Philly Boy Scouts Face Eviction Over Queer Rights

The Bobster

Senior News Editor since 2004
http://www.nbc10.com/news/16403034/detail.html?dl=headlineclick

Philly Boy Scouts Face Eviction Over Gay Rights

POSTED: 12:25 pm EDT May 27, 2008
UPDATED: 1:04 pm EDT May 27, 2008

PHILADELPHIA -- A local Boy Scouts chapter embroiled in a battle over gay rights is suing the city of Philadelphia to avoid eviction from its headquarters.

The federal lawsuit seeks to stop the city from evicting the Scouts or from charging the group about $200,000 a year in rent. The Scouts currently pay $1 annually for the space.

The city said it cannot keep subsidizing the rent of a private group that discriminates and gave the Scouts until Saturday to revise their policy or pay rent.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2000 that the Boy Scouts, as a private group, have a First Amendment right to bar gays.

The Philadelphia chapter adopted a nondiscrimination policy in 2003, but was ordered to revoke it by the National Council.
 
The world is going down the drain quickly. A group that wants to teach leadership to young boys wants to keep predatory fags away from them and that is called discrimination!!!! We should declare war soon!!!!
 
http://www.myfoxphilly.com/dpp/news/local_news/Philadelphia_Boy_Scouts_Eviction_061410

Boy Scouts, Philly Going To Trial
Rent, Queer Rights At Issue In Long-Standing Battle

PHILADELPHIA - A federal trial is getting under way that could settle a long-running dispute between local Boy Scouts and the city of Philadelphia.

At issue is whether the local scouts group, the Cradle of Liberty Council, should be allowed to stay rent-free in its city-owned headquarters, despite the Boy Scouts of America's national policy banning gays.

The local boy scouts group, the Cradle of Liberty Council, has been based at its downtown building since 1928.

Mayor Michael Nutter says to continue the free rent, the local scouts need to renounce the national scouts organization's admission policies excluding gays.

The lawsuit filed by the Cradle of Liberty Council contends that the mayor's ultimatum violates their First Amendment rights.
 
http://cbs3.com/topstories/boy.scouts.philadelphia.2.1763682.html

Ousted Gay Boy Scout Testifies In Philly Trial

PHILADELPHIA (AP) ― A gay Life Scout ousted from the Boy Scouts of America in Philadelphia says he never sought to become the poster child for gays in scouting.

Greg Lattera says scouting meant the world to him and he still supports the organization. But the 25-year-old Lattera says he has no regrets that he appeared on TV in his uniform to applaud the local chapter's anti-discrimination policy in 2003.

The Cradle of Liberty Council soon rescinded the policy amid pressure from national Boy Scout leaders in Texas, who ban gays.

The jury must decide whether the city can rescind the Boy Scouts' $1-a-year lease on their city-owned headquarters building if they don't comply with city anti-discrimination laws.

Lattera was the last witness before closing arguments Tuesday.
 
These same lefty pinkos who want openly gay faggots allowed in the boy scouts will not have much to say when the molestation of impressionable young boys on overnight camping trips becomes a common occurrence.
 
http://www.myfoxphilly.com/dpp/news/local_news/Philadelphia_Boy_Scout_Gay_Lawsuit_06_23_10

Philly Boy Scout Chapter Could Be Ousted

A Boy Scouts chapter in Philadelphia may have ousted just one gay scout in the decade since the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the organization's right to ban gays, but that doesn't mean untold others haven't been shut out, a city lawyer told jurors Tuesday.

In a 2003 press release, the Cradle of Liberty Council pledged to abide by the Boy Scouts of America's no-gays membership policy, rather than risk losing its charter. "That press release is a sign on the door that says 'No Gays Allowed,"' city lawyer David Smith argued. "The sign on the door scares away ... the gay kids, the gay leaders, the gay employees, before they even apply." :p

The local council is suing Philadelphia in federal court to try to keep the free lease it gets from the city for its Beaux Arts headquarters. The city says the scouts can no longer stay for free because their policies violate a local anti-discrimination ordinance.

Jurors heard closing arguments from both sides and began deliberating Tuesday.

The council has tried to walk a fine line in the years since the 2000 Supreme Court ruling. In 2003, it enacted its own nondiscrimination policy but was forced to retrench when the Boy Scouts of America ordered it to conform with national rules.

