Teen Scout Sex

Teen Scout Sex




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Teen Scout Sex
Posted Tue, Oct 23, 2012 at 1:34 am CT | Updated Fri, Oct 26, 2012 at 2:36 am CT
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What do an elementary schoolteacher, a voodoo cultist, a shipping clerk and a prison guard have in common?
Each has a "perversion file" kept by the Boy Scouts of America in secret records that detail decades of sex abuse allegations.
Almost 300 cases involving men and Boy Scout troops throughout Illinois are among the 1,200 secret Boy Scout files released last week by order of the Oregon Supreme Court.
In Illinois, the files date to the 1960s and extend through the ensuing five decades. The Boy Scouts of America used these records to prevent blackballed Scout leaders from returning to the organization with other troops. The files are filled with correspondence between the leadership of the Scouts and troop leaders, interviews with Scouts and parents, as well as newspaper clippings about arrest reports and molestation trials.
Information in the files was used against the Boy Scouts in a 2010 lawsuit alleging six Scouts were molested by a Scout Master in the 1980s. The Oregon firm representing the six Scouts in the lawsuit fought for the release of the secret “perversion files” and ultimately won a $20 million judgment . The records were submitted to the court under seal as evidence in the lawsuit, but Oregon’s high court ordered the files to be opened to the public.
These records were so secret even some Boy Scout leaders didn't know they existed. The files have been posted to the web in recent days. The names of volunteers expelled by the Boy Scouts are included in many but not all of the files, and victims’ names have been redacted.
PATCH DATABASE: Search for your town and troop in the Illinois "perversion files"
Wayne Perry, the national president of the Boy Scouts of America, released the following statement: “There have been instances where people misused their positions in Scouting to abuse children, and in certain cases, our response to these incidents and our efforts to protect youth were plainly insufficient, inappropriate, or wrong. Where those involved in Scouting failed to protect, or worse, inflicted harm on children, we extend our deepest and sincere apologies to victims and their families.”
Who were those victims and families?
In Joliet, the boys of Troop 239 fell victim to a prison guard during a camping trip. In Bensenville, the boys in Troop 444 were forced to strip naked for their troop leader so he could rub ice cubes on their bodies. In Oak Lawn, the Scout leader for Troop 1600 forced his boys to endure oral sex. A boy from Troop 294 in Chicago was sexually assaulted three times during a single trip to a Naperville campground.
These are just four cases in the hundreds of Illinois files involving troops in Batavia, Chicago Heights, Downers Grove, Forest Park, Frankfort, Joliet, Naperville, Oak Lawn, Plainfield, St. Charles, Wheaton and dozens of other Illinois communities.
While expelling suspected sexual predators from its ranks, the Boy Scouts also kept the abuse under wraps and failed to report some Scout leaders to the authorities. Several letters in the files reveal Scout leadership's expressed intent to keep the reported sex crimes "confidential."
No longer confidential, here is a glimpse into the Boy Scouts of America "perversion files." Patch will continue to report on all Chicago-area files as they are opened to the public.
JOLIET, CUB PACK 239 AND SCOUT TROOP 239
In 1970, Patrick Farrell was a 40-year-old state prison guard, a Cubmaster with Cub Pack 239 and assistant Scoutmaster with Troop 239. A year into his duty with the Scouts, allegations arose that he molested boys in his care. But three months after Farrell quit the Scouts, the BSA was reluctant to blacklist him, according to his file.
Earl L. Krall, a director with the Boy Scouts, sent a Jan. 28, 1971, letter to Rainbow Council Scout Executive Alfred I. Gardner asking for “some concrete evidence of his antisocial behavior.” Two months later, Krall got his concrete evidence in the form of a newspaper clipping recounting Farrell’s conviction for “'taking indecent liberties' with two boys at a LaSalle County campground.”
The newspaper clip in the file states that Farrell was sentenced to two years in prison.
“This is precisely the type of information we need for our file,” Boy Scouts Registration and Membership Supervisor Paul Ernst wrote of the clipping in April 1971, noting that such information “should help us in the future, should this individual ever again attempt to register in the scouting program."
