Judge Accepts Most of Boy Scouts Bankruptcy Plan to Settle Sex Abuse Cases
A bankruptcy judge on Friday accepted most of the Boy Scouts of America’s $2.7 billion plan for compensating sex-abuse victims, setting the youth group on a path out of the largest chapter 11 case involving childhood abuse, WSJ Pro Bankruptcy reported. Judge Laurie Selber Silverstein in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Del., endorsed the key elements of the settlement plan, concluding that it would pay off in full roughly 82,200 individual claims of sexual abuse against the Boy Scouts. She stopped short of granting formal approval to the bankruptcy plan, rejecting some aspects and requiring more information on others. But she broadly endorsed the Boy Scouts’ plan for compensating abuse survivors by seeking contributions from the organization’s local councils, insurers and partner organizations, in return for grants of legal immunity from further abuse-related claims. “Many survivors have been waiting for thirty, forty or even fifty years to tell their stories and receive a meaningful recovery,” the judge said. “This plan makes that happen.” Pending final approval, the bankruptcy plan is expected to end more than two years in chapter 11 where the Boy Scouts dealt with the competing interests of abuse survivors, its liability insurers, and its affiliates and partner organizations. Under the chapter 11 plan, roughly 250 local Scouts councils and partner groups, the lifeblood of scouting activities, will gain legal immunity from related sex-abuse claims by contributing to a settlement fund, the largest ever created to pay sex-abuse victims. Abuse victims, many of whom had lived with the trauma of childhood abuse for decades before stepping forward to file claims in the bankruptcy case, could start to see money flowing within 12 months. Judge Silverstein said on Friday that some aspects of the bankruptcy plan don’t pass muster, and that the Boy Scouts have “decisions to make” about how to proceed.
