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Ex-Scout official guilty in porn case

A former leader who headed a child sex abuse task force for the Boy Scouts pleads guilty to child porn charges.

By Associated Press
Published March 31, 2005

FORT WORTH, Texas - A former high-ranking Boy Scouts of America official who ran a task force that worked to protect children from sexual abuse pleaded guilty Wednesday to a child pornography charge.

Douglas Sovereign Smith Jr., 61, faces five to 20 years in prison.

Authorities found 520 images of child pornography, including video clips, on Smith's home computer, Assistant U.S. Attorney Bret Helmer said. The images included children engaging in sex acts.

Smith entered his plea to a federal charge of possession and distribution of child pornography without making a deal with prosecutors. During a hearing, he answered the judge's questions with "yes, sir" or "no, sir" but did not speak otherwise.

"He is contrite," said Jack Strickland, Smith's attorney. "He has accepted responsibility."

He will remain free until sentencing July 12.

Smith worked for the Boy Scouts for 39 years and led the Youth Protection Task Force that aimed to shield youth from sexual abuse. He did not work directly with children, and no child porn images were found on his work computer.

Law enforcement officials indicated the pictures did not show Boy Scouts, said Gregg Shields, national spokesman for the Boy Scouts. Smith received the images and e-mailed them to people he didn't know, Helmer said.

"Child porn collectors collect, and they're pretty prolific in their collections, but also they want to share what they have in hopes that they'll get more new images that they've never seen," Helmer said.

Smith's charge was a result of a child pornography investigation launched last year by U.S. and German authorities

Smith, who lives in Colleyville, near Fort Worth, took over the task force two years ago. The task force had been launched in the mid 1980s and soon became widely admired as a model program that provided a Web site, videos, literature and other resources to adults and boys in the Scouts, churches and schools.

The Boy Scouts have had other problems with their personnel, including volunteers. A California court case in the early 1990s revealed about 2,000 cases of sexual abuse of Scouts and other boys that Scouting officials documented privately for two decades without telling law enforcement officials.

[Last modified March 31, 2005, 01:29:09]


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