Former Boy Scout leader, Boy Scout council, church are named in abuse lawsuit

MINNESOTA
Post-Bulletin

Kay Fate, kfate@postbulletin.com

A former Rochester scoutmaster is at the heart of a civil lawsuit that is expected to be filed Monday in Olmsted County District Court, which is believed to be the first civil lawsuit involving the Boy Scouts of America using a new Minnesota law.

Two men claim several adults failed to protect them from sexual abuse at the hands of their Boy Scout leader, Richard C. Hokanson, who sexually assaulted them during the 1970s while they were in Rochester Troop 210. The new Minnesota law eliminates the civil statute of limitations for children who are sexually abused.

A news conference is scheduled at 11 a.m. Monday outside the Olmsted County Government Center to discuss the details, including damages sought, said the men’s attorney, Jeff Anderson, who has represented thousands of victims of sexual abuse in high-profile cases against the Catholic Church and Penn State University, and who will lead Monday’s news conference.

The new law also allows a three-year window for past victims of childhood sexual assault to file lawsuits against the accused abuser and/or an institution that may have allowed the abuse. St. Pius X Catholic Church, the troop’s sponsor; the Boy Scouts of America; and Gamehaven Council Inc., of southeast Minnesota, are also named as defendants.

Anderson said he will introduce one of the alleged victims, who will offer a prepared statement.

According to a news release from Anderson’s office, the conference will also discuss “the failings of multiple adults involved at St. Pius X, the troop and the Boy Scouts, who received information in the early 1970s pertaining to Hokanson’s sexual abuse, and failed to act to protect the children…”

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