L
Langdell
Guest
Since several recent threads have dealt with the Church’s wealth and the redistribution of wealth, I became curious about the total amount that U.S. Catholic dioceses have paid in damages to victims of child sexual abuse. Wikipedia has a helpful chart here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_sexual_abuse_scandal_in_the_United_States
The Wikipedia chart is not quite up-to-date. It does not list the payout by the Diocese of Wilmington (Delaware), which I understand was about $80 million. If we add that to the figures listed in the chart, I get a total a little north of $1.3 billion. And of course that does not take into account the legal fees and other costs associated with dealing with the various claims and, in some cases, resulting bankruptcies.
However you look at it (i.e., the Church hasn’t paid enough, the Church has paid too much, the Church has been unfairly singled out, etc.), that’s a huge redistribution of wealth, from the Church and her usual beneficiaries, to victims, victims’ families, and lawyers.
I guess I don’t really have a point other than that, deserved or not, it’s been a big dent in the Church’s resources.
The Wikipedia chart is not quite up-to-date. It does not list the payout by the Diocese of Wilmington (Delaware), which I understand was about $80 million. If we add that to the figures listed in the chart, I get a total a little north of $1.3 billion. And of course that does not take into account the legal fees and other costs associated with dealing with the various claims and, in some cases, resulting bankruptcies.
However you look at it (i.e., the Church hasn’t paid enough, the Church has paid too much, the Church has been unfairly singled out, etc.), that’s a huge redistribution of wealth, from the Church and her usual beneficiaries, to victims, victims’ families, and lawyers.
I guess I don’t really have a point other than that, deserved or not, it’s been a big dent in the Church’s resources.