Baltimore Archdiocese files for US bankruptcy to address sex abuse lawsuits
The Archdiocese of Baltimore filed for U.S. bankruptcy protection on Friday, saying it intends to seek a settlement of sex abuse claims by people who allege they were abused as children by Catholic priests.
The Archdiocese of Baltimore filed for U.S. bankruptcy protection on Friday, saying it intends to seek a settlement of sex abuse claims by people who allege they were abused as children by Catholic priests. The bankruptcy filing was spurred by a Maryland state law set to take effect on Oct. 1, which would allow survivors of sexual abuse to file new lawsuits regardless of how long ago the abuse occurred, according to the Archdiocese's court filings.
Maryland's attorney general has said that there are more than six hundred known survivors of clergy abuse in the state, numbers that the Archdiocese said it could not verify. The bankruptcy filing will help the Archdiocese compensate victims equitably while allowing to Church to continue operations and preserve its "limited resources," Archbishop William Lori said in a statement.
"I acknowledge that no apology, compensation, or knowledge of our present-day accountability measures will necessarily lead to healing for victim survivors, nor repair the harm they suffered," Lori said. "To be sure, conversations with victim-survivors have taught me that neither I nor the Archdiocese can undo what was taken from them."
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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