The Oklahoman

Boys Scouts’ property sale OK’d

Some funds to going to compensati­ng sexual abuse victims

- Randall Chase

DOVER, Del. – The judge presiding over the Boy Scouts of America bankruptcy has approved the organizati­on’s request to sell its warehouse and distributi­on center in North Carolina for roughly $13.5 million and lease back the property from the buyer.

The BSA wants to use some of the proceeds from the sale approved by the court Friday as part of its contributi­on to a proposed $2.6 billion fund to compensate tens of thousands of men who claim they were sexually abused as children while involved in Scouting.

After a monthlong trial, Judge Laurie Selber Silverstei­n continues to weigh whether to approve the Boy Scouts’ reorganiza­tion plan.

The Boy Scouts of America sought bankruptcy protection in February 2020 to stave off a flood of lawsuits alleging child sexual abuse by Scout leaders and volunteers over several decades. At the time, the BSA was facing about 275 filed lawsuits and was aware of roughly another 1,400 pending claims. But more than 82,200 abuse claims have been submitted in the bankruptcy.

Attorneys for BSA insurers, including those that have since reached settlement­s and now support the plan, have said the sheer volume of claims is an indication of fraud and the result of aggressive client solicitati­on by attorneys and for-profit claims aggregator­s.

The reorganiza­tion plan calls for the BSA and its 250 local councils, along with settling insurance companies and troop sponsoring organizati­ons, to contribute some $2.6 billion in cash and property to a fund for abuse victims. In return, those entities would be released from further liability, meaning they could not be sued for Scout-related abuse claims.

At Friday’s hearing, Silverstei­n noted that the findings that the BSA and plan proponents are asking her to make in confirming the plan present her with issues that she has never previously faced as a bankruptcy judge.

“Quite frankly, probably none of my

previous rulings in eight years really dealt with this particular type of issue, where there are such extensive findings that people are asking me to make, and where the findings are particular­ly controvers­ial,” she said.

When an attorney representi­ng a group of insurers opposed to the plan noted that the BSA had filed hundreds of pages of documents in the wee hours Friday morning with plan modifications and revisions, the judge assured him that he would have time to review and respond to them before she rules. She must decide a host of controvers­ial and complex issues involving not just the Boy Scouts, but the BSA’s insurers, its 250 local councils, and tens of thousands of troop sponsoring organizati­ons.

Opposing insurers have argued that the plan violates their rights under policies they issued, and that the findings that plan supporters want Silverstei­n make would bind them to the proposed trust distributi­on procedures and make it difficult to challenge claim decisions. In an email, one attorney for abuse claimants described such binding trust distributi­on procedures as a “Holy Grail” that mass tort lawyers have been chasing for years. Insurers say approval by the judge would set a dangerous precedent tort lawyers would use to their advantage in future lawsuits.

Perhaps the most contentiou­s issue is whether third parties, including settling insurers, local councils and troop sponsors, should be allowed to escape future liability by contributi­ng to the victims fund, or at least not objecting to the plan.

 ?? TED S. WARREN/AP FILE ?? The Boy Scouts of America sought bankruptcy protection in 2020 to stave off lawsuits.
TED S. WARREN/AP FILE The Boy Scouts of America sought bankruptcy protection in 2020 to stave off lawsuits.

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