The chapter later enacted a nondiscrimination statement that says it doesn't tolerate illegal discrimination.

The council says its free lease benefits both the scouts and the city, with the scouts providing services to needy city youth and spending $60,000 to $70,000 a year on building maintenance. "This is a city with its priorities totally out of whack," argued council lawyer William McSwain, who suggested that crime and poverty were far more pressing city issues.

He also mentioned the thousands of city children growing up without fathers. "For many of those boys, the Boy Scouts are a lifeline," McSwain said. "And this city wants to give the Boy Scouts the back of its hand?"

Former Boy Scout Greg Lattera was one of those boys. A gay teen growing up in what he described as a rough, predominantly Italian-Catholic neighborhood in South Philadelphia, he called scouting "probably the only thing I had going for me." But at 18, holding the rank just below Eagle Scout, he was forced out after declaring himself gay -- and praising the council's short-lived anti-discrimination policy -- in a brief TV news interview.

Smith argued Tuesday that Lattera was "kicked out for admitting he was gay." The Boy Scouts' attorneys suggested he was punished for pursuing a personal agenda while in uniform.

The Boy Scout council asked jurors to consider that the city allows a Roman Catholic parish and a Colonial Dames of America group to stay in city properties. Those groups, the city said, have agreed to open their properties to all.

In lieu of the free rent, the city said the Boy Scouts can start paying $200,000 a year, thereby ending the city subsidy.

The Boy Scouts say they can't afford it, but the city presented evidence showing the council paid its top two executives a combined $430,000 in 2007 and listed $26 million in assets on tax returns, including $14 million in cash and securities.

The council also is spending $860,000 in legal fees to fight the eviction, money it wants the city to reimburse, according to court papers.

The Boy Scouts of America, based in Irving, Texas, took in $183 million in revenues in 2007, and listed $868 million in assets, most in cash and securities, Smith said. "The Boy Scouts of America, if they want to impose discrimination on the Cradle of Liberty, surely can afford to pay the modest fair-market amount the city wants," Smith said.

Lattera testified on behalf of the city, but still encouragespeople to let their children become scouts. He said he feels manipulated by the gay-rights advocates who called him to the televised 2003 meeting that led to his ouster, but also faults the Boy Scouts for forcing gays to hide their sexuality or stay away. "I'll never tell anybody to stay quiet. You should be proud of who you are," he said. "I am proud of who I am."
 
http://cbs3.com/topstories/Boy.Scouts.City.2.1768531.html

Jury: Philly Can't Evict Scouts Over Gay Rights

PHILADELPHIA (AP) ― A jury says the city of Philadelphia cannot evict a local Boy Scouts chapter from a city-owned building for refusing to admit gays.

The city insisted that nonprofits given free use of Fairmount Park property must abide by city anti-discrimination laws.

The scouts said they can legally limit their membership under a 2000 Supreme Court decision. And they say they provide valuable services to thousands of needy city boys.

The local Cradle of Liberty Council has tried to walk a fine line to retain city support without losing their national Boy Scouts charter. The national organization bans gays.

Scouts lawyer Jason Gosselin says he hopes the two sides will now work out their differences in negotiations.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2010/11/17/philly-boy-scouts-end-gay-rights-battle-over-hq/

Philly, Boy Scouts End Gay-Rights Battle Over HQ
November 17, 2010 11:20 PM

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A Boy Scouts chapter that won the right to ban gays from its city-owned headquarters at a federal trial in Philadelphia said it has negotiated a deal to end the decade-long dispute with city officials.

The city had threatened to evict the scouts for violating its anti-discrimination laws, and urged the group to reject national Boy Scouts of America policies that ban gays. But a jury this year found the eviction would infringe on the private group’s right to free association.

Rather than appeal, the city will instead offer to sell the building to the Cradle of Liberty Council for $500,000, less than half its $1.1 million value, council lawyer Jason Gosselin said Wednesday. In exchange, the scouts will forgive the nearly $1 million in legal fees the city was ordered to pay the scouts after losing the case.

“At the end of the day, the Boy Scouts will be writing a check to the city, rather than the other way around,”�� Gosselin told The Associated Press. “This is a better solution than having to go through an appeals process.”��

City solicitor Shelley Smith and council attorney Sandra Girifalco said in a joint statement Wednesday night that all parties had worked hard to find an equitable solution.