In Bensenville, the boys of Bensenville Moose Lodge Boy Scout Troop 444 were told they needed to get naked as part of their initiation into the Scouts. In this file, signed testimony from several Scouts details how an Elmhurst man, in his 20s at the time told the boys to lie down naked while the Scout leader rubbed ice on them.
"Initiation consisted of me taking down my pants and off my shirt in front of the other boys, who told me he also did it to them," one 14-year-old boy wrote in June 1975. "This was about 9 or 10 months ago at Whitewater. He used a little cube of ice and rubbed it on my belly, thy (thigh) and once in a while on my penis while I was lying down."
The assistant Scoutmaster claimed in a letter to Boy Scout leadership that the troop leader admitted to assaulting 13 boys in the troop after parents came forward in June of 1975.
A letter to the accused from Scout Executive Walter Johnson, dated June 24, 1975, states: "After careful review, we have decided that your registration with the Boy Scouts of America should be suspended. … Please also understand that this decision and the reasons for it will be maintained as confidential."
There is nothing in the file to indicate whether this abuse was reported to police or if the Scout leader in question was ever arrested and prosecuted.
In Oak Lawn, Thomas Hacker crafted the public persona of a wholesome family man and schoolteacher. But Hacker was able to hide his secret past of abusing young boys from his employers, friends, neighbors—and the Boy Scouts of America. The earliest record in Hacker’s “perversion” file is a “confidential record sheet” dated June 8, 1970, in which a Boy Scout official recommends that Hacker be placed in the “ineligible volunteer file” after he pleaded guilty to sexually assaulting a 14-year-old boy in Indianapolis.
Hacker's sentence of one to five years in an Indiana prison was suspended on the stipulation he receive psychiatric treatment. Hacker received permission to relocate to Chicago’s northwest suburbs, where a year later he pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor count of indecent liberties with a child. But Hacker does not appear in the Boy Scout perversion files again until 17 years later—after he was charged with six counts of aggravated sexual assault for molesting three Boy Scouts, ages 11 and 13, from St. Louis de Montfort Church in Oak Lawn in 1988, according to published news reports in his confidential file.
Eventually, he would be charged with 25 counts of having oral sex with underage Boy Scouts. At his 1989 trial, Cook County prosecutors said Hacker was able to elude the Boy Scouts of America’s internal controls for tracking pedophiles by changing his middle initial. He was convicted and is currently is serving a 30-year prison sentence. He is listed as a “sexually dangerous person” in the Illinois Sex Offender Registry.
The first inkling that Boy Scout Troop 294 from Douglas Park had a leadership problem surfaced at a “Camporee” in May 1977, when troop leaders were said to be playing cards and imbibing in alcoholic beverages while supervising the youths. A month later, a pair of twenty-something Scoutmasters would be arrested and charged with several counts of sexually assaulting an 11-year-old boy at a Boy Scout camp near Naperville.
According to news reports of the day, Charles Fugate, of Chicago, whose hobby was “voodoo cultism,” lured the 11-year-old to the woods under the pretense of earning a merit badge and then sexually assaulted him. The boy was assaulted two more times on the camping trip, including another attack in a tent as another Boy Scout slept.
Chicago police arrested Fugate after the 11-year-old boy’s father confronted the 22-year-old assistant Scoutmaster at his home. He was released without charges when police learned the assault occurred in DuPage County. Fugate went on the lam until he surrendered himself to authorities a few days later.
Patrick Allen Weglarz was charged with concealing a fugitive — Fugate — as well as two counts of contributing to the sexual delinquency of a minor. Weglarz was alleged to have been present during two of the attacks on the 11-year-old boy. Astonishingly, both Scout leaders were allowed to take a group of Boy Scouts camping the weekend after their arrests, where another assault occurred.
A DuPage County record of criminal indictment said that Welgarz “placed his mouth on the sex organ” of the victim. Welgarz, 26 at the time, and his 22-year-old assistant, were charged with taking indecent liberties with a 12-year-old Boy Scout.
