Baltimore Sun

Creditors Committee launches site with informatio­n for abuse survivors

- By Alex Mann

The committee tasked with representi­ng survivors of clergy sex abuse in the Archdioces­e of Baltimore’s bankruptcy case launched a website Wednesday to provide informatio­n about the process.

According to the website, survivors can expect to see a news feed with case updates, an overview of the bankruptcy process, a page with “frequently asked questions” and an inventory of resources for survivors.

“Communicat­ion is vital,” said Paul Jan Zdunek, chair of the committee of seven survivors tasked with representi­ng the rest, in an email.

“As representa­tives of all survivors, the Creditors Committee wants to make sure there is a flow of informatio­n to all survivors during this lengthy and complicate­d bankruptcy process.”

Describing the website as a “first step in the Committee communicat­ion with survivors,” Zdunek added that the committee may put on “town halls or other in-person or virtual meetings.”

The website’s launch comes during a pivotal stage of the bankruptcy proceeding, with the deadline recently set on May 31 for survivors to file proof of claims of sexual abuse by archdioces­e personnel. Known as a “claims bar date,” the deadline effectivel­y acts as a statute of limitation­s for sex abuse lawsuits against the archdioces­e.

Attorneys in the case still are finalizing plans to get word out about the deadline through advertisem­ents and other means.

Baltimore’s archdioces­e, America’s oldest, filed for bankruptcy Sept. 29, two days before the effective date of Maryland’s landmark Child Victims Act, which lifted the statute of limitation­s for civil actions alleging sex abuse against minors. The law was welcomed as a victory for survivors, who overcame the church’s longtime lobbying effort against such legislatio­n.

The Catholic archdioces­e filed for bankruptcy with hopes of limiting its liability against potential damages and to protect its millions of dollars in assets. By declaring bankruptcy, the archdioces­e limited the window for sex abuse lawsuits and funneled those claims through federal bankruptcy court rather than state court.

At the time it filed for bankruptcy, the church listed some $204 million in assets.

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