“What we have on the table is a win-win situation that resolves the lawsuit, saves the city $1 million and gives the Scouts the opportunity to buy the headquarters they have been in for 80 years,”�� the statement said. The two said they expected that an ordinance for the building sale would be introduced before the City Council on Thursday.

The Boy Scout oath calls for members to be “morally straight,”�� which the national group interprets to mean that gays cannot participate. In 2000, the Supreme Court ruled in a 5-4 split that the Boy Scouts, as a private group, can exclude gays.

The Cradle of Liberty Council, like other councils, has since tried to walk a fine line between appeasing the city, the United Way and other supporters, and the Irving, Texas-based Boy Scouts of America.

In 2003, it passed its own nondiscrimination policy but was forced to retrench when the Boy Scouts of America ordered it to conform with national rules.

Jurors at the eight-day trial felt the council was “between a rock and a hard place,”�� in the words of the foreman, a former Eagle Scout from Lancaster County.

In Philadelphia, the council enjoys $1-a-year rent at the prime downtown site, a stately Depression-era building the scouts had built and maintained on city land. Rent is valued at about $200,000 a year. The council serves up to 75,000 children a year in various programs, including life-skills programs open to girls as well as boys.

There has been just one known case of a gay scout being ousted from the Philadelphia chapter, but the city argued at the June trial that many gay youths may be scared off by the national policy.

Former Scout Greg Lattera, then 25, testified at trial that scouting had meant the world to him as an inner-city child. He said he had not intended to become a flag bearer for gay rights when he spoke about being gay while wearing his scout uniform in a TV news interview. But the publicity cost him his scouts membership, he testified.

A city lawyer at trial urged Cradle of Liberty leaders to muster “the courage of their convictions”�� and fight the national office.

“This is a conversation taking place all across the country,”�� Gosselin said Wednesday, speaking of gay rights in society and in scouting. “I don’t think this conflict is going away, but hopefully it is with the Boy Scouts and the city of Philadelphia.”��
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...ity’s-proposed-boy-scouts-deal/#comment-16143

Civic Leaders Object To City’s Proposed Boy Scouts Deal
December 17, 2010 7:20 AM

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) – An ordinance has been introduced in Philadelphia City Council that would allow the local boy scouts chapter to buy their landmark headquarters building near the Franklin Institute. But a group of civic leaders remains against what they call a “sweat heart sale”�� to a group whose national council bans gays.

The sale of the property at 22nd and Winter Streets is intended to settle a federal lawsuit in which the scouts prevailed and which required the city to pay legal fees.

It’s councilman Darrell Clarke’s district, and the deal must be approved by council because it’s a city-owned building.

Clarke says, “The agreement was to allow a portion of that fee to go toward the purchase of the building, which was $1.2-million.”��

Technically, the scouts would get the property for $500,000 and would relinquish their right to seek legal fees from the city.

But more than 50 civic leaders, prominent folks who call themselves “Philadelphians Against Subsidized Discrimination,”�� say the city should not sell at a big discount.

Mayor Nutter says they may be right, but the city lost the case, “If you don’t have any fiscal liability or responsibility, that’s a different balance. We have that responsibility.”��

Duane Perry, a member of the lesbian and gay community who signed the letter, lisps the city argued in the latest motion was that it only owed $268,000 in legal fees. But an attorney for the scouts says the city was on the legal hook for nearly $1-million.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...g-about-boy-scout-headquarters/#comment-50877

Gay, Lesbian Leaders Unhappy After Meeting About Boy Scout Headquarters
March 10, 2011 5:48 AM

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) - Mayor Nutter met privately Wednesday with members of Philadelphia’s gay and lesbian community who are unhappy with his decision to cut a deal with the local Boy Scouts over their city-owned headquarters.

The closed-door meeting was a chance for the LGBT community to voice directly to the mayor their displeasure with his offer to sell the Scouts Headquarters at 22nd and Winter Streets to the Scouts for $500,000.

Among those at the meeting, and leaving dissatisfied, was developer Mel Heifetz.

“We would like to have a settlement that clearly has the building with an organization that doesn’t discriminate. Settling it with them remaining in that building is not a settlement.”��

Heifetz is offering to buy the building at twice the price. Nutter’s spokesman Mark McDonald described the meeting as cordial and frank.

