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Filed for bankruptcy, Chapter 11. [6] 2004, Sep: Tucson, AZ: $22.2 million: 50 (over) Filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, after reaching an agreement with its victims [7] 2004, Dec: Spokane, WA: $48 million (at least) Filed for bankruptcy, payment was a part (has to be approved by judge and victims) [8] 2005, Jan 3: Orange, CA: 30 priests, 2 nuns ...
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Sacramento announced Saturday that it is filing for bankruptcy protection, joining dozens of others that have been financially battered by sexual abuse lawsuits ...
Feb. 20—An archdiocese-maintained list of Catholic clergy members who have been deemed "credibly accused" of sexual abuse in Northern New Mexico parishes should also include others named by ...
Plaintiffs in the cases against the archdiocese have argued that the Catholic Church is a single entity, and that the Vatican should be liable for any damages awarded in judgment of pending sexual abuse cases. [7] [failed verification] After the filing, an April 29, 2005 deadline was set by the bankruptcy court to allow other people to file ...
The San Francisco Archdiocese is the third Bay Area diocese to file for bankruptcy after facing hundreds of lawsuits brought under a California law approved in 2019 that allowed decades-old claims ...
The archdiocese announced it would file for bankruptcy protection in November 2018, in the wake of dozens of ongoing lawsuits stemming from a sexual abuse scandal that stretches back decades. [38] [39] A new investigation was also ordered by the state's attorney general into the Catholic Church's handling of misconduct by its clergy.
But there were few signs of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Sacramento’s impending bankruptcy filing. The diocese announced it would be seeking financial protection in December and set April 1 as ...
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Dallas paid $30.9 million in 1998 to twelve victims of one priest ($59.6 million in present-day terms). [8] [9]In early 2002, The Boston Globe covered the criminal prosecutions of five Roman Catholic priests in an article that won an uncontested Pulitzer Prize.