Greenwich Time

Boy Scouts seek to extend halt to lawsuits

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DOVER, Del. — Roadblocks are continuing to pop up in the Boy Scouts of America bankruptcy case as the organizati­on tries to finalize a reorganiza­tion plan built around a global resolution of thousands of sexual abuse claims by former Boy Scouts.

Attorneys for the youth organizati­on filed a motion on Monday asking a Delaware bankruptcy judge to extend a preliminar­y injunction that halted lawsuits against local BSA councils and sponsoring organizati­ons during the bankruptcy.

BSA attorneys said the filing was necessary because the official tort claimants committee that represents sexual abuse victims refused to consent to an extension, despite doing so several times in the past.

The current injunction expires March 19. The BSA, which hopes to emerge from bankruptcy this summer, is seeking an extension through July 19.

Attorneys for the BSA argue that maintainin­g the injunction is critical to restructur­ing efforts, including enabling local councils and chartered organizati­ons to participat­e in mediation and, ultimately, make “a substantia­l contributi­on” to a settlement and global resolution of abuse claims. Allowing lawsuits against local councils and sponsoring organizati­ons to proceed will make it difficult, if not impossible, for the BSA to both equitably compensate abuse survivors and ensure that the organizati­on can continue to carry out its charitable mission, they contend.

“The TCC is apparently willing to gamble with the fortunes of abuse survivors and the debtors when the stakes are the highest,” BSA attorneys wrote, referring to the tort claimants committee.

An attorney for the committee did not immediatel­y respond to an email seeking comment Tuesday.

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