case finding in favor of Kowalski.
The Kowalski family claimed the hospital medically kidnapped Maya and pointed to examples of battery including ‘stripping her down’ to a sports bra and shorts to take pictures of lesions, as well as being ‘cuddled, kissed and held’ without the permission of her parents while in their care.
The hospital was accused of false imprisonment, battery, medical negligence, fraudulent billing, survivor claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress (Estate of Beata Kowalski), wrongful death claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress causing death and Maya’s claim for infliction of emotional distress.
After jury instructions were read, one juror was dismissed for medical reasons after a defense request to have the juror reassigned as an alternate was dismissed.
Why was Maya Kowalski in Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital?
Maya was taken to JHACH in October 2016, when she experienced a flare up of her CRPS, a disease which was diagnosed by a doctor that was not affiliated with the Florida institute.
Maya took the stand telling jurors that her condition left her in excruciating pain often screaming and unable to walk at times.
She said she received ketamine to treat the pain and even underwent a ketamine coma in Mexico after the diagnosis and prior to her arrival at JHACH.
At the time, she claimed the ketamine treatment worked and that she had seen a dramatic improvement until the 2016 flare up of the rare condition.
Maya was diagnosed with complex regional pain syndrome when she was nine-years-old and prescribed ketamine to help dull her pain.
Multiple witnesses, including health care professionals at JHACH, maintained during the trial that Beata was exhibiting signs of Munchausen by proxy and that Maya’s perceived CRPS symptoms were being driven by her mother.
The now 17-year-old was diagnosed with complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) aged 9, but was taken to hospital with severe pain Oct 2016, aged 10
Munchausen by proxy is a psychological disorder in which an abusive parent or caretaker makes up or causes an illness for a person under their care, often the parent’s own child, who is not actually ill.
Through the trial the defense accused Beata of giving her daughter unsafe dosages of ketamine and shared emails that Beata wrote to herself from Maya’s perspective in 2015 in an effort to prove their argument.
‘I have a very high tolerance for drugs, if I was a horse I would be comatosed (sic) or dead already,’ Beata wrote in one email from Maya’s perspective that was presented before the court.
‘But things are totally different when it comes to a girl with RSD, my metabolism is super fast.
‘My mommy says I am not a cheap date and my daddy’s response was that he feels deeply sorry for the “lucky man” that will marry me one day :).’
Beata crafted the emails in November 2015, when she and her husband, Jack Kowalski, traveled to Mexico with Maya to treat her pain with a ketamine-induced coma.
Both parents claimed that the treatment worked, until Maya experienced a flare-up in 2016, at which point they admitted her to JHACH.
In another email detailing Maya’s debilitating pain waking from a coma, Beata wrote: ‘I literally wanted to die again, I felt awful. I really didn’t think I was going to make it through this day.’
Beata documented Maya’s ketamine comas in her emails which the defense argued discredits the plaintiffs’ arguments that the treatments were safe and effective.
Maya’s mom, Beata, (right) took her own life after she was diagnosed with a depressive mood and adjustment disorder upon being separated from Maya for almost three months
Maya’s father, Jack, addressed Beata’s emails in court last week saying he believes they were an attempt by Beata to journal Maya’s experience.
‘After seeing the emails, I realized this is probably why she was doing it,’ he said.
‘I’m from a family of eight children my mom made a baby book for all of us, and in the baby books, it starts out, ‘I got my first haircut’ or ‘I crawled on such-and-such date.’ When Beata and I got married, she had seen my baby book and she thought that was an awesome idea.’
In his testimony Jack explained that Beata had created baby books with similar first-person narratives for Maya and their son Kyle.
It’s his belief the that the emails were a similar attempt at documenting memories in the first person for Maya to look back on as she journeyed to better health.
‘She’s talking for the child and that’s how my mom did it as well,’ Jack explained.
Why did hospital staff raise concerns of child abuse?
The hospital’s defense argued the trial represents the responsibility hospital staff have to report suspected child abuse to authorities.
Maya was removed from her parents’ care after hospital staff became suspicious of the dosage of ketamine her mother insisted on treating her with for the excruciating chronic pain.
Florida’s Department of Children and Families and a state judge supported hospital staff’s suspicions of ‘child medical abuse’ and placed Maya under Florida’s Department of Children and Families’ custody and she was housed at the center.
The hospital’s defense centered on staff as mandatory reporters who are required by state law to call the abuse hotline if they have ‘reasonable cause.’
Ethen Shapiro, attorney for the hospital, previously stated that the decision to remove Maya was made by the child welfare system rather than the medical facility.
Dr Kirkpatrick told the court he discussed his prescription of ketamine therapy to Kowalski with staff at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital
The hospital released a statement to DailyMail.com which read: ‘Our priority at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital is always the safety and privacy of our patients and their families.
‘Therefore, we follow strict federal privacy laws that limit the amount of information we can release regarding any particular case.
