Chattanooga Times Free Press

Baltimore Archdioces­e files for bankruptcy

- BY LEA SKENE

BALTIMORE — The Archdioces­e of Baltimore on Friday filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganiza­tion days before a new state law goes into effect removing the statute of limitation­s on child sex abuse claims and allowing victims to sue their abusers decades after the fact.

The step will allow the oldest diocese in the United States “to equitably compensate victim-survivors of child sexual abuse” while the local Catholic church continues its mission and ministries, Archbishop William E. Lori said in a statement posted on the archdioces­e website.

But attorneys and advocates said the church is simply trying to protect its assets and silence abuse victims by halting all civil claims against the archdioces­e and shifting the process to bankruptcy court, a less transparen­t forum.

Michael McDonnell, interim executive director of the national group Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said the Baltimore archdioces­e is following in the footsteps of other jurisdicti­ons across the country that have similarly sought bankruptcy protection to offset settlement costs and avoid further scrutiny.

“Catholic bishops are employing the same deception from coast to coast,” he said. “Cover up child sex offenses while maintainin­g the ministry of the abusers. Next, oppose any modificati­ons to the statute of limitation­s that might make those offenses more visible. Finally, go to federal bankruptcy courts and act as though you have run out of money when secular laws offer a window to justice. When will church officials make true amends?”

While the archdioces­e itself can’t be sued now, other entities such as Catholic schools and individual parishes still can under the new state law, which goes into effect Sunday.

Maryland lawmakers passed the law in April, weeks after the state attorney general released a nearly 500-page investigat­ive report detailing the scope of child sexual abuse and cover-up within the nation’s oldest Catholic diocese. The report lists more than 150 clergy who were credibly accused of abusing over 600 victims dating back several decades. It paints a damning picture of the archdioces­e.

Rob Jenner, a Baltimore attorney representi­ng abuse victims, said the bankruptcy decision deals them yet another blow. The fact that church leaders waited until the last minute adds insult to injury because victims spent months getting their hopes up, meeting with lawyers and reliving the abuse, he said.

“It’s just a further locking of the file cabinet doors to keep victims from seeing the full weight and scope of wrongdoing,” he told The Associated Press. “It’s so defeating.”

Jenner held a news conference earlier Friday to preview some of the lawsuits he plans to file.

One of the plaintiffs, Kimberly Mills-Bonham, will see her case relegated to bankruptcy court because the school where her alleged abuse occurred has since closed. Mills-Bonham alleges abuse at the hands of Father Joseph Maskell, one of the most notorious abusers named in the attorney general’s report, starting when she was 9. Maskell is featured in the Netflix docuseries “The Keepers” about child sexual abuse and coverup in the Baltimore archdioces­e.

“She saw it as yet another form of abuse,” he said. “She does not understand how they can get away with this.”

David Lorenz, Maryland state director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said the Chapter 11 filing effectivel­y waters down the rights afforded to victims under the new law. He said once the bankruptcy proceeding ends, the judge will divide a settlement among people who file claims, closing the window for victims to continue coming forward.

“There are a bunch of things about this that are really wrong,” Lorenz said. “It shows a level of moral bankruptcy.”

But Lori argued the move is the best way to compensate survivors since the archdioces­e’s resources would have otherwise been exhausted on litigation, perhaps after only a small number of cases had been decided.

“Staggering legal fees and large settlement­s or jury awards for a few victim-survivors would have depleted our financial resources, leaving the vast majority of victim-survivors without compensati­on, while ending ministries that families across Maryland rely on for material and spiritual support,” he said.

 ?? AP PHOTO/PATRICK SEMANSKY ?? Baltimore Archbishop William Lori leads a funeral Mass in 2017 in Baltimore.
AP PHOTO/PATRICK SEMANSKY Baltimore Archbishop William Lori leads a funeral Mass in 2017 in Baltimore.

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