“The Mayor’s position has not changed in any way.”��

Nutter made the offer after the Scouts sued and won a case against the city in federal court last summer.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/Boy-Scouts-Wont-Get-Free-HQ-in-Philly-138386829.html

Boy Scouts Won’t Get Free HQ in Philly
Boy Scouts of America were supposed to gain control of its headquarters in Philly as part of a deal with the city, but that is not happening, the group says
Tuesday, Jan 31, 2012 | Updated 7:23 AM

The Boy Scouts of America say a plan has fallen through that would have granted the organization possession of its city-owned headquarters to resolve a dispute with the City of Philadelphia over the group's antigay policies.

An attorney for the Boy Scouts said in a filing Friday the deal is unlikely to be approved by City Council.

The deal was hatched in 2010 to compensate the Scouts for legal fees racked up in its successful defense of an eviction try by the city over policies that discriminate against gays.

The city unsuccessfully sought to raise the Scouts' annual rent from $1 to $200,000 or kick them out of the building. In 2010 a federal jury found the city had violated the Scouts' First Amendment rights by trying to evict them.
 
Sodomites are never satisfied. Until the BSA makes their young scouts line up to be sodomized by fags, even then they would not be satisfied. It is no wonder that the Old testament specified death for sodomites. That is the only cure for the curse of sodomy.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...0-in-legal-fees-to-boy-scouts/#comment-187843

Judge Orders City of Phila. To Repay $877,000 in Legal Fees to Boy Scouts
March 21, 2012 1:40 PM
By Steve Tawa

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — The City of Philadelphia has been ordered to pay hefty legal fees to the local Boy Scouts chapter, which was involved in a federal trial over the national Boy Scouts’ controversial policy of banning gays.

The federal court judge who presided over the federal case has ordered the city to repay the Scouts $877,000 in legal fees. :)

Bill McSwain, attorney for the Boy Scouts, says the city is on the legal hook because Judge Ronald Buckwalter has denied the city’s motion for a new trial.

“The city has an obligation to pay for the Scouts’ attorney’s fees. In these Constitutional civil rights cases, the wrongdoer has to pay the winner’s attorney’s fees.”

In the 2010 trial, a federal jury found that the City of Philadelphia had violated the local Boy Scouts’ First Amendment rights by requiring the local chapter to reject the national Boy Scouts’ ban on gays or face eviction from their headquarters building in center city.

In his 35-page decision, Judge Buckwalter severely criticized former city solicitor Romy Diaz for essentially caving to a gay rights group that wanted the Scouts to comply with the city’s anti-discrimination laws. The judge cites at least a dozen e-mails between members of the so-called “working group” and Diaz that Buckwalter said could be looked upon as “preferential treatment.”

Mayor Nutter reacted soon after the decision was handed down.

“That component is tremendously troubling,” he told reporters at City Hall. “Quite honestly, some of those elements may have led directly to the fact that we, as a city, lost this case.”

The city has yet to determine whether it will take the case to the Third Circuit Court of Appeals.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...t-is-abiding-by-rules-to-weed-out-pedophiles/

Local Boy Scout Council Says It Is Abiding By Rules To Weed Out Pedophiles
October 18, 2012 5:30 PM
By David Madden, Todd Quinones

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — Confidential files listing the names of 1,200 scoutmasters and other Boy Scout officials accused of sexually abusing boys over two decades were released today.

The documents were used as evidence in a 2010 civil lawsuit brought by a man in Oregon who says he was molested by a Portland scout leader in the 1980s.

In the Delaware Valley, local Boy Scout officials insist they’ve abided by the national guidelines for dealing with alleged pedophiles within their ranks and have nothing to hide.

Cradle of Liberty Council CEO Tom Harrington says 6,000 adults in the region who serve as scoutmasters have gone through background checks, and any suspicions put them on the “ineligible” list.

In his three-year tenure, he adds, “We have had two of those individuals who we’ve been informed by authorities that they have either been charged or have been suspicious of inappropriate behavior.”

One involved a case 10 years ago of a former leader now charged with possession of child pornography.

The Boy Scouts’ national policy includes a mandate that authorities be notified at the first hint of a problem, and that the national office be informed of anyone who’s barred locally, so they can’t just go somewhere else.

