Survivors of clergy sexual misconduct who have yet to file charges against the state’s largest religious denomination have until April 4 to seek compensation under the church’s push for Chapter 11 financial protection.
A U.S. bankruptcy judge has set an April 4 deadline for people to report past clergy sexual abuse if they want compensation as part of the Vermont Roman Catholic Diocese’s court efforts to reorganize its depleting finances.
The state’s largest religious denomination filed for Chapter 11 financial protection last fall after facing a new wave of lawsuits alleging priest misconduct as far back as 1950. Burlington-based Judge Heather Cooper considers the more than 30 claimants in those unresolved cases to be among the church’s biggest creditors. But to ensure the court isn’t missing anyone, Cooper has called for public notices that alert others about the proceedings.
“If you were sexually abused by any person connected with the diocese,…
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