The proposed resolution covering 1,300 claims includes a $250,000 quick-pay option and a records disclosure requirement. If you have an existing claim in the New York Archdiocese bankruptcy, here is what to consider before making any election.
Reviewed by Abuse Justice Center · Updated 2026-07-07
The proposed New York settlement offers a quick-pay option and a records disclosure component. The decision between quick-pay and full assessment should be made with attorney guidance based on your individual claim.
The proposed $800 million New York Archdiocese settlement offers two paths for eligible claimants. The quick-pay option provides a fixed $250,000 per eligible claimant on an accelerated timeline. Claimants who select this option receive their payment faster but forgo the full individual assessment process. The standard path allows claimants to undergo a complete individual assessment that may yield a larger award based on the specific facts of the claim, the severity and duration of the abuse, documented economic harm, and other factors — but the process takes longer and the outcome depends on the allocation process.
Neither path is automatically better. For some survivors, the certainty and speed of the $250,000 quick-pay is the right choice — particularly where the priority is a defined resolution on a predictable timeline. For others, the specific facts of their claim may support a substantially larger individual award through the full assessment, making the longer process worth the additional time. This decision should be made with legal guidance from an attorney who is familiar with the settlement terms and the specific facts of your claim.
The settlement is proposed — it is not final. It requires a defined acceptance threshold among eligible claimants before it takes effect. Survivors with claims in this proceeding should follow their attorneys' guidance on what the acceptance threshold means for the timeline and whether any contingencies apply.
The proposed settlement includes a requirement that the Archdiocese of New York release personnel records on clergy who have been credibly accused of abuse. For survivors who have long sought recognition that the institution was aware of the conduct, the records disclosure component provides a form of accountability that extends beyond the financial settlement. Documentation of what the archdiocese knew and when can confirm what many survivors have suspected — that the institutional failure was a deliberate choice made over years with knowledge of the harm being caused.
Records disclosure requirements in institutional abuse settlements have increasingly become a standard negotiating point for survivors and their advocates. The argument for such requirements rests on two grounds: individual survivors deserve to know the full scope of the institution's knowledge, and the public interest in institutional transparency is served by making those records available. Whether the scope of the New York disclosure requirement is as broad as advocates sought is something survivors in the proceeding can evaluate with their attorneys.
For survivors considering the settlement terms, the records requirement is one factor among several. It does not affect the financial calculation directly, but it may matter significantly to survivors for whom the acknowledgment of institutional knowledge is part of what accountability means to them.
Survivors who filed claims in the New York Archdiocese bankruptcy without legal representation — or whose attorneys have not yet discussed the settlement election with them — should seek legal guidance now. Settlement elections in bankruptcy proceedings have defined timelines and procedural requirements. Making an uninformed election, or missing the election deadline, can significantly affect the outcome.
The Abuse Justice Center is a lawyer-matching service that can connect survivors with attorneys experienced in clergy abuse bankruptcy proceedings and settlement elections. Consultations are free, confidential, and available on a contingency-only basis. We are not a law firm and do not provide legal advice. If you have a pending claim in the New York Archdiocese proceeding and want guidance on the election, a qualified attorney is the right resource. Attorney advertising.
Survivors who do not currently have a claim in the New York proceeding are not eligible for the settlement distribution. If you are a survivor of clergy abuse in New York who did not file a claim before the relevant deadline in the bankruptcy, the New York settlement fund is not available to you. However, other civil options may exist depending on your specific situation — including the New York Child Victims Act framework or the NYC Gender-Motivated Violence Act window — and an attorney can evaluate what, if anything, remains available.
Settlement elections in bankruptcy proceedings are consequential and typically irreversible. These are the most important things to understand before making any election.
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.
If you filed a claim in the archdiocese's bankruptcy proceeding, you should have received confirmation from the court or your attorney. If you are unsure, the court's public docket for the proceeding lists filed claims by claimant number. An attorney familiar with the proceeding can also confirm your status.
The New York Archdiocese bankruptcy proceeding had a defined claims bar date. Whether any late-filed claims can be added depends on the specific terms of the bankruptcy case. An attorney familiar with the proceeding can advise on whether any path to filing remains available.
If you have a claim that was not filed in the bankruptcy, other civil options may exist depending on the specific facts of your situation, including the New York Child Victims Act framework and the NYC Gender-Motivated Violence Act window. An attorney can evaluate your options.
The Abuse Justice Center is a lawyer-matching service, not a law firm, and does not provide legal advice. Consultations are free, confidential, and handled on a contingency-only basis. Attorney advertising.