New York archdiocese announces $300 million settlement for victims of clergy abuse
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A view of St. Patrick's Cathedral near Rockefeller Center in Manhattan on Feb. 2, 2023, in New York City. The cathedral was completed in 1878 the Gothic Revival style by architect James Renwick Jr. / Credit: Roy Rochlin/Getty ImagesCNA Staff, Dec 9, 2025 / 09:30 am (CNA).The Archdiocese of New York will pay out nearly a third of a billion dollars to victims of clergy sex abuse, Cardinal Timothy Dolan said this week, offering one of the biggest Church payouts in U.S. history in order to compensate for the "horror of abuse" by clergy there. Cardinal Dolan said the archdiocese will pay out "a total of more than $300 million" to abuse survivors as part of a "global settlement" with victims. The archdiocese has made "a series of very difficult financial decisions" to help fund the settlement, Cardinal Dolan said in the Dec. 8 statement, including staff layoffs and a 10% reduction in the archdiocese's operating budget. "We are also working to finalize the sale of...
A view of St. Patrick's Cathedral near Rockefeller Center in Manhattan on Feb. 2, 2023, in New York City. The cathedral was completed in 1878 the Gothic Revival style by architect James Renwick Jr. / Credit: Roy Rochlin/Getty Images
CNA Staff, Dec 9, 2025 / 09:30 am (CNA).
The Archdiocese of New York will pay out nearly a third of a billion dollars to victims of clergy sex abuse, Cardinal Timothy Dolan said this week, offering one of the biggest Church payouts in U.S. history in order to compensate for the "horror of abuse" by clergy there.
Cardinal Dolan said the archdiocese will pay out "a total of more than $300 million" to abuse survivors as part of a "global settlement" with victims.
The archdiocese has made "a series of very difficult financial decisions" to help fund the settlement, Cardinal Dolan said in the Dec. 8 statement, including staff layoffs and a 10% reduction in the archdiocese's operating budget.
"We are also working to finalize the sale of significant real estate assets," the prelate said. He pointed to the recent sale of the former archdiocesan headquarters in Manhattan, which was bought by a development group for about $100 million.
The settlement comes a decade after the founding of the archdiocese's Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program, which seeks to "promote healing and bring closure" by offering compensation to clergy abuse victims.
Cardinal Dolan said the settlement came after talks with a third-party mediator who helped negotiate a "global settlement," a process which allows for rapid resolution of cases while avoiding lengthy court proceedings.
The archdiocese and lawyers are working with retired California Judge Daniel Buckley to help mediate the process. Buckley last year helped mediate the Los Angeles archdiocese's own abuse settlement, one that saw a record $880 million agreement for abuse survivors.
Cardinal Dolan said the archdiocese is seeking to ensure "the greatest possible compensation to victim-survivors" while still pursuing "vital ministries for the good of our parishes, families, and communities."
The cardinal also said the archdiocese is still engaged in a legal conflict with its longtime insurer Chubb. In 2024 the archdiocese launched a lawsuit against Chubb, claiming the corporation was "attempting to evade their legal and moral contractual obligation" to pay out financial claims to sex abuse victims.
"Despite accepting millions in premiums from the archdiocese, Chubb has steadfastly refused to honor the policies it issued," Dolan said on Dec. 8.
Cardinal Dolan urged the faithful to pray "for the victim-survivors, their families, and all who have experienced the horror of abuse."
The New York payout comes at the same time that a federal judge in Louisiana approved a $230 million settlement to be paid to abuse victims by the Archdiocese of New Orleans. The archdiocese had agreed to the payout in October.
The Los Angeles archdiocese's near-$1 billion payout still stands as the U.S. record for an abuse settlement by an archdiocese or diocese. The official record for a diocesan settlement is $323 million, by the New York Diocese of Rockville Centre, though it's unclear if the New York archdiocese's payment will ultimately top that.
Earlier this year the Diocese of Rochetser, New York agreed to a near-$250 million settlement for abuse victims. The Diocese of Syracuse this year also agreed to a $176 million settlement.
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The J. Edgar Hoover FBI headquarters building in Washington, D.C. / Credit: Tony Webster, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia CommonsCNA Staff, Dec 9, 2025 / 11:45 am (CNA).The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) special agent who oversaw the Virginia office responsible for a highly controversial investigation into local Catholics will lead the state's safety office under its new Democratic governor. Gov.-elect Abigail Spanberger nominated Stanley Meador as the next Virginia secretary for public safety and homeland security, according to a December announcement.Meador has served in several roles in the FBI, including in field offices in Seattle and Las Vegas, as well as at the bureau headquarters in Washington. In 2021 he became special agent in charge at the bureau's Richmond, Virginia field office, where he served until June 2025. In 2023 that office issued a memo to agents launching an investigation into "radical traditionalist" Catholics and their possible ties to "the far...