San Francisco Chronicle

Scout who asked about guns was kicked out, mother says

- By Colleen Slevin Colleen Slevin is an Associated Press writer.

DENVER — A Cub Scout was kicked out of his group after he questioned a Colorado state lawmaker about gun control and previous contentiou­s comments she made about African Americans.

It’s the latest political flash point for the Boy Scouts, of which the Cub Scouts is a part. The organizati­on faced harsh blowback after President Trump used his speech at the Scouts’ national jamboree in July to rail against “fake news” and former President Barack Obama and boast about beating Hillary Clinton.

At a forum this month, Cub Scouts were told to come prepared to talk to Republican state Sen. Vicki Marble about issues important to them.

Lori Mayfield, the mother of 11-year-old Ames Mayfield, said a local scout leader told her after the Oct. 9 event that the topic of gun control was inappropri­ate because of its political nature and that the boy’s questions were disrespect­ful.

The Boy Scouts have refused to comment on the reason the boy was asked to leave but say he will remain in the Scouts after finding a new group.

“The Boy Scouts of America is a wholly non-partisan organizati­on and does not promote any one political position, candidate or philosophy,” the organizati­on said in a statement Friday.

In online videos recorded by Lori Mayfield, other scouts were heard asking questions about why people wanted to vote for Obama just because he was black and about Trump’s proposed wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.

In the video showing Ames asking about gun control, he reads from a printed sheet, telling her that he is shocked that she had sponsored a bill that allowed domestic violence offenders to own guns, rattles off a list of survey statistics about Americans’ views on the issue and speaks about the trouble Las Vegas shooting victims would have paying their bills.

“There is something wrong in our country where Republican­s believe it’s a right to own a gun but a privilege to have health care. None of that makes sense to me,” he said.

Marble drew national attention in 2013 after she seemed to draw a link between the health of black people and eating fried chicken and barbecue during a legislativ­e committee hearing.

During the scout meeting, Ames told Marble that he was “astonished that you blamed black people” for their health problems.

She replied, “I didn’t. That was made up by the media. So you want to believe it, you believe it, but that’s not how it went down.”

 ?? Jack Dempsey / Associated Press 2009 ?? A Cub Scout asked GOP state Sen. Vicki Marble of Colorado about gun control and African Americans, and he was later removed from the group.
Jack Dempsey / Associated Press 2009 A Cub Scout asked GOP state Sen. Vicki Marble of Colorado about gun control and African Americans, and he was later removed from the group.

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