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Camden Diocese Reaches $180 Million Settlement Covering 330 Clergy Abuse Survivors

Southern New Jersey's Catholic diocese agreed in February 2026 to one of the largest diocesan resolutions outside California, pending bankruptcy court approval for a fund covering over 300 survivors.

Survivor Justice Alliance · 2026-06-29 · 6 min read

Reviewed by Survivor Justice Alliance · Updated 2026-06-29

Key takeaways

  • The Diocese of Camden agreed to a $180 million settlement in February 2026 covering 330 survivors of alleged clergy sexual abuse - one of the largest diocesan resolutions outside California.
  • The settlement incorporates an earlier $87.5 million Camden commitment from 2022, reflecting years of continued negotiation as additional claims were filed and the full scope of liability became clear.
  • Final distribution of funds requires bankruptcy court confirmation, which has not yet occurred as of the date of this article.
  • The Catholic Church in the United States has now paid more than $5 billion in clergy abuse settlements and legal fees since the 1980s, with the pace of large institutional resolutions accelerating in recent years.
INSTITUTIONAL ACCOUNTABILITY
Camden Diocese Settlement: Key Figures
$180M
Total Camden Diocese settlement (2026)
330
Survivors covered by the agreement
$880M
Archdiocese of Los Angeles settlement (2024) - largest U.S. record
$5B+
Total paid by U.S. Catholic institutions in abuse settlements

Sources: National Catholic Reporter, U.S. News & World Report (2026)

The Camden Settlement: Background and Scope

The Diocese of Camden, which serves southern New Jersey including communities near the Philadelphia metropolitan area, announced in February 2026 that it had reached a $180 million agreement to resolve clergy sexual abuse claims brought by 330 survivors. The diocese had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection as part of the broader pattern of Catholic dioceses using restructuring proceedings to consolidate and address mounting civil liability.

The Camden figure builds on a 2022 agreement in which the diocese had committed approximately $87.5 million to settle allegations involving roughly 300 claimants. As additional survivors came forward and legal proceedings continued, the total obligation grew substantially. The 2026 announcement encompasses both the previously committed amounts and the additional funds negotiated to resolve the expanded pool of claims, pending final court approval.

At an average of approximately $545,000 per survivor, the Camden resolution reflects the elevated per-claimant values that have emerged in recent diocesan bankruptcies. Claims administrators in similar cases have applied increasingly comprehensive valuation frameworks that account for long-term psychological harm, lost economic opportunities, and the institutional nature of conduct that enabled and concealed abuse over extended periods.

Why Civil Cases Against Institutions Matter

Civil litigation against dioceses and other institutions serves a purpose distinct from any criminal prosecution of individual perpetrators. While criminal cases address individual conduct and punish the person who committed the abuse, civil suits against an institution examine what the organization knew, when it knew it, and whether its policies or deliberate choices allowed abuse to continue. This institutional accountability is particularly important in clergy abuse cases, where documented patterns of transfer and internal reassignment demonstrate that decision-makers had knowledge and prioritized concealment over protection.

Diocese bankruptcy proceedings typically produce extensive discovery of internal institutional records that would not ordinarily be accessible to survivors outside litigation. Personnel files, inter-office communications, transfer orders, and records of prior complaints have been surfaced in these cases, creating an evidentiary record that establishes not just individual wrongdoing but the systemic nature of institutional failure. For many survivors, access to this institutional record is itself a meaningful form of acknowledgment.

For survivors who have not yet pursued civil claims, the documented record from diocesan proceedings - including released lists of credibly accused clergy - can provide important information. Some survivors learn details about their own experiences through records surfaced in other survivors' proceedings, reinforcing why attorneys advise those with potential claims to engage the process as early as possible.

The Claims Process After Confirmation

Once the Camden reorganization plan receives bankruptcy court confirmation, a trust will be established and a claims administrator will assess the value of each individual survivor's claim using a valuation framework agreed upon by the parties. Relevant factors typically include the nature and duration of the abuse, the survivor's age at the time, the abuser's position of trust and authority, and documented evidence of psychological or other harm.

