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The Diocese Of Rochester

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT                                            
WESTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK                                              
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In re:                                                                    

The Diocese of Rochester,                 Bankruptcy Case No. 19-20905-PRW   
                                     Chapter 11                       
                Debtor.                                               
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                   DECISION AND ORDER                                 
              DENYING CNA’s EX PARTE MOTION                           
   SEEKING TO FILE CONFIRMATION OBJECTIONS UNDER SEAL                 

PAUL R. WARREN, U.S.B.J.                                                  

 The Continental Insurance Company (“CNA”) filed an ex parte motion requesting an order 
authorizing it to file its objections to confirmation under seal.  (ECF No. 3268).  The Court was 
provided with a copy of CNA’s objections to confirmation for in camera review.  Pointing to this 
Court’s Order requiring attorneys representing multiple claimants to comply with Rule 2019 FRBP 
(ECF No. 2142), and characterizing that Order as a “confidentiality order,” CNA expresses 
concerns about what “information” can and cannot be filed on the docket.  Obviously, CNA is 
being careful to avoid a disclosure of information obtained from Attorney Jeff Anderson through 
the Rule 2019 disclosures, which was marked as “confidential” at the time of disclosure. 
 The Court’s Order directing attorneys representing multiple claimants, like Mr. Anderson, 
to  provide  information  required  by  Rule  2019—including  information  concerning  litigation 
financing—included a provision that “[a]ll documents relating to litigation financing agreements 
shall not be placed on the electronic docket.”  (ECF No. 2142 at 2 n.2 (emphasis added)).  Here, 
CNA is not proposing to file such documents on the docket, it is making a legal argument about 
the potential issues related to litigation financing in its objection to confirmation, which includes 
the amount loaned, terms of the loan(s), and alleged potential impacts on borrowers.  Further, 
CNA’s expert witness, Professor Samir Parikh, is expected to testify in detail about the litigation 
financing obtained by Mr. Anderson.  Should the Court expect CNA to request that no digital 
recording or transcript of Professor Parikh’s testimony be made at trial as the logical next step?  
Here, CNA seeks to file its entire 72-page objection to confirmation under seal.  If granted, the 
public would be denied access to the entire document.  And yet, only a handful of words have been 

highlighted by CNA as containing potentially confidential information.    
 “[T]he fact that there is a confidentiality order in place does not displace this Court’s duty 
to scrutinize the request for a seal order [under § 107(b)].”  In re Anthracite Cap., Inc., 492 B.R. 
162, 180 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2013).  The party seeking a seal order must demonstrate that the 
material contained in a filing is either:  (1) in the nature of a trade secret or commercial information, 
or (2) scandalous or defamatory.  11 U.S.C. § 107(b)(1) & (2).  Here, CNA argues that the 
information  concerning  litigation  financing  received  by  Mr.  Anderson  is  scandalous  or 
defamatory.  It is well-settled that potential reputational harm is insufficient to overcome the 
common law presumption in favor of public access to court records.  In re Food Mgmt. Grp., LLC, 

359 B.R. 543, 561 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2007).  In the Second Circuit, the Courts apply a strict 
interpretation of the term “scandalous.”  See In re Anthracite Cap., Inc., 492 B.R. at 176; In re 
Food Mgmt. Grp., LLC, 359 B.R. at 558.                                    
 The information concerning litigation financing is not scandalous.  Therefore, the objection 
cannot be sealed under § 107(b)(2) of the Code.  That leaves § 107(b)(1) as the basis to seal the 
objection, although not  asserted by CNA.  If information is “confidential . . . commercial 
information,” the court is required to protect an entity from disclosure of that information.  11 
U.S.C. § 107(b)(1).  “Information is not considered ‘commercial’ merely because it relates to 
business affairs.  Commercial information is ‘information which would cause an unfair advantage 
to competitors by providing them information as to the commercial operations of [an entity].’”  In 
re Anthracite Cap., Inc., 492 B.R. at 178 (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).  
“[Section] 107(b)(1) is meant to prevent business competitors from seeing confidential business-
related information and using that information to the detriment of the [entity].”  Id. at 179.   
 The existence of a so-called confidentiality order or confidentiality agreement is not 

outcome determinative.  Filings with the Court can only be sealed from public view if one of the 
two exceptions under § 107(b) of the Code are demonstrated by the movant.  The Court finds that 
CNA’s objection to confirmation is not entitled to protections under either § 107(b)(1) or (2).  As 
a result, CNA’s ex parte motion is DENIED.                                
 IT IS SO ORDERED.                                                    
DATED:  July 22, 2025         ______________/s/______________             
      Rochester, New York     HON. PAUL R. WARREN                     
                          United States Bankruptcy Judge