A lawsuit filed under New Jersey's Child Victims Act accuses the Boy Scouts of America and a local council of failing to protect a child from a camp service director who allegedly abused her during a 2025 visit to a Bergen County scout camp. The organization says it can't comment on active litigation, but the case adds to a pattern of camp-related abuse claims working through the courts.
Reviewed by Abuse Justice Center · Updated 2026-07-17
A massive national settlement trust doesn't prevent new, separate lawsuits over incidents that happened after the bankruptcy was finalized.
A family has filed suit against the Greater New York Councils of the Boy Scouts of America and a specific camp in Bergen County, New Jersey, alleging a minor was sexually assaulted by the camp's service director during a visit in the summer of 2025. The complaint was filed under New Jersey's Child Victims Act, a law that gives survivors of childhood sexual abuse an extended period to bring civil claims that might otherwise be too old to file.
According to the filing, the organizations are accused of negligence on three fronts: failing to adequately supervise the child during her time at camp, failing to act on what the suit claims staff knew or should have known about the risk the service director posed, and failing to provide effective training on preventing abuse. The organization has declined to comment, citing the ongoing litigation.
This lawsuit lands against the backdrop of a much larger reckoning already underway inside Boy Scouts of America. The organization's national settlement trust, created after its bankruptcy, has issued determinations on more than sixty thousand abuse claims and approved over forty thousand payments totaling more than eight hundred million dollars so far this year, covering decades of alleged abuse across troops and camps nationwide.
That existing settlement, however, generally covers abuse that happened before the bankruptcy was finalized. A new incident, like the one alleged here from 2025, falls outside that trust entirely and has to be pursued as its own separate civil case against the specific council and camp involved, which is exactly what this new lawsuit does.
Laws like New Jersey's Child Victims Act exist because lawmakers recognized that children who are groomed or abused often can't process or report it until years, sometimes decades, later. Rather than locking survivors out once an ordinary deadline passes, these laws create a longer runway, or in some states a temporary revival window, for filing a civil claim.
For a case involving a recent incident, like the 2025 camp allegation here, the extended timeline matters less than it would for an older claim, but the same law still shapes what evidence and legal theories are available, including how liability against an organization, not just an individual, can be established.
If a child was abused during a scouting activity, camp, or troop event, whether recently or years ago, the fact that Boy Scouts of America went through bankruptcy doesn't automatically mean there's nothing left to pursue. Newer incidents and claims against specific local councils or camps can be handled separately from the national settlement trust.
A free, confidential case review can sort out which path applies to your situation, what deadline governs your state, and whether a specific council, camp, or troop can be named directly. These cases are typically handled on contingency, so there's no cost to find out where things stand.
Between an older national settlement and newer state child victims acts, it can be confusing to know which process actually applies to your situation. Here's what generally matters.
Abuse Justice Center is a lawyer-matching and advocacy service, not a law firm, and nothing here is legal advice. Matching and consultations are free, and network attorneys work on contingency. Need support now? The RAINN hotline is 800-656-4673, 24/7.
Generally, no. The national settlement trust covers abuse that occurred before the bankruptcy was finalized. Newer incidents are typically pursued as separate lawsuits.
Yes. Many claims name the specific local council, camp, or troop directly, alongside or instead of the national organization.
It's worth having an attorney review your specific timeline. Depending on your state and when you found out about the connection to your injuries, options may still exist.
No. A civil claim against an organization for negligent supervision or training can proceed independent of any criminal case against the individual.