The ‘longest,’ ‘most emotional’ experience: Attorneys mark final plan approval in Boy Scouts case

Delaware Law Weekly

More than two and a half years after the Boy Scouts of America first filed for bankruptcy in the District of Delaware, attorneys for tens of thousands of sexual abuse survivors are celebrating the court’s approval of a final Chapter 11 plan.

Judge Laurie Selber Silverstein’s final approval last week means a trust of more than $2.4 billion in settlement funds obtained to date can start to be distributed to the more than 82,000 abuse claimants, though there’s no set timetable for when that process will be complete.

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‘Mindbogglingly expansive’: Twitter blasts Musk’s discovery demands as parties blame each other in scheduling row

Delaware Business Court Insider

Twitter and Elon Musk indicated this week they’re at a standstill in scheduling dates for their broken deal trial, asking Chancellor Kathaleen McCormick to weigh in.

The Musk team claimed in a letter sent Tuesday that Twitter is intentionally holding up discovery in an effort to give Musk as little time as possible to analyze the data he’s requested, and Twitter fired back in a motion filed the next day that Musk has made setting dates impossible by making unreasonable requests and refusing to make any concessions to the other side.

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Multicultural exhibit grants voice to minority artists

The Athens NEWS

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Following the 2016 election, artist Kasey Jones and photographer Emily Webb felt the need to speak out for minority groups in the Athens area. They co-curated “In the Margins,” an exhibition of art with themes of marginalized groups.

Berks Residential Center vigil draws only one detainee

The Reading Eagle

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About 25 activists gathered on Sunday at a vigil held by Shut Down Berks Interfaith Witness in protest of the Berks County Residential Center, which houses undocumented immigrant families, including children, seeking asylum in the United States.

The vigil included readings from the Bible and the Quran in English and Spanish as well as several gospel songs. In the past, women and children being detained at the center have come as close as possible to the vigil in order to sing and express their appreciation. At Sunday’s vigil, the area where they normally gathered was empty, except for one boy who rode his bike up to the fence to listen for a few minutes. Several Shut Down Berks members thought this, along with the fact that there were only three police cars stationed near the vigil, was odd, as the detainees have been known to approach past vigils, even in bad weather.