The Buffalo Diocese bankruptcy case is approaching final resolution after years of proceedings. In June 2026, survivors spoke publicly about the end being near. If you are a survivor with a claim in this case, here is what the process looks like now and what comes next.
Reviewed by Abuse Justice Center · Updated 2026-06-27
Diocese bankruptcies consolidate hundreds of survivor claims into a single federal proceeding. Sources: Fox 8 Live, May 2026; SNAP Network, June 2026.
The Diocese of Buffalo filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy after hundreds of civil sexual abuse claims accumulated against it. As of June 2026, members of the official survivors' creditors committee spoke publicly for the first time, describing the case as being only pages away from final resolution. More than 850 survivors are represented in the proceeding, and the committee's public statement reflects both the proximity of a conclusion and the long road that led here.
Chapter 11 bankruptcy consolidates all claims against an institution into a single federal court proceeding. Survivors with claims against the diocese participate as creditors in that process, represented collectively by the official creditors committee. The committee reviews proposed settlement plans, negotiates terms, and must ultimately accept or reject the plan on behalf of the survivor claimants.
A near-final resolution in the bankruptcy does not mean payments are imminent. Even after a plan is confirmed by a federal judge, administrative steps, claim evaluations, potential appeals, and trustee logistics can delay actual distribution of funds by months. Survivors in a similar proceeding, the Archdiocese of New Orleans, have been waiting since the plan's confirmation for payments that were initially expected to begin April 1, 2026.
If you are a survivor with a potential claim against the Diocese of Buffalo and have not already filed in the bankruptcy proceeding, time is critical. Bankruptcy courts set bar dates by which claims must be submitted. Claims filed late may be treated differently or denied entirely. Speaking with an attorney who handles clergy abuse bankruptcy claims is the clearest way to understand whether you can still participate and what your options are.
Survivors who have already filed a claim in the proceeding and are working with an attorney should stay in contact with that attorney as the case approaches resolution. The plan confirmation process involves a vote by creditors and approval by the court. Once a plan is confirmed, the trustee or settlement fund administrator takes over the distribution process.
The amount each survivor receives depends on the terms of the plan, including the total settlement fund, the distribution formula, and how individual claims are evaluated. These factors are negotiated during the plan development process and reviewed by the court. Your attorney can explain how the specific plan terms apply to your situation.
Survivors on the Buffalo Diocese creditors committee spoke publicly in June 2026 about more than just the settlement fund. They demanded a direct, formal apology from the diocese. That demand reflects what many survivors of institutional abuse say they need from a justice process: acknowledgment, not just compensation. A bankruptcy court can approve a payment plan; it cannot compel an institution to admit it failed in its duty of care or to say it is sorry.
The demand for an apology is significant and is worth understanding as you evaluate what resolution in this case will and will not provide. Financial compensation may be part of what you receive if you are a claimant in the proceeding. Whether the diocese responds to calls for an apology is a separate question, one that will unfold as the case closes.
Many survivors have found that the legal process, however important, is only one part of a larger journey toward healing and justice. Connecting with survivor advocacy organizations, peer support communities, and trauma-informed mental health professionals alongside the legal process can help survivors maintain perspective on what the bankruptcy resolution means and what it does not.
If you were abused by clergy or an employee of the Diocese of Buffalo and have never filed a claim in the bankruptcy proceeding, speaking with an attorney now is important. Depending on the status of the bar date and the plan confirmation timeline, there may or may not be an opportunity to add your claim. An attorney can assess your specific situation and advise you honestly on what options remain.
Even if the Buffalo Diocese proceeding is no longer accessible, survivors of clergy abuse in other dioceses, some still in early stages of bankruptcy or civil litigation, may have separate options. Rhode Island passed a new two-year lookback window effective July 1, 2026. Iowa extended its civil filing deadline. New York City opened a one-year revival window. The landscape for survivor civil claims continues to evolve.
Consultations with attorneys who handle survivor civil cases are free and confidential. There is no fee unless and until a case resolves favorably. A conversation about what happened and what your options are costs you nothing and may give you information that matters.
If you have or may have a claim in a diocese bankruptcy proceeding, here is what to do to protect your interests and understand your options.
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.
It depends on whether the bar date in the proceeding has already passed. Speaking with an attorney who handles clergy abuse bankruptcy claims is the best way to find out whether any option remains. Do not assume it is too late without checking.
The distribution amount depends on the plan's terms, including the total fund size, the distribution formula, and how your individual claim is evaluated. Your attorney can explain how the plan terms apply to your specific claim.
Claims are specific to each diocese's bankruptcy proceeding. Other dioceses have separate cases, some still in early stages. An attorney can tell you which proceedings may be relevant to your situation and what options exist.
No. Attorneys who handle survivor civil claims work on a contingency fee basis: no upfront fees, no legal costs unless the case resolves favorably. Consultations are free and confidential.