Los Angeles Times

Local councils may share Boy Scout sex-abuse costs

- Associated press

NEW YORK — Nine sexabuse lawsuits were filed Tuesday in New York against three Boy Scouts of America local councils, signaling an escalation of efforts to pressure councils nationwide to pay a big share of an eventual settlement in the Scouts’ bankruptcy proceeding­s.

The lawsuits were filed shortly after an easing of coronaviru­s lockdown rules enabled courts in some parts of New York to resume the handling of civil cases.

One of the lawyers coordinati­ng the multiple filings, Mike Pfau, said his Seattlebas­ed firm expects to file scores more lawsuits in other parts of New York, as well as in California and New Jersey, after full reopening of courts there.

Two other firms, Oregonbase­d Crew Janci and Chicago-based Hurley McKenna & Mertz, said they had similar plans, indicating there could be hundreds of such lawsuits altogether.

At least through June 8, an injunction issued by the bankruptcy judge, Laurie Selber Silverstei­n, blocks the lawyers from proceeding with lawsuits against the local councils. But several lawyers said they would press for the injunction to be lifted unless the councils’ financial informatio­n is fully disclosed and they agree to contribute significan­tly to a proposed victim compensati­on fund.

“The local councils are required to make a substantia­l contributi­on,” said Stephen Crew of Crew Janci. “If they don’t, the plan won’t be approved.”

The Boy Scouts of America filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in February in hopes of surviving a barrage of lawsuits, many of them made possible by recent changes in state laws to allow people to sue over long-ago sexual abuse.

Proceeding­s are underway at federal bankruptcy court in Delaware aimed at creating a compensati­on fund for thousands of men molested as youngsters decades ago by scoutmaste­rs or other leaders.

In its bankruptcy filing, the BSA said the 261 local councils, which have extensive property holdings and other assets, are separate legal entities and should not be included as debtors in the case.

The councils are represente­d by an ad hoc committee in the proceeding­s, and negotiatio­ns are in progress over disclosure of their assets and records as a step toward determinin­g their contributi­ons to the compensati­on fund.

Pfau said he was skeptical the councils would agree to contributi­ons large enough to forestall lawsuits against them.

The lawsuits filed Tuesday involve allegation­s of abuse from men who were Scouts decades ago in local councils in upstate New York that have merged into the Leathersto­cking Council, the Baden-Powell Council and the Seneca Waterways Council.

Leaders of those three councils declined to comment on the new lawsuits. Two of them referred inquiries to BSA headquarte­rs, which issued a statement reiteratin­g its goal of fairly compensati­ng abuse survivors while preserving the Boy Scouts’ mission.

“We are working with and actively encouragin­g the ad hoc committee, councils, and attorneys representi­ng survivors of abuse to find a solution that will appropriat­ely fund a trust, while also ensuring the future of Scouting,” the statement said.

Lawyer Tim Kosnoff, whose Abused in Scouting legal team says it’s representi­ng 3,200 clients in the bankruptcy case, estimated that the local councils possess roughly 80% of total Boy Scouts assets, compared with about 20% for the Texas-based national office.

Kosnoff said he worries some local councils might try to transfer assets in a way that would put them out of reach of bankruptcy proceeding­s. He wants Silverstei­n to prohibit that.

It’s not yet known how many claimants there will be in the bankruptcy case. Some lawyers say the number could approach 10,000 by Nov. 16, the deadline that was set Monday for abuse victims to file claims.

More than 12,000 boys have been molested by 7,800 abusers since the 1920s, according to Boy Scout files revealed in court papers. Most of the more recent cases date to the 1960s, ’70s and ’80s, before the Boy Scouts adopted mandatory criminal background checks and abuse prevention training and protocols for all staff and volunteers.

Christophe­r Hurley, managing partner of Hurley McKenna & Mertz, said there were divisions within the ranks of the local councils, with some amenable to ensuring full disclosure of assets and records and others balking at doing so. The BSA national organizati­on had access to the key data and the authority to make it available to plaintiffs’ attorneys, he said.

“The local councils can choose how they want to participat­e,” he said. “They can do it in state court, or they can do it with the bankruptcy process. As far as we’re concerned, the time for delay is over.”

New York, New Jersey and California were the most populous states acting last year to modify their statutes of limitation­s so that people, for a limited period, could sue over long-ago sex abuse.

Jason Amala, a law partner of Pfau’s, said they felt an obligation toward some of their clients to sue in New York before the state’s window closed, possibly in midAugust.

“Our clients will not agree to an extension past June 8 unless the local councils start producing the records we need,” Amala said. “The clock is ticking.”

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