Bankrupt Boy Scouts of America to pay hundreds of millions to sex abuse victims
By Stephen Rex Brown, New York Daily News
Delaware, Ohio - The Boy Scouts of America (BSA) have reached an agreement that will pay around $850 million to more than 60,000 men who say they were abused as scouts, The New York Daily News has learned.
The deal, announced late Thursday, is a major step toward the beleaguered youth organization emerging from bankruptcy.
Under the agreement filed in Delaware Bankruptcy Court, the Boy Scouts of America will pay $250 million. Local councils of the Scouts will pay at least $600 million, some of it through the transfer of property.
The deal is the result of months of negotiations between survivor groups, the Boy Scouts of America and more than 250 local councils, which are akin to franchises. Victims will continue to seek money from insurers, former insurers and chartered organizations of the Scouts such as the Catholic and Mormon Churches.
The process of distributing money to victims will begin once the Scouts exit chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings.
"We have been working tirelessly to deliver the results that the survivors of sexual abuse in Boy Scouts are entitled to, and we will continue to do so. This is an important step but the work continues," said Adam Slater, a lawyer on the Coalition of Abused Scouts for Justice, which is involved in the litigation.
"I strongly encourage the many insurance companies and charter organizations to step up and do the right thing for these deserving individuals," Slater said.
Decades of despair for victims
The 111-year-old organization filed for bankruptcy in February 2020 as nearly 90,000 abuse claims piled up. The Scouts emphasize the value of the great outdoors, teamwork and community service.
The majority of the pending claims date back decades. Accusers alleged abuse in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s before the BSA began requiring two adult leaders be present at all scouting activities in 1987. The scandal, along with the coronavirus pandemic and other factors, have caused membership in America’s most well-known youth organization to plummet.
"We are devastated by the number of lives impacted by past abuse in Scouting and moved by the bravery of those who have come forward," the BSA previously said. "We are heartbroken that we cannot undo their pain."
Suits have been filed all over the country, including in Brooklyn and Manhattan.
"I remember there was one camp out, and I remember waking up in the tent in the dark and his hands were on me, in my private areas," an accuser told the Daily News last year, describing abuse while in the Scouts in the early 1990s in Texas.
"I would sit in the dark in a pit of confusion and fear and despair."
In a statement, the Boy Scouts of America said the agreement represents "substantial progress in our Chapter 11 case" and is part of "our ongoing efforts to reach a global resolution that will equitably compensate survivors and ensure Scouting’s future by resolving past abuse cases for both the national organization and local councils."
Cover photo: IMAGO / ZUMA Wire