The Denver Post

Boy Scouts are facing 82K claims

- By Mike Baker

More than 82,000 people have come forward with sex- abuse claims against the Boy Scouts of America, describing a decadeslon­g accumulati­on of assaults at the hands of Scout leaders across the nation who had been trusted as role models.

The claims, which lawyers said far eclipsed the number of abuse accusation­s filed in Catholic Church cases, continued to mount before a Monday deadline establishe­d in bankruptcy court in Delaware, where the Boy Scouts had sought refuge this year in a bid to survive the demands for damages.

Paul Mones, a lawyer who has been working on Boy Scouts cases for nearly two decades, said the prevalence of abuse detailed in the filings was breathtaki­ng and might reflect only a fraction of victims.

“I knew there were a lot of cases,” Mones said. “I never contemplat­ed it would be a number close to this.”

One coalition of attorneys, operating as the group Abused in Scouting, has clients from all 50 states along with cases in which the abuse occurred overseas at places such as military bases in Japan and Germany. The accusers range in age from 8 to 93. While the vast majority are men, some women have also filed complaints.

The avalanche of claims — 82,663 of them by late Sunday — set up a monumental task for the bankruptcy case as the Boy Scouts seek to one day emerge with its operations intact.

The national organizati­on has more than $ 1 billion in assets, according to its bankruptcy filing. The organizati­on also has a network of local Boy Scouts councils that own hundreds of camps and other properties across the country where Scouts can advance their skills and values along lake shores and in mountain valleys.

As the Boy Scouts seek to reorganize and set up a victims’ compensati­on fund under the Chapter 11 filing, a judge set Monday as the deadline for victims to come forward with claims that will ultimately undergo a vetting process.

In a statement, the Boy Scouts of America said the organizati­on was “devastated by the number of lives impacted by past abuse in Scouting.” The organizati­on said it had sought an accessible process for survivors to seek compensati­on.

“The response we have seen from survivors has been gut wrenching,” the organizati­on said in the statement. “We are deeply sorry.”

Founded in 1910, the Boy Scouts grew under a rare congressio­nal charter in 1916 that detailed scouting values of “patriotism, courage, self- reliance and kindred virtues” — goals that shaped the civic ideals for generation­s of American boys.

From an early age, young Scouts learn about obedience and loyalty, reciting an oath to stay “morally straight.” The organizati­on has said that some 130 million Americans have gone through its programs over the years, including the likes of John F. Kennedy, astronaut Neil Armstrong, Civil Rights icon Ernest Green and film director Steven Spielberg.

While the Boy Scouts count some 2.2 million current members, those numbers have been on the decline from a peak of around 5 million in the 1970s. In 2017, the organizati­on expanded to allow girls to participat­e, although that effort has frayed relationsh­ips with the Girl Scouts of the USA.

But even in the organizati­on’s early years, abuse files maintained at the Boy Scouts headquarte­rs detailed troubles. In 1935, the organizati­on described having files on hundreds of “degenerate­s” who had served as Scout leaders, according to a New York Times article from the time.

Lawyers, including Mones, later pressed to release some of those files in a case in Oregon, where a 2010 jury verdict held the Scouts liable for $ 18.5 million in punitive damages. The Oregon Supreme Court later ordered that the case records be made public.

Although many of the abuse cases occurred in decades past, some states in recent years have passed laws giving older victims a chance to pursue accountabi­lity in the courts. That includes New York, which approved a one- year window that opened last year.

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