Las Vegas Review-Journal

Suit alleges discovery of more abuse in Boy Scouts

- The Associated Press

Lawyers bringing a lawsuit against the Boy Scouts of America said Tuesday that they believe they’ve turned up allegation­s of sexual abuse against more than 350 people not previously identified in files released by the organizati­on.

Attorneys for the Abused in Scouting group filed a lawsuit Monday in Philadelph­ia Common Pleas Court alleging that a onetime Scout leader sexually abused a minor identified only by initials.

The suit alleges that the abuse of the then-12- or 13-year-old victim by an assistant Scout leader started around 1974 or 1975 and continued until about 1980.

It also says that the lawyers received allegation­s of abuse from their clients against more than 350 people involved with the Scouts who had not previously been named.

The Irving, Texas-based Scouts compiled so-called ineligible volunteer files for years on people considered to pose a risk of abuse, and about 5,000 of these files have been made public as a result of court action.

Monday’s suit is claiming that the lawyers now have hundreds of names that were not in those public files. It does not list the names.

The lawsuit comes as states have begun changing their statutes of limitation­s to make it easier for longago victims of sexual assault to seek damages in court.

The Boy Scouts have said previously that when volunteers are added to the database for suspected abuse, “they are reported to law enforcemen­t, removed entirely from any Scouting and prohibited from re-joining anywhere.”

The sexual abuse settlement­s have begun to strain the Boy Scouts’ finances to the point where the organizati­on has said it’s exploring “all available options,” including Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

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