‘Our first responsibility is always to the child brought to us for care. Our staff are required by law to notify Florida’s Department of Children and Families (DCF) if they suspect abuse or neglect.
‘It is DCF and a judge – not Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital – that investigates the situation and makes the ultimate decision about what course of action is in the best interest of the child.
‘We are determined to prevent any chilling effect on the obligation to report suspected child abuse in order to protect the most vulnerable among us.’
What were the closing statements from the close to two-month trial?
The Kowalski family alleged that the power of the large hospital system combined with the power of the state made them helpless.
They further claim that being separated caused severe emotional distress for both Maya and her mother, who hanged herself in their garage in January 2017 after going months without seeing her daughter.
The lawsuit also details the Kowalskis’ claim that the hospital billed their insurance company thousands of dollars for CRPS treatments despite the staff’s claims that Maya did not have suffer from it.
In closing statements on Tuesday Greg Anderson, who represents the family, made a fiery end rebuttal blasting the hospital as ‘dysfunctional.’
‘This is Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital, this is who they really are,’ Anderson said to the court.
‘It’s a place that retaliates against its own employees for bringing things out that are negative and retaliates against anyone, any parent, who decides they want to do something different.
Greg Anderson, the family’s attorney, made a fiery rebuttal accusing JHACH of being ‘dysfunctional’ claiming there was no oversight over Maya’s treatment while in their care
Ethen Shapiro, an attorney for the hospital, tore to shreds the seven allegations against the medical facility pleading to the jury to listen to facts and not to hand down a verdict based on sympathy
‘This case is about an organization that is so screwed up that it actually thinks it’s a good idea to force parents to accept their way of doing things and if the parents don’t they have to find different ways to punish them.
Anderson claimed that there needs to be a ‘captain of the ship, and there never was.’
‘It was totally dysfunctional the way this hospital operated,’ he said.
‘No one was checking, no one was making sure to see how this child was being taken care of, no one was looking to see how their own employees were behaving and it wasn’t just one.’
Ethen Shapiro, an attorney for the hospital, tore to shreds the seven allegations against the medical facility, pleading to the jury to listen to facts and not to hand down a verdict based on sympathy.
‘The most unfortunate parts of this case is the caption, Kowalskis versus All Children’s. We were never against the Kowalski family,’ Shapiro said.
‘The reason why All Children’s did what it did, the reason why All Children’s tried to comfort Maya, the reason why All Children’s tried to get her on a safe medical path is because the loving and caring providers and my client’s hospital believed in a better future for her.
‘If they could get her off the unnecessary drugs given at dangerous levels. Period. End of story.
Maya failed to attend a hearing during her bombshell trial with lawyers saying she was too ill. Lawyers introduced photos into evidence that showed her partying on Halloween (pictured)
Maya, seen sitting in the back of a limo, also attended her homecoming. Defense lawyers said it was proof that she was able to live a normal teenager’s life
Those photos were again brought up during defense counsel’s closing statements
Shapiro stressed to jurors that if there was any cause for punitive damages to be paid to the Kowalski family to do so, but vehemently denied the allegations against his client.
‘There’s nothing outrageous that the hospital ever did, there’s no reason to be considering punitive damages, your work can end with your deliberations.
‘What we need in this courtroom is closure for everybody.’
According to the complaint from Pinellas County Beata died by suicide because of the turmoil that the hospital created.
‘Defendants imprisoned Maya at [Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital in St. Petersburg] with no legal justification,’ the lawsuit states.
Throughout the trial the hospital vehemently denied the allegations and reiterated this defense in closing statements.
‘The evidence that we’ve been able to put on through our defense case has shown that Maya came to us in a horrible condition on a number of dangerous and unnecessary drugs,’ Shapiro, attorney for the hospital said during the trial.
‘We were able to wean her off those drugs and get her to a place where she can be like you see her today, walking in and out of court, going to homecoming and living a more normal teenage life.’
Anderson rebuffed the defense’s narrative that Maya is doing much better after they showed pictures of her in court enjoying similar luxuries as a ‘normal teen’ including going out on Halloween and her homecoming dance.
‘There’s a base level of pain, but when you’re in that much pain at different times it becomes, it’s not as noticeable as a normal person, really,’ Anderson said.
‘You develop a high tolerance for it. CRPS patients always have a little bit of pain, but it does come and go, and this is one of the elusive and frankly frustrating things about the disease.’
Anderson argued that out of the five depositions made by Maya the defense had been picking snippets to portray Maya’s life after hospitalization as ‘normal.’
He pointed out that Maya ‘almost died after one relapse’ and she was sent to Arnold Palmer’s Children’s Hospital in Orlando where she was given a feeding tube because of the significant weight loss she experienced.
‘The fact that they stood up for their rights to treat their own child with the best knowledge they could, with every bit of information they could, and they made the right choices,’ Anderson said.
‘So, the things that happened to them at Johns Hopkins are beyond belief, absolutely beyond belief, but we’ve proved them over and over again.’