A Catholic diocese in Minnesota filed for bankruptcy on Friday, joining more than a dozen other U.S. Catholic districts and religious orders driven to seek protection from creditors by the church's clergy sex abuse scandal, Reuters reported on Friday. The Roman Catholic Diocese of New Ulm, which is southwest of Minneapolis, said that it will use chapter 11 bankruptcy to reorganize its finances and produce a plan to pay creditors. The rural diocese is defending 101 lawsuits involving alleged sex abuse by clergy mostly from the 1950s through the 1970s. Minnesota had lifted the civil statute of limitations for a period of three years ending May 25, 2016, allowing claims from prior decades to be brought. The diocese is the third in Minnesota to file for bankruptcy in recent years over claims of clergy sex abuse.
