#sexual-abuse-lawsuits

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fromThe Mercury News
5 days ago

Bay Area Catholic Diocese sells 2 churches as bishop says it's running out of money

The sales prices suggest something modest, even forgettable. But the real estate transactions are weighted with meaning. The Catholic Diocese of Santa Rosa recently gained approval to sell two small churches - one near Cloverdale, one in Hopland - as part of its Chapter 11 bankruptcy case, a judicial process now 2½ years old. They probably won't be the last properties liquidated by the diocese as it continues mediation talks with insurance companies and with survivors of alleged sexual abuse,
Real estate
Real estate
fromwww.pressdemocrat.com
5 days ago

Bay Area Catholic Diocese sells 2 churches as bishop says it's running out of money

Catholic Diocese of Santa Rosa is selling mission churches, including Our Lady of Mount Carmel and St. Francis, as part of its Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
US news
fromwww.mercurynews.com
3 days ago

Federal judge agrees to dismiss bankruptcy case filed by Oakland Catholic Diocese

A federal judge granted the Diocese of Oakland's request to dismiss its bankruptcy, allowing hundreds of sexual assault lawsuits against the church to proceed to trial.
Law
fromwww.pressdemocrat.com
1 week ago

Santa Rosa Diocese's bankruptcy paused 260 sexual abuse lawsuits against Catholic church. Now some may proceed to trial

A small set of sexual-abuse lawsuits against the Catholic Diocese of Santa Rosa moved toward trial after the diocese's 2023 bankruptcy paused about 260 claims.
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 month ago

Diocese of Oakland seeks to pull plug on bankruptcy, send sex abuse cases back to court

In a motion filed this week, the diocese said its latest proposal to pay $165 million over five years to settle roughly 350 claims of alleged abuse drew hardly a response from the victims' attorneys, and neither did several previous offers. A local division of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court may decide next month whether to allow the church to pull the plug on its Chapter 11 proceedings, which Diocese attorneys said have become expensive because their creditors have effectively bled (the church) dry.
California
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