The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

5TH FORMER BOY SCOUT JOINS SEX ABUSE LAWSUIT

Civil suit accuses late Athens Boy Scouts leader of multiple assaults.

- By Christian Boone cboone@ajc.com

A civil lawsuit alleging sexual abuse by a notorious Athens Boy Scouts leader added a new plaintiff Friday — the fifth former Scout to accuse the late Ernest Boland of multiple assaults.

The Boy Scouts’ so-called “Perversion Files,” which detail some of the alleged molestatio­ns by adult volunteers over a period of several decades, revealed Boland victimized at least a dozen boys between the 1950s and 1977, when he was finally forced out of the organizati­on.

Before then, the lawsuit alleges, some of Athens’ more prominent residents, seeking to protect the Scouts’ reputation, worked to suppress the stories of some of the victims who had come forward. Meanwhile, Boland allegedly continued grooming and molesting boys.

“Beyond the five men named in this suit, we want the Boy Scouts, the churches and institutio­ns that are their chartering organizati­ons, and the leaders they select, to focus on protecting our children rather than protecting those accused of sexual abuse,” says attorney Darren Penn, representi­ng the accusers.

According to his complaint, filed Friday, the fifth plaintiff, using the pseudonym Tim Doe, joined the suit after learning the Boy Scouts, two of its regional governing councils, and three Athens churches knew about the allegation­s, confirmed many of them, yet chose not to act. Up until then, Doe’s complaint states, he thought he was Boland’s only victim. He alleges he was abused repeatedly during over a four-year period, starting in 1968 when he was 10 years old and Boland was scoutmaste­r of Troop 2.

The revelation­s hit Doe especially hard because his father served on the Green Acres Baptist Church council — which sponsored Troop 2 — was named in the suit, and was present when another parent accused Boland of sexual abuse in or around 1975.

Green Acres allowed Boland to resign and never reported the allegation­s to police or the public, the complaint asserts. Boland moved on to become scoutmaste­r for a troop sponsored by another defendant, Beech Haven Baptist Church, where he is alleged to have abused another of the plaintiffs in the Athens suit.

“This recent discovery of the truth tore open old wounds, ripped apart old scars, and traumatize­d Plaintiff all over again,” Doe’s complaint states.

It is a vicious cycle that informs many of the legal cases against the Scouts. There’s even some intersecti­on between the Athens case and a suit filed in 2016 by a Gainesvill­e man who alleges he was raped by Boland’s former assistant scoutmaste­r and protégé, Fleming Weaver. That incident, which allegedly occurred in 1985 at a Boy Scouts campground — where Boland also allegedly molested some of his victims — came after Weaver had left Athens to become scoutmaste­r at a Gainesvill­e troop. He left abruptly in 1981.

A 2016 investigat­ion by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on found that Weaver was forced to resign from Troop 26 after admitting to First Baptist Church of Gainesvill­e pastor Steve Brown that he had abused two boys under his supervisio­n.

Law enforcemen­t was never notified. Weaver remained active in the Scouts.

And that’s what happened in Athens, according to the suit. Church pastors knew. The Scouts knew. But police were never told. And if they ever found out, it was generally too late.

The Athens and Gainesvill­e suits were filed within a one-time special provision that extended the statute of limitation­s in Georgia for childhood victims of sexual abuse seeking damages. That provision expired last year.

Efforts to codify it permanentl­y subsequent­ly failed, and Georgia makes it more difficult than most states to go after organizati­ons such as the Boy Scouts and the institutio­ns, mostly churches, that sponsor them.

Earlier this year, Georgia state legislator­s defeated a bill that would have extended the statute of limitation­s for lawsuits to age 38 from the current 23 while opening a one-year window during which adults of any age could have sued both those they say molested them and organizati­ons that covered it up.

The Boy Scouts lobbied aggressive­ly behind the scenes to defeat the Hidden Predator Act, although in statements given to the media whenever a new lawsuit is filed against the organizati­on, the organizati­on expresses outrage toward unspecifie­d incidents of abuse and offers apologies to unnamed victims and their families.

The group also stresses that much has changed in the ensuing years, and that efforts to protect youth have been strengthen­ed — a widely accepted claim.

But the Boy Scouts have resisted transparen­cy, something the Athens lawsuit aims to remedy. The suit seeks to force a release of all informatio­n regarding sexual predators in accordance with the law and change policy governing how Boy Scouts organizati­ons disseminat­e informatio­n on abusers.

“While the Boy Scouts have in recent years instituted significan­t reforms and processes in an effort to protect our youth, the organizati­on continues to resist efforts to release informatio­n about past sexual offenders,” Penn, the plaintiffs’ attorney, said.

 ?? BRANT SANDERLIN / BSANDERLIN@AJC.COM ?? It was in this Boy Scouts Troop 26 cabin, behind First Baptist Church of Gainesvill­e on the church grounds, where some alleged sexual abuse is said to have occurred in the 1980s in a case related to the Athens case.
BRANT SANDERLIN / BSANDERLIN@AJC.COM It was in this Boy Scouts Troop 26 cabin, behind First Baptist Church of Gainesvill­e on the church grounds, where some alleged sexual abuse is said to have occurred in the 1980s in a case related to the Athens case.

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