The Boston Archdiocese has agreed to an $8.5 million settlement with an insurance carrier that disputed the Catholic archdiocese’s claims related to payments to clergy sex abuse victims. The carrier, St. Paul Travelers, also agreed to waive certain premiums the archdiocese would have owed.
The archdiocese said some of the contested claims with St. Paul were part of the $85 million settlement with 541 abuse victims in September 2003. Negotiations with St. Paul began shortly after the settlement, the archdiocese said. In March, the archdiocese agreed to a $20 million settlement with another insurance carrier, Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company,
The archdiocese said the settlement with St. Paul means it’s now reached agreements on the abuse claims with its two major carriers.
There are approximately 170 claims still pending, according to Kelly Lynch, a spokeswoman for the archdiocese.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Acrisure to Cut 2,250 Employees, Citing Advances in Technology and AI
USI Insurance Services Claims Ex-Broker Poached Clients for Own New Agency
NY Archdiocese Can Depose Chubb CEO Greenberg in Clergy Abuse Claims Case
NC Jury Award for Workers Injured in Wall Collapse May be Largest in State History 


