Trail of Betrayal Feature

  1. Scouts improve security, but gaps remain

    Scouts improve security, but gaps remain

    Though the Boy Scouts of America has improved its youth-protection system, at least 13 sexual predators have slipped through security gaps during the last decade.
     

Document Trail

  1. Document trail: William A. Hoefling

    Document trail: William A. Hoefling

    Look at the confidential documents in Hoefling's file. Hoefling was a troop leader near Detroit.

  2. Document trail: Scott A. Herrick

    Document trail: Scott A. Herrick

    Click to view confidential documents in his file. Herrick is currently serving a 95-year sentence.

  3. Document trail: Brian K. Liska

    Document trail: Brian K. Liska

    Examine for yourself: the documents in his confidential files. To this day, Liska said he doesn't know if national Scouting officials approved his application because they were unaware of his past conviction -- or if they knew about it but decided he was fit nonetheless.

Related Stories

  1. Expert: Exposing abuses will help kids

    Expert: Exposing abuses will help kids

    Patrick Boyle was the first to publish reports of the Boy Scouts of America's confidential "ineligible volunteers" files, in 1994.  Boyle says the attention these files are now getting will do good for kids.
     
     
  2. Boy Scouts' president official statement

    Boy Scouts' president official statement

    An official response to our investigation from Boy Scouts of America national president Wayne Perry.
     
     

Full Series

  1. Trail of Betrayal: Inside the files

    Trail of Betrayal: Inside the files

    Our exclusive look into the Boy Scouts confidential files – 30,000 documents, 10 journalists, 6 months of research. Our investigation reveals scouts’ pleas for help being ignored while some scout leaders were promised confidentiality.

  2. Part 2 - Systemic Failures

    Part 2 - Systemic Failures

    The Scripps National Investigative Team tracks systemic problems within the Boy Scouts of America, including poor background checks, and suspected molesters moving from troop to troop. More of our exclusive interview with the leader of BSA.

  3. Part 3 - Scouts Today

    Part 3 - Scouts Today

    After revelations of abuse within the Boy Scouts of America, how has the organization and its policies changed, and are changes working? You’ll hear different sides. Plus, a one-time abused scout has to decide whether scouting is right for his sons.

Extended Interviews

  1. Exclusive video interview: Patrick Boyle

    Exclusive video interview: Patrick Boyle

    Boyle wrote “Scout’s Honor,” a 1994 book examining child sexual abuse in the Boy Scouts of America.

  2. Video interview: Tom Stewart

    Video interview: Tom Stewart

     

    Former scout Tom Stewart describes years of abuse he suffered as a child, and how he views scouting today as a father.