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Abuse survivors, archdiocese submit competing settlement plans

The two sides are worlds apart, with the survivors asking for $2 million average per claimant, church offering $125,000

NEW ORLEANS — With a self-imposed deadline looming to file a plan to reorganize New Orleans’ bankrupt Roman Catholic archdiocese, a committee representing about 500 survivors of clergy sexual abuse on Friday proposed that the church, its affiliated parishes, ministries, schools and their insurers should pay more than $1 billion to settle their claims.

The archdiocese quickly answered with its counterproposal: $62.5 million, or more than $900 million less.

Looking at it another way, the survivors are seeking $2 million per claim – the church is offering $125,000 on average.   

The vast majority of the money in the abuse claimants’ proposal – roughly $800 million – would come from insurance companies. Meanwhile, the archdiocese should pay $84 million and its affiliates – known as apostolates – should chip in $133 million, according to the plan filed Friday in US Bankruptcy Court by the abuse creditors’ negotiating committee.

In the church’s competing plan, the archdiocese was prepared to offer $50 million and its apostolates $12.5 million. Nothing additional would come from the archdiocese’s insurers. 

The church’s proposal includes non-monetary considerations, but it didn’t file any of those details yet. New Orleans’s archbishop, Gregory Aymond, has said he planned to disclose documents on clergy abusers that the church has long fought to keep secret.

In a letter to Catholics in the region, Aymond said the church’s reorganization plan was a “milestone in this process.” He also said the church is still negotiating “actions that we publicly pledge to take to continue our commitment to ensuring our parishes, schools, and ministries are safe places for all to grow in faith, be educated, and to participate in ministry.”

The archdiocese has already paid about $40 million in legal and professional fees to go through the bankruptcy process so far – well over the $7 million that the church initially claimed that the proceeding could cost. And none of those costs will be paid by insurance, church officials told WWL.

Any final settlement plan would have to be approved by the majority of abuse survivor claimants. Their committee’s proposal Friday sought what would be the largest settlement per abuse claimant in the history of US Catholic church bankruptcies.

The San Diego archdiocese’s 2007 bankruptcy settlement was the most lucrative for abuse claimants, with the church and its insurers paying more than $198 million to 144 victims – an average of $1.4 million per claim. San Diego’s archdiocese declared bankruptcy again in June.

If the New Orleans church were to pay what its claimants are seeking, it would average $2 million per claim.

James Adams, an abuse survivor, former president of the archdiocese’s fundraising board and ex-member of the creditors’ committee, said the initial offer is more than fair. Adams alluded to how New Orleans archbishop Gregory Aymond, early in the proceeding, informed the Vatican in writing that insurance would cover “the vast majority” of the bankruptcy – and that is the case in Friday’s proposal.

“So I’m looking at this [and] it’s a very reasonable request,” Adams said Friday.

With the high cost of legal fees and the church embarking on a $75 million restoration project for the St. Louis Cathedral, Adams said he expected the church to pay more for “the value of a human's soul.”

The creditors’ plan also lays out exactly how each abuse claim would be valued by a neutral Abuse Claims Reviewer. It proposes using a score of 1 to 100 for each claimant based on the severity, duration and frequency of the abuse they allegedly suffered, how many church officials allegedly abused them and how they were affected for the rest of their childhood and through adulthood.

The creditors’ proposal also would require the church to change the way it reports and responds to child molestation claims, which, for decades, were handled internally without being reported to police. The proposal would require the archdiocese to report to law enforcement all abuse whether or not the abuser is dead, the victim is now an adult and no matter how many years have passed since the crime, which is the opposite of how the church dealt with such claims during the decades-old clergy molestation crisis that preceded the archdiocese’s bankruptcy/

This is just the opening public salvo in the ongoing negotiations for a settlement. It comes after more than four and a half years of legal wrangling, which has been marked by acrimony, secrecy and even a criminal investigation into coverups with sworn police statements describing an alleged child sex ring at the archdiocese.

US Bankruptcy Judge Meredith Grabill has recently put the first public pressure on the two sides to reach an agreement or pull the plug on Chapter 11 reorganization. She assigned a business turnaround expert to determine whether it was viable for the church’s bankruptcy to be resolved successfully, with a public report on the question due October 23.  

One reason for the difference of opinion in the value of the proposed settlements was the Louisiana Supreme Court’s decision to uphold a law allowing child molestation victims to pursue monetary damages over long-ago abuse. Church institutions have consistently argued that law is unconstitutional while abuse victims’ advocates say it has considerably driven up the potential value of their claims.

Last month, attorneys for the archdiocese and the creditors promised Grabill that the two sides would present their dueling reorganization plans to the court by Sept. 16, this coming Monday.

Aymond, who is the corporate leader of the archdiocese and each of the church’s 188 apostolates, announced in September 2023 that affiliated parishes, schools and ministries would also have to share in the cost of settling the bankruptcy. 

One of the apostolates on the hook for a portion of the settlement is Christopher Homes, about a dozen apartment complexes the church owns and operates as low-income and senior housing. A major Boston-based real estate investment firm, Hayden Glade, made an offer shortly after the start of the archdiocese bankruptcy case to purchase Christopher Homes for $150 million. Sources tell WWL the deal would have let the church pay off the business’ debts and clear about $75 million.

Hayden Glade managing partner Elliott White, himself a survivor of child sexual abuse, said the archdiocese dismissed his offer out of hand. But he has not given up hope that the church might ultimately accept his offer, which would cover more than half of the total amount survivors are demanding from all of the archdiocese’s affiliates.

“I made an offer, and to move forward, (the church said) I'd have to release what I'm guessing would be several million dollars to the church, but without having a purchase contract,” White said. “We didn't have the opportunity to say we need to see this money go to aid the victims. We just were sort of told, ‘No.’”

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