For more information on the documents released on The Boy Scouts of America visit: www.kellyclarkattorney.com/files.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/vide...t-Philly-Law-Firm-to-Sue-Boy-Scouts/183137411

"Perversion Files" Prompt Philly Law Firm to Sue Boy Scouts

The Boy Scouts of America released a list that names 1200 suspected pedophiles, many from our area, who were expelled from the Scouts from 1959 to 1985. One of those was a leader in a Chester Co. troop, now, he's being named by in the Philadelphia suit. One alleged victim is expected to speak Wednesday at 10:30 a.m.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2012/12/12/delaware-man-sues-boy-scouts-mormons-over-sex-abuse/

Delaware Man Sues Boy Scouts, Mormon Church Over Sexual Abuse
December 12, 2012 3:00 PM
By Paul Kurtz

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — A 28-year-old Delaware man has filed suit against the Boy Scouts and the Mormon Church in connection with the sexual abuse he suffered at the hands of a scoutmaster when he was a teenager.

Melvin Novak’s complaint says that pedophiles had infiltrated scouting for decades; a fact that was recently proven by the release of the organizations perversion files listing more than 1,200 alleged abusers who were weeded out between 1965 and 1985.

Scoutmaster Melvin Hein was convicted of abusing Novak in Chester County in 1999. It was an experience that left the plaintiff shattered.

“My childhood just fell apart. I guess you could classify me as a quitter. I never finished after that that I started. I never finished college. I finished high school, but only through a homeschooling program after not graduating with my class,” Novak explained.

Novak says he also fell into a pit of substance abuse for about five years.

He’s also targeted the Mormon Church because it failed to conduct a background check before hiring Vance Hein.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2013/05/03/boy-scouts-to-vacate-philly-home-under-settlement/

Boy Scouts To Vacate Philly Home Under Settlement
May 3, 2013 2:44 PM
By Tim Jimenez

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — A five-year court battle between the city of Philadelphia and the local boy scout chapter, The Cradle of Liberty Council, has been settled. Now, the scouts will be leaving their city headquarters they’ve been in since 1928.

Mayor Michael Nutter’s office said Friday the Boy Scouts Cradle of Liberty Council staff will leave its downtown headquarters by June 30 and the retail store in the building will close by Oct. 31.

Attorney Jason Gosselin represents the Cradle of Liberty Council and says they’re happy to settle.

“At the end of the day, the scouts are not about a building, they’re about serving kids in the activities of scouting. :mad: That’s what they want to focus on and they were very pleased to be able to resolve this dispute,” said Gosselin. “In return, the city will be paying Cradle of Liberty $825,000 as compensation for capital improvements that have been made to the building over the years.”

Gosselin says the scouts now plan on finding new headquarters in the city.

They scouts sued the city in 2008 for threatening eviction from their city-owned building at 22nd and Winter off the Ben Franklin Parkway because of the national scouts policy against gays. According to the deal reached, the scouts will leave the building in stages this year.
 
https://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2...conditional-approval-of-850m-bankruptcy-deal/

Boy Scouts Get Conditional Approval Of $850M Bankruptcy Deal
August 20, 2021 at 10:14 am

DOVER, Del. (AP) — A bankruptcy judge on Thursday approved a proposal by the Boy Scouts of America to enter into an agreement that includes an $850 million fund to compensate tens of thousands of men who say they were sexually abused as youngsters by Scout leaders and others.

But the judge also rejected two key provisions of the deal, potentially jeopardizing the agreement that the organization had been hoping to use as a springboard to emerge from bankruptcy later this year.

Following three days of testimony and arguments, Judge Laura Selber Silverstein granted the BSA’s request to enter into an agreement involving the national Boy Scouts organization, roughly 250 local Boy Scout councils, and attorneys representing some 70,000 men who say they were sexually abused as youngsters decades ago while engaged in Boy Scout-related activities.

The agreement was opposed by insurers who issued policies to the Boy Scouts and local councils, attorneys representing thousands of other abuse victims, and various church denominations that have sponsored local Boy Scout troops.

It was not immediately clear how Thursday’s ruling will affect the future of the bankruptcy case, given that she rejected two significant provisions in the restructuring support agreement.

“Basically, everybody’s going to have to go back to the drawing board,” said Paul Mones, an attorney representing hundreds of abuse claimants. “I think this is going to cause a reset.”

While ruling that BSA officials exercised proper business judgment as required under the law in entering into the agreement, the judge refused to grant a request that the Boy Scouts be allowed to pay millions in legal fees and expenses of attorneys hired by law firms that represent tens of thousands of abuse claimants.

