The Columbus Dispatch

Boy Scouts sex abuse claims may grow to tens of thousands

- Rachel Axon and Cara Kelly

As a Nov. 16 deadline looms for abuse survivors to come forward to make claims in the Boy Scouts of America bankruptcy, a judge’s ruling could allow the case to become the largesteve­r child sexual abuse case against a single national organizati­on.

Late last week, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Laurie Selber Silverstei­n allowed the Coalition of Abused Scouts for Justice to join mediation discussion­s, giving a group representi­ng 28,000 clients a say in any future settlement agreement.

So far, 7,300 victims represente­d by the 10 law firms in the coalition have signed consent forms allowing the attorneys to negotiate on their behalf. More are expected to sign before the November deadline to file proof of their allegation­s.

That means tens of thousands of victims, who are considered creditors in the bankruptcy proceeding, could vote on any future settlement with the Boy Scouts.

“In the end it comes down to ... the votes of the survivors, so if you have the majority of the survivors, your votes can confirm a plan,” said Philadelph­ia attorney Ken Rothweiler, who as part of the group Abused in Scouting represents 13,000 claimants. “Anybody that has the most claimants, it puts them in a very advantageo­us position.”

Boy Scouts filed for bankruptcy in federal court in Delaware in February amid mounting liability from abuse cases, estimating it faced 275 lawsuits in state and federal courts around the country plus another 1,400 potential claims – a number dwarfed by activity in the months since.

In recent years, thousands also have alleged abuse by Catholic priests. Those cases have been filed against individual dioceses, however, obscuring how many total claims the church has faced.

In initial filings, Boy Scouts were the ones who proposed the creation of the Victims Compensati­on Trust, but the youth organizati­on has not yet suggested how much money would be set aside for it.

The bankruptcy process is ill-suited to deal with these types of cases, said Marci Hamilton, CEO of CHILD USA, a nonprofit think tank that works to prevent child abuse. Hamilton has been studying abuse cases in Boy Scouts based on data shared by Abused in Scouting.

“The goal of federal Chapter 11 bankruptcy is to be able to reorganize your assets to put a lid on any kind of future claims by people you currently owe,” she said. “It never was intended for child sex abuse.”

But Hamilton said it has become the “go-to model for organizati­ons with large numbers of victims,” like the Catholic Church.

“It’s a potent message to the victims: They had better come forward immediatel­y because they might be shut out,” she said. “So, they come forward whether they’re ready or not.”

Legal battles over the coalition were just the latest in a string of skirmishes that have broken out over the past months.

The coalition faced opposition from an unlikely combinatio­n of the Boy Scouts’ insurers and the Torts Claimant Committee, a group of nine survivors of child sexual abuse within Boy Scouts appointed in March to represent the interests of claimants.

Insurers and lawyers for the committee argued the coalition didn’t meet financial disclosure requiremen­ts and used that rule to question the makeup and structure of the coalition and whom it represents. In hearings in September and October, both groups argued against including the coalition in mediation, saying the interests of survivors already are represente­d by the Torts Claimant Committee.

“What the insurance companies and the TCC are responding to is the number of victims here,” Sunni Beville of Brown Rudnick, the firm representi­ng the coalition, argued last week.

In allowing the coalition to join the case, Silverstei­n noted that she could think of many reasons for the increase in claims against Boy Scouts, including the approachin­g deadline, a national advertisin­g blitz by attorneys and a less stigmatizi­ng environmen­t for victims to come forward in recent years.

“Here the purported concern expressed by insurers ... is the explosion of claims ... and the concern that claims filed may not be valid,” she said.

The ruling comes after months of disagreeme­nt between parties representi­ng former Scouts who say they were abused while in the organizati­on and who may be entitled to compensati­on.

This summer, some of the state court counsels who formed the coalition began to clash with the Torts Claimant Committee and its representa­tive, James Stang, whose previous abuse cases include the Catholic Church and USA Gymnastics.

The two camps disagreed on the role of Boy Scouts’ local councils in the bankruptcy, and whether or not victims from states that have done away with statutes of limitation­s or created so-called “look-back” windows should be given preference.

The committee objected to the coalition’s motion to enter the case, saying the coalition “is nothing more than a marketing term that was concocted” by law firms “who were unhappy they could not control the Tort Claimants’ Committee to implement their agenda in the case.”

In September, insurers sought to depose Tim Kosnoff and Andrew Van Arsdale, attorneys with Abused in Scouting who say they represent thousands of survivors. Kosnoff and Van Arsdale created the coalition, and their involvemen­t spawned further dispute after the U.S. Trustee in the case turned over an email from Kosnoff.

In an objection to the coalition’s inclusion, Century Indemnity Co., one of the Boy Scouts’ insurers, argued the contents of the email explained why the coalition didn’t make required disclosure­s: because it made it clear that the group intended to “exert total control” over the case, which, Century argued, could undermine “the integrity of the bankruptcy process.”

Century cited Kosnoff’s June email, in which he wrote, “[h]ere is the message: We control 80% of the claims i.e. our coalition controls the case. ... Nothing happens until AIS says so. We smile, nod our heads and do nothing, nothing at all.”

In a hearing last week, David Wilks, who represents Kosnoff and Van Arsdale, called the email a distractio­n put forward by the Boy Scouts’ insurers.

In her ruling, Silverstei­n said it was “more than unfortunat­e,” but not enough to compel Kosnoff’s deposition to Boy Scouts’ insurers.

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