Latest & Breaking News on Fox News
Victims of child sexual abuse in Ohio will see more compensation for the crimes committed against them while in the Boy Scouts of America after Republican Gov. Mike DeWine signed a new law guaranteeing it Thursday.
The measure was enacted amid the organization’s bankruptcy settlement, first filed in 2020 after tens of thousands of men nationwide brought forth claims they had been sexually abused by their Scout leaders. Nearly 2,000 of those men are from Ohio.
The organization filed bankruptcy in order to continue operating while still partially compensating victims after an onslaught of lawsuits against them.
The amount that victims receive varies state by state based on the length of the statute of limitations for civil claims — as well as the length and severity of each abuse case.
Until DeWine signed off on the new law, Ohio’s current civil statute of limitations in bankruptcy cases was 12 years. That’s now void for the next five years, meaning Boy Scout abuse victims filing a claim will receive all the money they’re owed through the settlement, rather than just 30 to 45% of it.
Ohio is the first to take advantage of the settlement’s provision allowing states to extend the statute of limitations, according to one of the measure’s sponsors, Republican Rep. Bill Seitz of the Cincinnati area.
Author Profile
Latest entries
- ScienceOctober 19, 2024Social media policies are no match for AI bots
- HeadlinesOctober 19, 2024Mets survive Game 5 vs. Dodgers to send NLCS back to Los Angeles
- HeadlinesOctober 19, 2024College admissions officer rails against Trump supporters in social media post: 'Piece of s—'
- HeadlinesOctober 18, 2024Missing Texas real estate agent’s husband kept in jail with high bond as family rips his lack of cooperation