Survivors who have already filed proofs of claim in the Camden bankruptcy should work with their attorneys to understand what supplemental documentation or personal declarations may strengthen their claim valuations. Those who believe they have a Camden-related claim but have not yet filed should determine as soon as possible whether the court's bar date - the filing deadline - has passed or remains open.

The Survivor Justice Alliance provides confidential referrals to attorneys experienced in diocesan bankruptcy cases. Initial consultations are provided at no charge, and attorneys in our network work on a contingency basis - meaning they are paid only from any recovery obtained on behalf of the survivor, with no out-of-pocket cost required.

National Scale of Catholic Clergy Abuse Accountability

The Catholic Church in the United States has paid more than $5 billion in clergy abuse settlements and legal fees since the 1980s. The largest single diocesan settlement in U.S. history was the $880 million agreement reached by the Archdiocese of Los Angeles in 2024. The Franciscan Friars of California reached a $20 million bankruptcy settlement in 2026 to resolve claims by nearly 100 survivors. These cases represent institutional accountability achieved through the civil justice system over many years of sustained litigation.

Multiple diocese bankruptcy cases remain active across the country. Lookback window legislation in states including California, New York, and others continues to bring previously time-barred claims within the reach of civil courts. For many survivors, the legal environment in 2026 represents the broadest window of civil accountability available in decades, with both existing proceedings and newly opened legal pathways offering opportunities that did not exist five years ago.

The Survivor Justice Alliance tracks active cases and legislative developments. Survivors who are uncertain whether any legal option remains available to them - regardless of when the underlying events occurred - are encouraged to consult confidentially with an attorney before concluding that no path exists. An experienced attorney can assess the specific facts and applicable law in a single consultation.

5 Key Differences Between Civil Clergy Abuse Cases and Criminal Prosecutions

Survivors often wonder whether they need a criminal conviction before pursuing civil accountability. They do not. Civil cases operate on a fundamentally different track.

  1. A lower standard of proof applies: Criminal conviction requires proof beyond a reasonable doubt. Civil cases require only a preponderance of the evidence - meaning it is more probable than not that the abuse occurred and the institution bears responsibility. This is a meaningfully lower threshold.
  2. The institution itself can be held liable: Criminal cases name individual perpetrators. Civil suits can name the diocese, school, or organization as a defendant and hold it financially accountable for systemic failures - independent of whether any individual was convicted.
  3. No police report is required to file: A survivor does not need a prior police report, a prior criminal complaint, or a prior criminal conviction to bring a civil lawsuit. Many successful civil recoveries involve situations where no criminal charges were ever filed.
  4. Privacy protections are available: Civil cases can in many jurisdictions proceed under a pseudonym or with sealed records. Survivors concerned about public exposure should ask an attorney what protective measures are available before deciding not to pursue a claim on privacy grounds alone.
  5. Statutes of limitations differ significantly from criminal law: Each state establishes its own civil deadline, and many have extended these deadlines through lookback window legislation. Whether a civil claim remains timely depends on state law, not on whether a criminal case was ever filed or how long ago it was resolved.

The Survivor Justice Alliance is an attorney alliance and advocacy organization, not a law firm; nothing here is legal advice. Attorney advertising. Referrals and consultations are free, and alliance attorneys work on contingency. Support is available 24/7 at the RAINN hotline, 800-656-4673.

Related

Questions

Common Questions

No. The Camden settlement applies only to claims against the Diocese of Camden and its affiliated entities in southern New Jersey. Other New Jersey dioceses operate under separate legal structures, and claims against them would be governed by those institutions' own proceedings and legal timelines.

Missing a bankruptcy court claims deadline generally bars a survivor from participating in that proceeding's distribution fund. However, other legal options may exist depending on state law and whether any revival windows apply to the survivor's specific circumstances. An attorney should review the facts to determine whether any viable path remains.

Civil law does not impose a formal severity threshold in the way criminal statutes define specific offenses. However, the assessed value of a claim - and the likely range of recovery - is influenced by factors including the nature, duration, and frequency of the conduct and the survivor's documented harm. Survivors should not self-screen before speaking with an attorney.

Jurisdiction generally follows where the abuse occurred, not where the survivor currently lives. If the abuse occurred within the Diocese of Camden's geographic territory, a survivor who has since relocated to another state can still participate in the Camden proceedings. A survivor's current location does not determine eligibility.