A bankruptcy court judge was asked Thursday to include Catholic parishes and schools with the assets of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis to compensate clergy abuse victims.
The archdiocese's Chapter 11 bankruptcy organization plan, filed in May, would create a $65 million trust fund to compensate the some 440 abuse victims who have filed claims.
But victims' attorneys say the archdiocese's true assets are more than $1.7 billion, because it is intricately linked administratively and financially to its 187 parishes, schools, cemeteries and other affiliated nonprofits. They argued the archdiocese has tried to hide those financial ties.
In a courtroom packed with lawyers opposing the move, the archdiocese asked Judge Robert Kressel to dismiss the motion. Kressel said he would file a written ruling after further review.
"The fundamental question is whether the court has the authority to consolidate," said archdiocese attorney Richard Anderson.
"The motion asks for unprecedented relief," he said. "No other court has ruled on the operational and managerial relationship alleged in this case."
Attorney Jeff Anderson, representing abuse victims, presented a chronology of the alleged "hiding" of assets starting with the May 2013 passage of the Minnesota Child Victims Act, which opened the door to a flood of clergy abuse claims.
Later that year, for example, the Catholic Services Appeal — the archdiocese's biggest fundraiser — was spun off from the archdiocese to become an independent nonprofit. Likewise, a month after the archdiocese filed for bankruptcy in 2015, its cemeteries changed their signage and websites to remove wording indicating they were owned by the archdiocese, Jeff Anderson said, noting photographs documented the changes.