EXPELLED SCOUT LEADERS: Search for your town in the Illinois "perversion files"

I was thrilled to be a Boy Scout, then for months I was sexually abused by my scoutmaster
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James Kretschmer
 | Opinion contributor
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Editor's note: On Monday, Aug. 5, lawyers filed a lawsuit against the Boy Scouts of America on behalf of a client alleging sexual abuse by his former scoutmaster . The lawyers also represent nearly 800 other clients alleging abuse while scouting. The author of this column is one of those other nearly 800 clients. This column was originally published June 10, 2019.
I was about 6 years old when I joined the Cub Scouts in 1969. I adored going to the Cub Scout meetings — it felt important and it was exciting learning new skills and listening to stories of how to be a better person. Lessons centered around patriotism, service, sportsmanship and spirituality.
Like most young boys, my favorite time was attending the campouts and being in nature. We got to canoe, fish, shoot bows, tie knots, start fires and so many other things. I always strove to be the first one to earn a new badge or acknowledgement and, when I finally grew old enough to become a Boy Scout , my sense of wonder and excitement for the organization only deepened. I was learning how to be a better citizen, the best person I could possibly be. The world felt limitless.
My father was stationed at Fairchild Air Force Base, and so we lived near Spokane, Washington. The summer I was 12, I finally got the chance to go to a weeklong Boy Scout camp. At one point, the scoutmaster presented a compass challenge game. Written on a piece of paper for each of us was a series of very specific instructions we needed to follow in order to find our treasure. I wanted to be the best Scout in the troop, so it was important to me that I finish the challenge first. I studied the instructions and followed my compass to perfection. It led me to my scoutmaster's tent.
He smiled and nodded when he saw me arrive first: There I was — the winner, his winner — the best Boy Scout around. Winning that game unfortunately changed my life forever. 
That night, the sky was black and the stars sparkled. I was sleeping soundly, alone in my little tent, but awoke to a strange feeling of hot breath on my neck and someone moving his hands all over my body, on the front of my pajamas. Although it was dark I knew it was my scoutmaster; I recognized his voice in his breathing.
I felt my throat tighten and a wave of panic overtook my body. I was still, not knowing what to do. Do I call out and scream? Do I jump up and run? To where? Maybe, I thought, if I lay still and close my eyes and cry he will just go away.
I tensed up and became angry with myself for winning the earlier challenge. If I had come in second place, maybe he wouldn’t be here right now. This was my fault for wanting to come in first place so badly. This was my punishment and I deserved it. Otherwise why would it be happening to me? 
All I could do was stay frozen and act as though I was asleep and then maybe he would stop and I could pretend like it never happened in the morning. Tomorrow I would wake up and say to myself, "This was just a bad dream," and then it would all go away.
This is what it is like to be a child overtaken by an abusive adult.
Unfortunately, this was just the start of the trauma I suffered at the hands of this scoutmaster. The abuse continued for more than three months. Finally, I told my parents what was happening during my scouting trips. They listened, shifting in their seats. At first, their eyes stared at me in disbelief, but then they fell to the floor as I described those nights with my scoutmaster in the tent.
My father said it was time for me to quit scouting. My stepmother suggested that we should keep this information to ourselves and never speak of it again. They agreed that we should move on with our lives. And, like the first night in the tent, I realized that if we all just closed our eyes, looked away and pretended like nothing was happening, maybe it would all go away and in the morning we would call it a bad dream.
But as I learned over the decades, this trauma never goes away. Children like me need counseling. More important, society needs to go after pedophiles and the organizations harboring them, to keep more children from being harmed.
As an adult, my relationships suffered. I joined the Marine Corps and barely kept in contact with my family. I called home maybe a couple of times a year; I sent the occasional letter, mostly around the holidays. I also married and divorced multiple times. At the time, I told myself this was because I was so occupied with being a Marine, but I realize now that I was closing myself off and keeping other people away from me — especially the ones who wanted my love. I had no love or trust to give. How could I learn to love somebody else when I didn’t really love myself?
Around my 40th birthday, I really started feeling the loneliness and despair that comes from building walls around yourself.
As crazy as it sounds, it never occurred to me that it wasn't my own fault. This is what it is like to be a child: You look to blame yourself and protect the adults around you. It took me many decades to come to terms with the fact that the man in my tent — the pedophile breathing on my neck — is the guilty one. Shame on him for hurting that little boy.
