U.S. judge signs off on $850 million Boy Scouts sex abuse settlement
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[August 20, 2021]
By Maria Chutchian
(Reuters) -The judge overseeing the Boy
Scouts of America bankruptcy on Thursday approved the youth
organization’s request to sign off on an $850 million settlement to
resolve tens of thousands of sex abuse claims.
The ruling by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Laurie Selber Silverstein of
Delaware will enable the Boy Scouts to move ahead with a proposed
reorganization plan that would allow the group to exit bankruptcy by the
end of the year.
"I find that debtors have met the relevant standard," she said in a
court hearing.
The organization must still obtain approval from creditors to move ahead
with the deal in a formal plan to exit bankruptcy.
The creditors include victims of the abuse, who generally supported the
settlement.
Founded in 1910, the Boy Scouts filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
protection in February 2020 after being hit with a flood of sexual abuse
lawsuits.
Claims multiplied after several U.S. states passed laws allowing
accusers, including adults, to sue over allegations dating back several
decades.
The Boy Scouts have apologized and said they are committed to fulfilling
their “social and moral responsibility to equitably compensate
survivors.” The organization has said "nothing can undo the tragic abuse
that victims suffered" and that it believed the bankruptcy process was
the best way to compensate them.
The Boy Scouts said in a statement that Silverstein's ruling is "an
important development in Boy Scouts of America’s financial
restructuring."
The settlement is backed by 250 local councils but opposed by insurers,
who say representatives of the abuse claimants had too much say in the
negotiations.
The Boy Scouts' insurers, which include Century Indemnity Company and
Hartford Financial Services Group, had argued throughout the bankruptcy
process that some claims may be fraudulent.
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The statue of a scout stands in the entrance to Boy Scouts of
America headquarters in Irving, Texas, February 5, 2013. REUTERS/Tim
Sharp
Unless the Boy Scouts reach a resolution with the
insurers, they are likely to fight over the final bankruptcy plan.
Century declined to comment on the judge's ruling.
Hartford did not immediately return a request for comment.
About 82,000 sex abuse claims have been filed against the Boy
Scouts.
In addition to the $850 million, the settlement includes the
creation of a “child protection committee” designed to ensure safety
for Scouts in future.
The judge rejected a provision of the deal that would have allowed
the Boy Scouts to pay up to $10.5 million in fees and expenses
accrued by lawyers representing several thousand victims.
She also rejected the organization’s request to toss a prior deal
through which insurer Hartford Financial Services Group agreed to
contribute $650 million to a settlement, leaving its dispute with
Hartford lingering. The Boy Scouts effectively abandoned the
Hartford agreement after representatives of victims said they would
not support it.
Lawyers for the Boy Scouts, the insurers and victims of abuse are
expected to appear before Silverstein on Aug. 25.
(Reporting by Maria Chutchian; Editing by Noeleen Walder and Grant
McCool)
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