Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

» Listecki seeks review:

U.S. Supreme Court asked to weigh in on cemetery trust

- By ANNYSA JOHNSON anjohnson@journalsen­tinel.com

Catholic Archbishop Jerome Listecki appeals to the U.S. Supreme Court seeking to protect about $70 million in the Milwaukee Archdioces­e’s cemetery care fund from a settlement with sex abuse victims.

Catholic Archbishop Jerome Listecki on Tuesday asked the U.S. Supreme Court to weigh in on a key issue of the Archdioces­e of Milwaukee’s bankruptcy: whether the First Amendment and a federal law aimed at protecting religious liberty can be used to shield an estimated $70 million held in trust for the care of its cemeteries.

Lawyers for Listecki, who serves as sole trustee of the fund, filed a writ of certiorari asking the high court to review a March ruling by the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals.

In that decision, a three-judge panel ruled that neither the First Amendment nor the 1993 Religious Freedom Restoratio­n Act could be used to keep the funds out of the bankruptcy estate, where they would be used in part to fund a settlement with sex abuse vic- tims.

The writ filed Tuesday argues that the 7th Circuit ruling is at odds with decisions in at least three other federal courts around the country.

Timothy Nixon, the attorney who represents the trust, said a Supreme Court review is needed to resolve those so-called circuit splits and to restore protection­s intended by the framers of the Constituti­on and by Congress.

“The 7th Circuit decision encroaches on religious freedom and curtails the protection­s in the First Amendment,” Nixon said in a statement provided to the Journal Sentinel. “Our request is that the Supreme Court agree to re-view this case so that the substantia­l protection­s that are being threatened can be protected.”

Marci Hamilton, the First Amendment scholar representi­ng the creditors committee, called their arguments “slim pickings for a certiorari brief,” and she said it was unlikely the Supreme Court would take the case so soon after last year’s Hobby Lobby decision, which also turned on the Religious Freedom Restoratio­n Act.

“In this circumstan­ce, there are some minor disagreeme­nts over some of the issues but no deepseated circuit split that would invite the court’s attention,” Hamilton said. “It’s unfortunat­e that they have decided to draw out this (bankruptcy) process even further for these survivors.”

Jerry Topczewski, chief of staff for Listecki, said the filing would have no effect on the archdioces­e’s reorganiza­tion plan, which is scheduled for a confirmati­on hearing beginning Nov. 9. The archdioces­e is in the process of revising that plan, which is scheduled to be submitted to U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Susan V. Kelley on Aug. 3.

Statistica­lly, Tuesday’s filing is a long shot. The court grants certiorari in fewer than 5% of the cases submitted for review.

Seeking clarificat­ion

The writ seeks clarificat­ion on the scope of the Religious Freedom Restoratio­n Act, which prohibits government from substantia­lly burdening a person’s free exercise of religion without a com-

pelling government­al interest.

The 7th Circuit decision reinstated a lawsuit, brought by Listecki, in an effort to protect the cemetery trust, which was establishe­d in 2007 by then-Archbishop Timothy Dolan with approval from the Vatican.

It is the largest single asset currently in play in the nearly 5-yearold bankruptcy and a linchpin of its reorganiza­tion plan, which is scheduled for a confirmati­on hearing in November. Dolan is now cardinal of New York.

The creditors committee argues that the movement of $55 million into the account in 2008 was intended to shield it from legal liability and constitute­d a fraudulent transfer of funds in advance of the bankruptcy. It argues that a significan­t portion of that money should be made available to compensate abuse victims who have filed claims in the bankruptcy.

The archdioces­e maintains that the funds support an essential element of the Catholic faith — the belief in the resurrecti­on of the body after death — and that to force it to tap even $1 for the bankruptcy is a violation of its religious freedom. However, it has agreed to use at least some of the funds as part of its reorganiza­tion plan required to exit its bankruptcy. Under the original plan, which is now being revised, the trust would lend the archdioces­e $2 million and provide an additional $2 million annually toward the cost of running its cemeteries.

The archdioces­e filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 2011 to address its sex abuse liabilitie­s. Of the 14 Catholic dioceses and religious orders that have filed such bankruptci­es since 2004, it is the longest running to date in terms of the time between the initial filing and confirmati­on of the reorganiza­tion plan. Legal fees in the case have totaled about $17 million for the bankruptcy proceeding­s alone. The archdioces­e has declined to say how much it has spent on the cemetery trust litigation.

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