Silverstein said she had several concerns about the fee request, including whether the ad hoc group called the Coalition of Abused Scouts for Justice is duplicating efforts by the official victims committee appointed by the U.S. bankruptcy trustee, and whether the coalition is making a substantial contribution to the case.

The judge also noted that coalition attorneys had emphasized last year that their legal fees would be paid by individual law firms they were representing, and that abuse claimants would not be responsible for those costs.

Silverstein said any payment of legal fees by the Boys Scouts, or by the victims fund, which was also contemplated in the agreement, “comes directly or indirectly out of their clients’ pockets, and indeed the pockets of all abuse victims.”

“Any funds diverted from abuse victims, especially to pay an obligation of their lawyers, needs to be closely examined,” she said.

David Molton, an attorney for the coalition, said the group was pleased that Silverstein approved the agreement. He said it enables the coalition and its partners to procure settlements from insurers and sponsoring organizations that will bring in “additional billions of dollars” to compensate survivors.

Molton did not address Silverstein’s denial of the fee arrangement with the Boy Scouts, which he described at a hearing earlier this week as “part and parcel” of the agreement.
READ MORE:
15-Year-Old Girl Shot In Head Dies Following Shooting At Jerome Brown Playground In Tioga, Philadelphia Police Say

Silverstein also denied the BSA’s request under the agreement for permission to withdraw from an April agreement in which insurance company The Hartford would pay $650 million into the fund for abuse claimants in exchange for being released from any further liability.

Silverstein said the Hartford settlement was a separate issue from the agreement, and that the BSA’s attempt to use the agreement as a vehicle to back out of that deal was improper.

“You can’t just roll up any relief you want and put it in a request to approve an (agreement),” she said. ”… The request to determine debtor’s obligations or, conversely, Hartford’s damages, is not appropriate in this context.”

A spokesperson for The Hartford said the company declined to comment.

Irwin Zalkin, an attorney for abuse claimants who opposed the agreement, said the judge “gutted” key conditions that supporters were hoping to “box her into.”

“In my view the (agreement) has been rendered toothless,” Zalkin said.

The Boy Scouts of America issued a statement describing the ruling as “an important development” in the case. The BSA also indicated that it would be submitting a court filing regarding the timing of a hearing that was scheduled to start Wednesday. The hearing is to determine whether the judge approves a disclosure statement that explains the Boy Scouts’ reorganization plan to creditors. Approval of the disclosure statement is required before ballots can be sent to abuse claimants to vote on a plan.

The Boy Scouts, based in Irving, Texas, sought bankruptcy protection in February 2020 in an effort to halt hundreds of individual lawsuits and create a huge compensation fund for thousands of men who were molested as youngsters by scoutmasters or other leaders. Although the organization was facing 275 lawsuits at the time of the filing, it is now facing some 82,500 sexual abuse claims in the bankruptcy case.

Under the agreement, the Boy Scouts would contribute up to $250 million in cash and property to a fund for victims of child sexual abuse. The local councils, which run day-to-day operations for Boy Scout troops, would contribute $600 million. In addition, the national organization and local councils would transfer their rights to Boy Scout insurance policies to the victims fund. In return, they would be released from future liability for abuse claims.

Opponents of the deal argued that BSA officials failed to fully inform themselves or exercise proper business judgment in entering into the agreement. They noted that the Boy Scouts board of directors never adopted a resolution approving the agreement, and that decision-making authority was delegated to an executive committee and a handful of people on a bankruptcy task force.

“Having reviewed the evidence, I conclude that debtors were sufficiently informed to make this decision,” Silverstein said. “And while a specific (board) resolution would have been preferable, the evidence is clear that debtors approved the transaction.”

“A court is particularly ill-suited to address strategic business decisions such as this one,” the judge added. “Debtors may ultimately may be wrong in their assessment, but that is not the test of business judgment.”
 

