San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

SBC panel will fund third-party inquiry of sex abuse

- By Holly Meyer

NASHVILLE, Tennessee — A top Southern Baptist Convention committee agreed Tuesday to fund a third-party investigat­ion into its handling of sexual abuse allegation­s but held off on waiving its attorney-client privilege for the probe, delaying for the future a decision seen as a key demand of the thousands of Southern Baptists who set the review in motion.

The Executive Committee allocated $1.6 million for Guidepost Solutions, the firm conducting the investigat­ion into allegation­s it mishandled abuse cases, resisted reforms and intimidate­d survivors and advocates. They also agreed to taking more time to negotiate the contract and other legal questions related to the investigat­ion.

“I think it’s a good step and I think that it shows our unity on the urgency of the matter,” Executive Committee Chair Rolland Slade said.

The decision, the latest action taken in the denominati­on’s ongoing public reckoning with the scandal, came at the end of the Executive Committee’s twoday business meeting in Nashville. The investigat­ion, including the question of whether the Executive Committee would waive its attorney-client privilege, dominated discussion. The rule protects the confidenti­ality of communicat­ions on legal advice, and some Executive Committee members raised concerns waiving it could impact litigation and insurance policies.

Delegates, also known as messengers, voted overwhelmi­ngly at their national gathering in June to create a task force charged with overseeing the third-party investigat­ion.

They also directed the task force to agree to the investigat­or’s recommende­d standards and best practices, “including but not limited to the Executive Committee staff and members waiving attorney-client privilege in order to ensure full access to informatio­n and accuracy in the review.” In August, the task force formerly asked the Executive Committee to waive it, saying it is the will of the messengers and critical to the investigat­ion.

On Monday and Tuesday, Executive Committee members heard from key stakeholde­rs about the investigat­ion, asked questions about the risks of waiving privilege and disagreed over how much of this week’s discussion­s should happen behind closed doors.

Julie Myers Wood, the CEO of Guidepost Solutions, told the Executive Committee waiving privilege is the “only way to ensure that the investigat­ion is viewed as fully credible, transparen­t and thorough and to show that the EC has and the Southern Baptist Convention has nothing to hide.”

On Tuesday, the members took hours to hash out what they ultimately approved, which also included asking the task force and Executive Committee officers to come up with a contract in

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