This cannot be tolerated ever again. I urge everyone who has been a victim to become a survivor, just as I have. Speak up and tell people what happened. The trauma I suffered at the hands of a scoutmaster will always be with me. But only by coming forward can reform be possible. 
James Kretschmer lives in Houston. He connected with other alleged victims of sexual abuse through abusedinscouting.com .

'Our little secret.' Eagle Scout says writing graphic book about sex abuse helped him heal
'Our little secret.' Eagle Scout says writing graphic book about sex abuse helped him heal
Memory of horrific sexual abuse at a Southwest Florida Boy Scout camp
Aaron Averhart describes the memory of horrific sexual abuse during and after his years at Camp Miles, a Boy Scout camp in Southwest Florida.
H. Leo Kim and Alex Driehaus, Fort Myers News-Press
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“I was so excited, I could barely contain myself. The year was 1986, I had turned twelve a few short months before, and I was ready for my greatest adventure so far, the Camp Franklin Miles Boy Scout Summer Camp Program.” 
So Aaron Averhart writes in his just-completed book, Finding Foxboro, which he hopes to publish, about coping with sexual abuse during and after his years at Camp Miles, a Boy Scouts camp in Southwest Florida. 
Averhart was 15 when he reported in 1989 being molested by his scout leader William Sheehan over four years at camp. 
Only now, he says, at age 45, is he able to give a name to what happened to him and talk about it openly; a process helped by discovering other men in Foxborough, Massachusetts where Sheehan came from. Since 1998, almost 50 from that town have alleged the scout leader raped and molested them, too. 
Averhart found their stories on the internet in 2016 and reached out, overwhelmed by the discovery he was not alone.
It took him two years to pour his Camp Miles experiences onto the book’s pages, at times in graphic detail, as if by conjuring his abuser he might exorcise Sheehan’s power over him once and for all. 
He hopes the book will help others break their silence and begin to heal, he says.
Here are excerpts from Finding Foxboro :
“Everyone called him ‘Uncle Bill,” Averhart writes, “and he seemed loved and respected by scouts and leaders alike. He soon took a liking to me and brought me under his wing. He talked to me about staying and becoming a staff member for the remainder of the summer, which I was greatly interested in. Although I was officially too young he informed me, … he could pull some strings to make it happen. When I said yes in excitement, he assured me he would make it so.”
Many people have asked Averhart why he returned to Camp Miles after that first summer, he says, and why he told no one. The delayed revelations of thousands of former Boy Scouts across the country suggest his silence is not unique. 
“I endured these things in silence, knowing they were wrong, but not knowing what to do,” Averhart writes. “If I exposed him, everyone would discover what happened, that I had caused it and that I enjoyed it. I took what he told me to heart, vowing inside to keep it closely guarded."
Men typically wait 20 years or more before disclosing they were sexually abused, according to social science research, and boys are less likely than girls to discuss their experiences.
 “ … I felt as if my shame and guilt were plain for all to see. Was I gay? I was confused about everything. “… That my shameful secrets should remain undiscovered from my friends and classmates was my greatest preoccupation.” 
As for telling his parents, who knew he was hurting but not why:
“I was still too scared and ashamed to tell them the truth. I was frightened that no one would believe me if I came forward and that was a chance I was unwilling to take,” he writes.
Nor was it a black and white experience. Averhart loved scouting. Like his older brother, he wanted to become an Eagle Scout, and eventually did.
“My happiness was juxtaposed by my profound sorrow,” he writes of the years at Camp Miles. "The variety of educational experiences was intoxicating and exotic, offering things I could never accomplish at home, I loved getting to work the ropes course and having a cabin by the older boys. It was exciting to be away from home, living in the literal wilderness … .”
Over time, Sheehan changed, becoming more violent, he writes. 
"If it was late at night or early in the morning, he would not hesitate to rape me. In order to keep me quiet, or perhaps because he got a thrill from controlling people, he began to shove my face in the pillow. Sometimes while being choked in my cot, I would only be partially unconscious and other times completely … .I was starting to fear for my safety. 
"The thought of death sounded peaceful
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