Houston Chronicle

Scouts slammed by new accusation­s of sex abuse

- By Kim Christense­n

Lawyers who launched a national TV ad campaign this year have signed 800 new clients with sexual abuse claims against the Boy Scouts of America, including 350 previously unidentifi­ed “hidden predators” whose names are not on the youth organizati­on’s blacklist of alleged offenders.

A roster of the 350 alleged perpetrato­rs was not publicly disclosed but was made available to reporters Tuesday at a news conference in Washington to announce a civil lawsuit against a former assistant scoutmaste­r accused of repeatedly molesting a Scout in Pennsylvan­ia in the 1970s.

The list also has been provided to Boy Scouts officials, who say they have reported 120 of the men to law enforcemen­t and are investigat­ing the others.

The lawsuit, filed Monday in Philadelph­ia County Common Pleas Court, accuses the Boy Scouts of America of perpetuati­ng “a continuing and serious conspiracy to conceal and cover up” abusers in its ranks.

“Its dirty little secret is not a little secret — it’s huge,” attorney Tim Kosnoff, who has sued the organizati­on more than 100 times, said at Tuesday’s news conference.

The 800 former Scouts who contacted the lawyers through a website are from across the country and range in age from 14 to 88, according to Kosnoff and attorneys from two law firms he has teamed with.

They said none of the names of the 350 “hidden predators” appeared in the Scouts’ “perversion files,” a closely guarded trove of documents that detail sexual abuse allegation­s against troop leaders and others dating back a century.

In 2012, the Los Angeles Times published internal Scout records involving about 5,000 men on the blacklist, formally known for decades as the Ineligible Volunteer files and now called the Volunteer Screening Database. It was not necessary to be charged with a crime to be placed in the files, nor were all allegation­s substantia­ted.

In its yearlong examinatio­n of the files, The Times documented hundreds of cases in which the Boy Scouts failed to report accusation­s to authoritie­s, hid the allegation­s from parents and the public, or urged admitted abusers to quietly resign — and then helped cover their tracks with bogus reasons for their departures.

A researcher hired by the Scouts to analyze a more complete set of records from 1944 to 2016 said this year that she had identified 7,819 suspected abusers and 12,254 victims.

Sex abuse lawyers and others contend those numbers understate the extent of the abuse in Scouting. They note that most offenders were accused of molesting multiple boys and that many instances of abuse were never reported. The Scouts also have acknowledg­ed destroying an unknown number of files over the years.

In a statement to the Times, Scouts officials on Tuesday acknowledg­ed there were “instances in our organizati­on’s history when cases were not addressed or handled in a manner consistent with our commitment to protect Scouts.”

But they emphasized enhanced youth protection measures now in place, including criminal background checks for leaders and volunteers and mandatory reporting of incidents.

“We care deeply about all victims of abuse and sincerely apologize to anyone who was harmed during their time in Scouting,” the statement said. “We believe victims, we support them, we pay for counseling by a provider of their choice, and we encourage them to come forward.”

Lawyers at Tuesday’s news conference said they have heard from only one law enforcemen­t agency, the Colorado Bureau of Investigat­ion.

 ?? Patrick Semansky / Associated Press ?? Tim Kosnoff, left, an attorney with the legal team of Abused in Scouting, displays a list of more plaintiffs who allege that they were victims of child sex abuse by “hidden predators” in the Boy Scouts of America.
Patrick Semansky / Associated Press Tim Kosnoff, left, an attorney with the legal team of Abused in Scouting, displays a list of more plaintiffs who allege that they were victims of child sex abuse by “hidden predators” in the Boy Scouts of America.

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