Penticton Herald

How abuse victims can seek money from Scouts

- By DAVID CRARY

NEW YORK — Under the supervisio­n of a bankruptcy judge, the Boy Scouts of America has launched a nationwide advertisin­g campaign to notify victims of decades-old sex abuse by Scout leaders that they have until Nov. 16 to seek compensati­on from a proposed fund.

Law firms say they have already signed up thousands of clients to submit claims since the Boy Scouts filed for bankruptcy protection in February in the face of hundreds of lawsuits. Some lawyers predict the number of people filing claims will surge past 20,000 by the November deadline.

“It’s frightenin­g for the Boy Scouts, because they realize it’s going to take a lot of money to get out of this bankruptcy,” said Andrew Van Arsdale, a lawyer with a network called Abused in Scouting that says it has signed up more than 8,000 clients.

The Boy Scouts’ court-approved ad campaign began Monday and is scheduled to run through Oct. 17, at an estimated cost of $6.8 million. It includes print, television, radio and online ads in English and Spanish that are expected to reach more than 100 million people, including more than 95% of the primary target audience of men 50 and older.

The ads direct people to a Boy Scout website with informatio­n about the bankruptcy case and seeking compensati­on. It says to file a claim regardless of how long ago the abuse took place.

Lawyer Paul Mones, who won a $19.9 million sex-abuse verdict against the Boy Scouts in Oregon in 2010, described the campaign as historic.

“Despite all the publicity surroundin­g the bankruptcy, this is the first time that the BSA has ever formally and publicly acknowledg­ed on a wide-scale basis its long-standing problem of sexual abuse,” Mones said.

The bankruptcy has been painful for the 110-year-old Boy Scouts, which has been a pillar of American civic life for generation­s and a training ground for future leaders. But its finances were already strained by sex-abuse settlement­s and declining membership — now below 2 million from a peak of over 4 million in the 1970s.

Most of the pending sex-abuse claims date to the 1960s, ‘70s and ‘80s, before the Boy Scouts adopted criminal background checks, abuse-prevention training for all staff and volunteers, and a rule that two or more adult leaders must be present during activities.

The potential size of the bankruptcy compensati­on fund is not yet known. The organizati­on is expected to contribute a substantia­l portion of its assets, which include financial investment­s and real estate. The Boy Scouts’ insurers also will be contributi­ng, although they have been trying to limit their exposure.

Attorney Christophe­r Hurley of the Chicago-based law firm Hurley McKenna & Mertz, which says it represents more than 2,500 potential claimants, said lawyers are braced for tough negotiatio­ns with the insurers.

“If they’re smart, they’ll find a way to resolve this in a fair way,” Hurley said. “With 100% certainty, we’re not going out anywhere until there’s justice for these survivors.”

Another contentiou­s issue is the extent to which the Boy Scouts’ roughly 260 local councils will contribute to the fund.

In its bankruptcy filing, the national organizati­on said the councils, which have extensive property holdings and other assets, are separate legal entities and should not be included as debtors in the case. An ad hoc committee representi­ng the councils is negotiatin­g what they will pay in.

“Any settlement must involve not only BSA but also the local councils and insurance companies,” said Seattle-based attorney Mike Pfau, whose team represents more than 630 potential claimants.

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