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		Boy Scouts of America files bankruptcy in wake of abuse lawsuits
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		 [February 18, 2020] 
		By Tom Hals 
 WILMINGTON, Del. (Reuters) - The Boy Scouts 
		of America said on Tuesday it had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy amid a 
		flood of lawsuits over allegations of child sexual abuse stretching back 
		decades.
 
 The bankruptcy is not expected to affect the organization's programs, 
		which promote self-reliance through outdoor activities such as hiking 
		and camping. The group was already struggling with declining membership 
		and controversy over admitting gay and female members.
 
 The Boy Scouts, based in Irving, Texas, has said that it sincerely 
		apologizes to anyone harmed, that it believes the accusers and that it 
		encourages victims to come forward.
 
 Founded in 1910, the organization has been overwhelmed by hundreds of 
		claims after several states, including New York, removed legal hurdles 
		that had barred people from suing over old allegations of child sex 
		abuse.
 
 The changes to the law coincided with the #MeToo movement and a shift in 
		public opinion that has been more supportive of accusers. The result has 
		been a wave of lawsuits against church leaders, doctors and schools, as 
		well as scouting.
 
		
		 
		
 The Boy Scouts has said in a statement that "we can live up to our 
		social and moral responsibility to fairly compensate victims" while 
		"also ensuring that we carry out our mission to serve youth, families 
		and local communities through our programs."
 
 Paul Mones, who represents hundreds of men who claim they were abused as 
		scouts, told Reuters: "The bankruptcy is being filed as a result of 
		decades of concealing abuse by the Boy Scouts and their adult leaders."
 
 The bankruptcy, filed in Delaware, will allow the Boy Scouts to bring 
		all of the lawsuits into one court and try to negotiate a settlement, 
		rather than using the organization's funds to fight each case in court, 
		which might leave some victims with nothing.
 
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			The statue of a scout stands in the entrance to the Boy Scouts of 
			America headquarters in Irving, Texas, February 5, 2013. REUTERS/Tim 
			Sharp/File Photo 
            
 
            A similar bankruptcy strategy to resolve sex abuse lawsuits has been 
			used by more than 20 Catholic dioceses and USA Gymnastics.
 It could, however, be challenging to determine the value of the Boy 
			Scouts' assets. The national organization said in its most recent 
			annual report from 2018 that it had $1.5 billion. But hundreds of 
			local councils have their own assets, and victims may try to make 
			those available for settling claims.
 
 Membership in the organization's Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts fell 13% 
			at the end of 2018 from the end of 2012, according to its annual 
			report.
 
 The Boy Scouts lost a major source of support when the Mormon church 
			said it would no longer sponsor scouting troops, beginning in 2020. 
			The move by the Utah-based Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day 
			Saints came shortly after the Boy Scouts said it would drop "boy" 
			from its program for older youths and after saying it would admit 
			transgender scouts.
 
 The church said its decision was not influenced by the Boy Scouts' 
			changes, but by a desire to focus on its own youth programs.
 
 (Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware; Editing by Noeleen 
			Walder, Dan Grebler and Gerry Doyle)
 
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