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New Orleans Boy Scout Troop 137 was a troop that operated as a front for a child sex abuse ring in the mid-1970s. • Floyd David Slusher, a former scoutmaster in the
Boulder, Colorado area, was convicted in 1977 of one count of sexually assaulting a child and received an indeterminate sentence of "one day to life." Paroled in 1984, Slusher was arrested in 1989 and convicted of three felony counts of child exploitation in 1990. After being released on parole in 2018, he was arrested again on August 9, 2018, for violating his parole. • Joe Gibson, a former scoutmaster in the
St. Petersburg, Florida area, was convicted in June 1982. • Lee Pontius, former Daytona Beach, Florida area scoutmaster and recipient of the Silver Beaver award, was convicted multiple times of molesting Boy Scouts, including on a November 1982 camping trip. • Martin Turner, a leader in
Texas, pleaded guilty in 2008 to two counts of indecency with a child by contact and one count of attempted indecency with a child by contact. He had abused two children in cases going back up to 40 years. • Al Steven Stein, a former boy scout leader in
Santa Barbara, California, was convicted in 2009 for felony child molestation and misdemeanor possession of
child pornography. Stein and the Boy Scouts of America were sued for negligent training, knowledge of Stein's propensities, and failure to report.
Roe v. Boy Scouts of America, Stein et al., settled in 2015 with the BSA. J. Geck awarded judgment against Stein. BSA has since changed some of its policies as requested by plaintiffs. • David McDonald Rankin, a former scoutmaster in
College Park, Maryland, was convicted for abusing scouts between 1984 and 1987. • Gary Lee Gephart, a former Cub Scout leader in
Oceanside, California, was convicted in 1996. • Howard W. Curtis, a
Haverhill, Massachusetts leader, pleaded guilty in May 2008 for acts occurring in the 1980s. • James Hiatt, a former Boy Scout leader in Texas, was convicted in May 2008 for abuse that took place from about 2003 to 2005. • Camp employee Brad Stowell confessed to molesting 24 boys from 1989 until his arrest in 1997. Authorities working at the camp were warned numerous times during his employment. In 1988, at age 16, Stowell had admitted to police to the prior molestation of a six-year-old: scout officials were also aware of this fact. • Gary Wade Brown, a former Boy Scout leader in
Orem, Utah, in 2009 pleaded guilty to four counts of sexual abuse of a child and sexual exploitation of a minor, second-degree felonies, and one count of lewdness involving a child, a class A misdemeanor. Seven additional charges were dismissed as part of a plea agreement. The abuse involved a 12-year-old boy and took place between 2005 and 2006. • Richard Turley, a former volunteer in
California, was convicted of kidnapping and sexually assaulting an 11-year-old Canadian scout. After 18 months, he was released from a mental institution and returned to volunteer work at a California scout camp. In 1979, he assaulted three of those scouts. Upon learning this, the Boy Scouts of America simply told Turley to return to Canada, not warning
Scouts Canada of Turley's criminal behavior. In 1996, Turley went on to assault four boys, three of whom were scouts, in
Victoria, British Columbia. He was sentenced to seven years in prison. • James Molyneaux, 2004, a former Boy Scout leader and 6th-grade English school teacher in
Portville, New York, was arrested in connection to an abuse case of a 13-year-old in July 1997 at a campground owned by the Molyneaux family that was used for scouting activities and another case of an 11-year-old at his home in Portville, New York in September 2000. Although Molyneaux denied the charges, at trial he was found guilty of two counts of first-degree sodomy, two counts of second-degree sodomy, and one count of first-degree sexual abuse. Molyneaux was sentenced to a maximum of 57 years in the Clinton Correctional Facility. An appeal was not considered. • Garth David Snively, 1994, a former Boy Scout leader, was convicted of two counts of first-degree child molestation and sentenced to 11 years after his 1993 arrest for molesting at least 20 Boy Scout members of various ages over several years, as well as while a mentor in the Big Brothers program. His victims testified in court that while at his home in Everett, Washington, Snively would apply baby powder to and fondle their genitals, make them wear diapers and, in addition, make them fondle, powder and diaper him. A Level III sex offender, Snively was released and now resides in Centralia, Washington. • Jerrold Schwartz, a volunteer with Troop 666 in
Manhattan from 1978 to 2001, was charged with more than 30 counts of sodomy alleged to have occurred in 1996 and 1997, while Schwartz was serving as the troop's scoutmaster. The victim claimed the abuse began in 1994, when he was 13 years old, but
New York's
statute of limitations had already expired on acts before 1996. At Schwartz's arraignment, the prosecution produced an audio recording of Schwartz admitting to and apologizing for the abuse in a conversation with his victim. Attorneys for the victim, who filed a $50 million suit against Schwartz and the Boy Scouts of America, stated that four other victims claimed that they were also abused by Schwartz in the 1980s and 1990s, but those acts were barred from prosecution by the statute of limitations. A previous abuse complaint had been lodged with the local Boy Scout council against Schwartz in 1994, but he was permitted to continue as scoutmaster after police determined the accusation to be unfounded. Schwartz was released on parole from Oneida Correctional Facility in January 2008, after serving five years and four months for his crimes. • Cubmaster Franklin Keith "Frank" Tercey and Den Leader Coach Judith Tercey organized orgies involving underage scouts and local girls in their home in Moccasin Street,
San Diego, California. They were arrested in December 1975, and resigned from the organization later that month. Frank was convicted and sentenced to five years probabation, with six months incarceration. Judith was not prosecuted. ==Bankruptcy==