A landmark settlement appears near in a clergy sex abuse lawsuit that has already forced the church to disclose the names of dozens of priests accused of abuse and the files documenting their actions.
Attorney Jeff Anderson and officials from the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis said Sunday that they would unveil a "historic child protection action plan" at a news conference Monday, but sources told the Star Tribune the plan is part of a deal to settle the suit filed against the Archdiocese and the Diocese of Winona.
The agreement, including undisclosed financial terms, is to be presented to Ramsey County District Court Judge John Van de North Monday morning, before the 1 p.m. news conference.
"This will be the first time in 30 years Anderson has stood with archdiocese officials to work in cooperation for child protection," said a news release from Anderson's office Sunday.
Neither Anderson nor Archdiocese officials would provided any further details on the child-protection plan or proposed settlement Sunday.
Anderson represents an alleged victim of the former priest Tom Adamson in the Ramsey County case. The suit alleges that Adamson was a known abuser in the diocese of Winona before he was transferred to the archdiocese, where he allegedly abused the plaintiff in the mid-1970s at a St. Paul Park church.
The suit filed by a plaintiff identified as John Doe I, has already resulted in an unprecedented public release of names priests who have sexually abused children and more than 50,000 pages of documents showing how the church responded. Last month a judge ruled that Doe could pursue a public nuisance claim against the church for its pattern of moving known offenders to other parishes where they could reoffend.
The proposed settlement would cover both the public nuisance and negligence claims. The public nuisance claim had drawn national interest, because it was the first time such a legal tactic had been used in a clergy abuse lawsuit.