The Catholic Church has spent at least $10.6 million lobbying against legislation that gives sexual abuse victims more time to seek justice in courts ― and that’s in the Northeast alone, according to a new report. Church funds have gone toward attempts to oppose statute-of-limitations reform in Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island between 2011 and 2018, the report released by four law firms on Tuesday suggested. The law firms ― Williams Cedar, Seeger Weiss, Abraham Watkins, and Simpson Tuegel ― have collectively represented more than 300 survivors of clerical sexual abuse across the country. They obtained the data about the church’s lobbying efforts from public filings. Gerald Williams, a partner at Williams Cedar, said the church’s lobbying contradict its promises to prioritize victims and take accountability for clerical sexual abuse. “We’ve heard a lot about the church’s desire to be accountable and turn over a new leaf,” Williams told CBS. “But when we turn to the form where we can most help people and where we can get the most justice — the courts of justice — the church has been there blocking their efforts.”

Marc Levy/ASSOCIATED PRESS State Rep. Mark Rozzi (D) speaks at an Oct. 17, 2018, news conference in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, after the stalling of legislation that was meant to respond to a grand jury report on child sexual abuse by Catholic priests.

Of the eight states studied, the largest amount of lobbying money ― $5.3 million ― appears to have been spent in Pennsylvania. Last August, Pennsylvania’s attorney general, Josh Shapiro, released the results of a two-year grand jury investigation into sexual abuse and cover-up in six Catholic dioceses in the state. The investigation identified over 1,000 victims and 301 “predator priests,” and jurors recommended changes to the state’s statute of limitations. Pennsylvania legislators are now considering reforms to the state’s child sexual abuse laws that would eliminate the criminal statute of limitations, extend the civil statute of limitations, and create a temporary window for victims to seek justice for older cases. Catholic Church officials across the country have been particularly wary of attempts to open retroactive windows, arguing that reviving old claims would be financially crippling to Catholic schools, parishes and charities. Shapiro told NBC News that he believes the church’s “extensive lobbying” in his state shows that it cannot be trusted to police itself. “It’s reprehensible that the church continues to spend significant sums of money fighting these reforms, instead of protecting and supporting the victims of clergy sexual abuse,” he said. The Pennsylvania Catholic Conference, the lobbying arm for bishops in that state, told HuffPost that it has not reviewed the law firms’ report. “For more than a half century, the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference has lobbied on a myriad of issues that are important to people of the Catholic faith,” communications director Al Gnoza said in a statement. “We do not have a breakdown of costs, but our lobbying budget funds this broad effort.”

Hans Pennink/ASSOCIATED PRESS Members of the New York Assembly celebrate after the Child Victims Act passed on Jan. 28, 2019, in Albany.