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Insurers Prepare for Appeal on Boy Scouts Sex-Abuse Settlement Plan

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

A group of insurers fighting the Boy Scouts of America’s bankruptcy reorganization plan wants to capitalize on a recent court ruling rejecting Johnson & Johnson’s use of chapter 11 to freeze 40,000 lawsuits linking its talc products to cancer, WSJ Pro Bankruptcy reported. Allianz Global Risks US Insurance Co. and Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. are among the carriers scheduled to appear Thursday in the U.S. District Court in Wilmington, Del., to argue against a bankruptcy court’s 2022 approval of the Boy Scouts chapter 11 plan, which would settle tens of thousands of sexual abuse claims. Last week, they argued in written papers that the now-dismissed bankruptcy of J&J subsidiary LTL Management LLC could apply to the youth group as well. The appeals-court ruling against LTL said that debtors seeking protection in chapter 11 must demonstrate good faith by acting in conformity with the underlying principles of the bankruptcy code, according to the insurers’ recent letter. They have previously said the Boy Scouts plan seeks to inflate financial distress to provide a windfall for sex-abuse attorneys. “Good intentions — such as to protect the J&J brand or comprehensively resolve litigation — do not suffice alone,” the insurers’ letter said, quoting the LTL decision. Some insurers settled with the Boy Scouts, but those that are appealing the chapter 11 plan argue their contractual rights under the policies they issued the Boy Scouts or its affiliates were unfairly disregarded.