
On 27th August the Church of England Redress Scheme leaked the personal details of nearly 200 survivors of CofE abuse in a data breach.
House of Survivors recognises that this was human error with no malevolent intent – nevertheless it has distressing consequences for all survivors involved. Many survivors had kept their name and identity carefully hidden. And many of us experience it as yet another betrayal in a long narrative of harm done to us by the Church and its agents. The fact that this breach has occurred so early in this critical process which is meant to redress the Church’s long history of failing to protect and support abuse survivors—makes this incident particularly galling. It reinforces the very failures of safeguarding and care that the redress scheme was meant to address. It may now cause many survivors to be wary and distrustful of the Redress Scheme.
House of Survivors fears that this data breach may cause the Redress Scheme to be delayed, and in our view this would be the worst outcome. It has taken many years to reach the point we have today, with a Redress Scheme voted for by Synod and ready to begin towards the end of this year or beginning of next. There have been too many delays. Too many survivors are struggling to survive economically as result of the damage in our lives and the re-abuse by the Church.
In our view, the Redress Scheme should move forward without the Church going back to the drawing board to negotiate with a new law firm (which might take another year at least). Kennedys and the Church must work together urgently to put this right and make sure there is no further additional harm to survivors. In our view, Kennedys should quickly offer fair and proportionate compensation to all survivors in the data breach, enabling us to move forward without the additional stress of civil claims.
Update 3rd Sept. 25: HoS Statement released
News pieces on this are listed below in chronological order, to follow the timeline from the first (top) to last (bottom).
Church of England alleged to have breached abuse survivors data
The Telegraph
26 Aug 2025
Personal details of Church of England abuse victims leaked, say survivors
Reuters
27 Aug 2025
Church of England abuse victims’ details leaked in email, survivors say
Independent
27 Aug 2025 
‘A new low has been reached’: Church abuse victim on data breach
Channel 4
27 Aug 2025
Church of England looking into alleged abuse survivor data breach
Premier Christian News
27 Aug 2025
Church of England ‘deeply concerned’ after confirming redress scheme data breach
Premier Christian News
27 Aug 2025
John Smyth survivor tells of ‘physical reaction’ over data breach reaction
Independent
27 Aug 2025 
Church leaders face fury after almost 200 victims of clergy abuse see personal details shared in major data breach
Daily Mail
27 Aug 2025
Church’s redress scheme for abuse survivors subject to data breach 
Church Times
28 Aug 2025
Kennedys ‘deeply sorry’ for church abuse victim data leak
Law Society Gazette
28 Aug 2025
Nearly 200 abuse survivors’ details leaked in Church of England data breach
Third Sector
27 Aug 2025
Major City law firm apologises for Church abuse data breach
Legal Futures
28 Aug 2025
City law firm Kennedys apologises for Church abuse data leak
Legal Cheek
28 Aug 2025