Former Boy Scout youth protection official says group is still ‘not safe for kids’​



By
Jesse O’Neill


October 13, 2021 8:35pm
Updated





Michael Johnson, center, former National Youth Protection Director for the Boy Scouts of America, speaks at a news conference held to urge Congress to investigate the BSA's sex-abuse prevention programs, Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021, at the National Press Club in Washington.
Michael Johnson, center, former National Youth Protection Director for the Boy Scouts of America, speaks at a news conference held to urge Congress to investigate the BSA's sex-abuse prevention programs on Oct. 12, 2021, at the National Press Club in Washington. AP Photo/Patrick Semansky




A former Boy Scouts of America official that was tasked with shielding kids from sex abuse says the organization is still dangerous to children, and not committed to reform.
Michael Johnson urged Congress to look into the BSA’s efforts to cover-up abuse during a tearful speech at the National Press Club Tuesday.
In a letter to lawmakers last week, he claimed there remains a “high risk of child sexual abuse that exists within Scouts BSA,” and listed a dozen steps the group should take to become more transparent, including releasing its so-called secret perversion files.
“The Boy Scouts of America is not safe for kids. It is safer, but it is not safe for kids,” Johnson said.
“We failed you. I failed you,” an emotional Johnson told survivors in between tears.
 The Cushman Watt Scout Center, headquarters of the Boy Scouts of America for the Los Angeles Area CouncilThe Boy Scouts of America is facing 82,000 claims of sexual abuse from former members.REUTERS/Fred Prouser/File Photo
Johnson was hired in 2010 as the organization’s first youth protection director. He said in recent years BSA brass became less receptive to reforms, even as the organization faced more than 80,000 claims by abuse victims.
“All of the sudden, I wasn’t able to make the changes that were needed, and there were excuses and omissions…. I felt, naively, that I could make change within the organization, and there were some successes, but it wasn’t nearly enough,” Johnson said.
“I’m fed up with people telling me in that organization what to say, how to say it, and what to believe.”
The former official said he was fired in December as part of a financial restructuring plan, and did not sign non-disclosure and non-disparagement agreements in exchange for severance.
Michael Johnson“We failed you. I failed you,” Johnson told abuse survivors.AP Photo/Patrick Semansky
A BSA spokesperson denied the group tried to silence Johnson, and thanked him for his decade of work protecting children.
“We are disappointed to hear Mr. Johnson’s characterization of the program he spearheaded and the concerns he raised, especially given his past public support for the robust measures the BSA instituted at his recommendation,” a statement read.
Most of the sex abuse claims leveled against the Boy Scouts happened prior to 1990, before BSA conducted criminal background checks on scoutmasters and required two adults to be present during events.
Johnson claimed known offenders have continued to still slip through the system due to a lack of proper screening.
Boy Scouts of America uniformsMost of the sex abuse claims leveled against the Boy Scouts happened prior to 1990 before the organization conducted criminal background checks on scoutmasters.Christopher Millette/Erie Times-News via AP, File
The organization is facing 82,000 claims of sexual abuse from former members in connection with its bankruptcy reorganization plan. The Coalition of Abused Scouts for Justice, which represents most of the accusers, has secured nearly $2 billion in settlements from BSA and its partners.
Plaintiffs will begin voting to approve a new BSA bankruptcy plan later this week before ballots are tabulated in January.
With AP wires
 

Boy Scouts set to exit bankruptcy after $2.46 bln U.S. sex abuse settlement approved​

By Dietrich Knauth



Scout statue at the Boy Scouts of America headquarters in Irving

The statue of a scout stands in the entrance to Boy Scouts of America headquarters in Irving, Texas, February 5, 2013. REUTERS/Tim Sharp/File Photo

Sept 8 (Reuters) - The Boy Scouts of America secured approval of a $2.46 billion reorganization plan from a bankruptcy judge on Thursday that will allow the youth organization to exit Chapter 11 and settle decades of claims by more than 80,000 men who say they were abused as children by troop leaders.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Laurie Selber Silverstein in Wilmington, Delaware signed off on the restructuring plan after the Boy Scouts made changes to address portions of a previous settlement proposal she had rejected. read more


The biggest change in the amended plan was the removal of a $250 million settlement payment from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which Silverstein refused to approve. read more

Silverstein said that part of that settlement proposal went too far in attempting to protect the Mormon church from abuse claims that were only loosely connected to scouting activities.

The Irving, Texas-based organization, has said the reorganization will allow it to continue its scouting mission free from the threat of costly litigation.

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"Today's order means abuse survivors will get the compensation they deserve and millions of youth will benefit from scouting for years to come," said Richard Mason, an attorney representing local Boy Scouts councils that contributed to the settlement.

The Coalition of Abused Scouts for Justice, which represents the majority of abuse claimants in the case, said the bankruptcy ruling would set up the largest sexual abuse settlement fund in history.
 
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