Baltimore Sun

Boy Scouts reach $850M abuse settlement

- By Randall Chase

DOVER, Del. — The Boy Scouts of America have reached an $850 million agreement with attorneys representi­ng some 60,000 victims of child sex abuse in what could prove to be a pivotal moment in the organizati­on’s bankruptcy case.

The agreement filed in court by BSA attorneys late Thursday would mark one of the largest sums in U.S. history involving cases of sexual abuse. The filing, known as a restructur­ing support agreement, includes the BSA, abuse victims, local Boy Scouts councils and lawyers appointed to represent victims who might file future claims.

The Boy Scouts of America sought bankruptcy protection in February 2020, moving to halt hundreds of lawsuits by men who were molested as youngsters decades ago by scoutmaste­rs or other leaders. The filing was intended to try to reach a global resolution of abuse claims and create a compensati­on fund for victims.

But attorneys for the Irving, Texas-based BSA had previously been unable to reach agreement with victims, local Boy Scout councils and insurers on how to compensate victims while allowing the 111-year-old organizati­on to continue operating.

Thursday’s agreement signals the BSA’s acknowledg­ment that disagreeme­nts remain between attorneys representi­ng abuse victims and those representi­ng the BSA’s insurers.

In an earlier court filing Thursday, attorneys for certain insurance companies accused the BSA of allowing attorneys for abuse victims to rewrite the BSA’s restructur­ing plan to favor their clients.

“With only the fox guarding the henhouse, the outcome is utterly at odds with what BSA itself asserted was necessary for a confirmabl­e plan and is permissibl­e under the bankruptcy code,” the insurers wrote.

Meanwhile, attorneys for the Boy Scouts are also asking for U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Laurie Selber Silverstei­n to declare that they have no obligation to seek court approval of a previously announced settlement with The Hartford, one of the BSA’s insurers.

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