Thomas J. Menghi Jr. sits on the front porch of his home during an interview in Monroe, N.C. on Wednesday.(Photo: Chuck Burton, AP)
MONROE, N.C. -- Former scoutmaster Thomas J. Menghi Jr. says he
was usually drunk when he molested numerous Boy Scouts during the early
1970s.
He was in his late 20s, living in a Fayetteville motel and
working as Tupperware deliveryman. He invited boys from Troop 786 as
young as 11 years old to ride with him along his route, requesting that
they spend the night in his room so they could get an early start.
"Yes,
I abused kids," Menghi, now 69, said in an interview Wednesday with The
Associated Press. "But just how many and other details I can't
remember. It was a long time ago and I was in a fog."
Menghi's
file is just one among 14,500 pages of "perversion files" compiled by
the Boy Scouts of America between 1959 to 1985 and made public last week
by court order.
His file details the way local Scout officials
investigated the allegations and removed him from the organization, but
failed to report crimes to law enforcement. In Menghi's case, even some
parents were not told that their children could have been victims.
The
AP tracked down the former scoutmaster in Monroe, a bedroom community
near Charlotte where he lives on a quiet street around the corner from
an elementary school. Had he ever been convicted and placed on the
state's sex offender registry, a 2006 law would bar him from living
within 1,000 feet of a school or daycare.
The house Menghi shares
with his adult son was decked out for Halloween with fake tombstones, a
big white ghost and a black-clad witch. The front door was covered with
bloody handprints and a warning: "Keep Out!"
The former
scoutmaster said he was a Boy Scout growing up and wanted to give back
to the organization. He was 25 years old and single when he decided to
volunteer. As he spent more time alone with the boys, his "dark side"
took over.
"What I did was wrong," Menghi said, sitting in a
rocking chair on his front porch. "I'm not making any excuses. But I was
a heavy drinker and did pot every once in a while."
His file
shows local scout officials were contacted in early 1974 by the father
of two brothers, ages 11 and 12. They had been overhead by an older
sister talking about what happened in Menghi's motel room. Other parents
also reported that their sons had been molested.
After
interviewing the parents and some of the scouts, Kia Kim District Scout
Executive George F. Hardwick Sr. drafted a memo stating that he believed
there was evidence Menghi had abused as many as 10 boys. He and other
officials met with Menghi the next day to confront him with the abuse
claims and barred him from scouting.
"The biggest thing was to get
the guy out of scouting and away from our boys," said George Heib, 86, a
retired U.S. Army officer who was at the meeting. "Putting the boys
through all the trauma of having to go to court and trial and all the
stuff like that, I didn't think it was worth it. Of course, the
publicity wouldn't be good for scouting, either."
The local
scouting officials wrote to national headquarters seeking guidance on
whether to encourage the parents of the abused boys to file a criminal
complaint. Paul I. Ernst, the BSA executive then in charge of the
organization's secret files, directed them not to.
"Normally, we
do not suggest that any legal action be instituted by parents," Ernst
wrote. "If they desire to do this on their own they certainly should
bring about any action they feel necessary. Certainly in this case,
there is every indication that legal action is justified."
A woman who answered the phone at a listing for Ernst, who now lives in Texas, directed questions to BSA and hung up.
There's
no statute of limitations on prosecuting child sexual abuse in North
Carolina. William West, the district attorney for the county that
includes Fayetteville, said in a statement that his office and the
sheriff's department would review Menghi's case.
Now 83 and still
active in scouting, Hardwick said Thursday he never contacted some of
the parents and never considered going to the police himself.
"As
the district executive, I followed the procedure I was supposed to
follow," said Hardwick, a retired U.S. Army officer. "I handled it
according to my instructions. Today, there's no question the guy would
be put in handcuffs. But that wasn't the way it was done in those days.
Nobody even wanted to talk about it."
The current leadership of
the Boy Scouts of America, which has hired a public relations firm to
handle media questions on abuse, declined to comment on Menghi's case.
Menghi said the only reason he stopped molesting boys was because he got caught.
"That's when it really hit me. I knew I needed to quit and get help. Then I blacked it out," he said.
He
said he recognized the emotional and physical pain he caused and would
like to apologize to his victims. He said that might not be enough now
that his secret file can be read by anyone with an Internet connection.
"I don't know what I'm going to do now," he said. "I just don't want to wake up in jail."
Associated Press