Santa Fe New Mexican

Scouts offer new support for abuse victims

Lawyers representi­ng accusers say group’s on verge of bankruptcy

- By David Crary

NEW YORK — Facing possible bankruptcy due to sexual abuse litigation, the Boy Scouts of America issued a new apology Tuesday to survivors of abuse and announced plans for expanded services to support them.

The Boy Scouts are teaming up in a five-year partnershi­p with 1in6, a national nonprofit that provides various resources and support services to male survivors of sexual abuse. The organizati­on’s name derives from studies concluding that about 1 in 6 men in the U.S. experience­d childhood sexual abuse.

The BSA said the partnershi­p will enable 1in6 to expand its 24/7 web-based helpline chat service, which helps survivors connect quickly to a trained advocate for abuse victims.

The BSA declined to disclose if it was investing money in the partnershi­p, or how much. It’s also unclear how much cash the organizati­on has on hand to enter into significan­t ventures at a time when its finances are in turmoil.

The Boy Scouts recently mortgaged Philmont Scout Ranch in New Mexico to help secure a line of credit, with the vast tract of land being used as collateral amid a crush of sexual abuse lawsuits.

Lawyers representi­ng hundreds of men who say they were abused as scouts are predicting that the Boy Scouts will soon file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, which potentiall­y would provide a centralize­d, court-supervised process for handling claims while enabling the organizati­on to remain in operation.

The organizati­on’s finances have been strained by abuse settlement­s for several years, and the situation worsened after New York, Arizona, New Jersey, and California enacted bills last year making it easier for victims of long-ago abuse to file claims. Teams of lawyers across the U.S. have been signing up clients by the hundreds to join lawsuits against the BSA.

One of those lawyers, Seattle-based Mike Pfau, questioned whether the 1in6 partnershi­p announceme­nt was a “publicity attempt” linked to an impending bankruptcy declaratio­n.

“Sadly, this is extraordin­arily late in the game, particular­ly given the Boy Scouts knew that perpetrato­rs had been infiltrati­ng their ranks for 100 years,” said Pfau, referring to files of suspected molesters that the BSA began compiling in the 1920s.

The BSA said the partnershi­p will allow 1in6 to expand the number of online support groups for men who were sexually abused from two to five each week.

The organizati­on said the new arrangemen­t was expected to continue regardless of how it deals with its current financial crisis.

“We sincerely apologize to anyone who was harmed in Scouting,” said Roger Mosby, the BSA’s president and CEO. “In addition to implementi­ng strong policies to prevent abuse, we are dedicated to supporting victims when and how they need it.”

The BSA says it will not comment on “speculatio­n and rumor,” but has not ruled out the possibilit­y of a bankruptcy filing.

One of Pfau’s clients, Virginia resident Ralph Morse, described the new partnershi­p as “a step in the right direction.”

“But it certainly doesn’t compensate for anything that’s happened to survivors,” he said.

Morse is suing the BSA for abuse he says he suffered in the 1960s at the hands of a scoutmaste­r in upstate New York.

For years, the Boy Scouts have offered to fund in-person counseling for any current or former scout.

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