Ore. lawsuit claims Boy Scouts sex abuse  coverup                          

Mar 19, 2010 By WILLIAM McCALL
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - The Boy Scouts  of America has long kept an extensive 
archive of secret documents that chronicle  the sexual abuse of young boys 
by Scout leaders over the years.

The  "perversion files," a nickname the Boy Scouts are said to have used 
for the  documents, have rarely been seen by the public, but that could all 
change in the  coming weeks in an Oregon courtroom.

The lawyer for a man who was  molested in the 1980s by a Scout leader has 
obtained about 1,000 Boy Scouts sex  files and is expected to release some of 
them at a trial that began Wednesday.  The lawyer says the files show how 
the Boy Scouts have covered up abuse for  decades.

The trial is significant because the files could offer a rare  window into 
how the Boy Scouts have responded to sex abuse by Scout leaders. The  only 
other time the documents are believed to have been presented at a trial was  
in the 1980s in Virginia.
At the start of the Oregon trial, attorney Kelly  Clark recited the Boy 
Scout oath and the promise to obey Scout law to be  "trustworthy." Then he 
presented six boxes of documents that he said will show  "how the Boy Scouts of 
America broke that oath." He held up file folder after  file folder he said 
contained reports of abuse from around the country, telling  the jury the 
efforts to keep them secret may have actually set back efforts to  prevent 
child abuse nationally.....

Clark is seeking $14 million in  damages on behalf of a 37-year-old man who 
was sexually molested in the early  1980s in Portland by an assistant 
Scoutmaster, Timur Dykes. Clark said the  victim suffered mental health 
problems, 
bad grades in school, drug use, anxiety,  difficulty maintaining 
relationships and lost several jobs over the years  because of the abuse. Dykes 
was 
convicted three times between 1983 and 1994  
of sexually abusing boys, most of them Scouts....

The lawsuit also  named the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 
because the Mormons acted  as a charter organization, or sponsor, for the local 
Boy Scouts troop that  included the victim. But the church has settled its 
portion of the case. 
_http://apnews.myway.com/article/20100319/D9EHLRE00.html_ 
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