San Francisco Catholic Archdiocese to Pay $395M in Child Abuse Settlement
Quick Look
- The San Francisco Catholic archdiocese agreed to pay $395M to settle over 500 child sexual abuse lawsuits.
- The settlement includes an apology from Archbishop Cordileone and new child protection and transparency reforms, following the archdiocese's 2021 bankruptcy filing.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
The settlement comes three years after the archdiocese filed for bankruptcy and follows a 2019 California law that allowed decades-old claims to be filed.
The San Francisco Catholic archdiocese has agreed to pay $395m to settle more than 500 lawsuits alleging child sexual abuse by church officials, plaintiffs’ attorneys said on Monday.
Salvatore Cordileone, the San Francisco archbishop, will have to write an apology letter to each survivor as part of the settlement.
The settlement also requires the archdiocese to implement a series of child protection and transparency reforms, including creating a list of clergy accused of abuse, said Jeff Anderson, an attorney representing dozens of child sexual abuse victims.
The settlement comes three years after the archdiocese filed for bankruptcy and will cover approximately 530 survivors of child sexual abuse, Anderson said. It is the latest agreement over clergy sexual abuse claims. In 2024, the archdiocese of Los Angeles agreed to a record $880m settlement.
Several archdioceses in California filed for bankruptcy after facing hundreds of lawsuits brought under a California law approved in 2019 that allowed decades-old claims to be filed by 31 December 2022.
Cordileone said in a statement that he believed the settlement provided “a path toward fair compensation for survivors who have borne the weight of this abuse for a lifetime”.
“The hope is that this proposal will allow us collectively to move forward,” he said. “We accept full responsibility for what happened, and I sincerely apologize to all those who have been harmed.”
Margie O’Driscoll sued the archdiocese alleging she was sexually abused almost 50 years ago by a priest while she was a student at Marin Catholic high school in Kentfield, a community north of the Golden Gate Bridge. She said the settlement was hard-fought and put the responsibility on church officials, not survivors.
“I, like every survivor, have carried this pain and shame along like a ball and chain for a very, very long time,” O’Driscoll said during a news conference. “Ashamed and confused about what happened, scorned by the archdiocese, and sometimes not even believed by family and friends, and I think today shame is gonna change sides.”
Anderson said a committee of survivors who spent thousands of hours over the last three years negotiating with Cordileone is empowered with establishing protocols on how to distribute the funds. He said every survivor would be given an opportunity to submit their story of abuse to an allocator hired by the committee to receive what Anderson said would be “an equitable distribution based on the unique circumstances of that survival”.
Besides the funds, the archdiocese will be required to follow 14 child protection and transparency demands that include maintaining and making public a comprehensive, up-to-date list of all accused clergy that details allegations and the outcomes of investigations. The archdiocese will also be banned from imposing confidentiality agreements that silence survivors.
“I’ve been working with survivors for decades and I’ve never heard of anything quite as significant, as rigorous, as robust as what is being required of the archdiocese of San Francisco,” Anderson said.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
San Francisco archdiocese will implement child protection and transparency reforms.
Very likely · Within months
Open Questions
- How will the $395M be distributed among survivors?
- What specific protocols will guide fund distribution?
- How will the archdiocese ensure compliance with new reforms?






