The 12-year-old is part of her troop in Springfield, Virginia, right outside Washington, and told CNN it gives her a sense of adventure and is a fun way to be around her friends. So when she heard about the BSA declaring bankruptcy as the organization faces hundreds of sexual abuse lawsuits, the news scared her. "I didn't realize this stuff was going on in BSA," Hiroko said Wednesday. Her father, Luke Rose, spoke with her about the reasons for the bankruptcy and what it means for the organization. "We talked about how not-so-nice things were going on in the 1980s," Hiroko said. Like Hiroko, there are thousands of children across the country who are part of local Boy Scout troops. They are not affected by the BSA bankruptcy because they're legally separate and distinct organizations, according to Effie Delimarkos, a BSA spokeswoman. It seems the bankruptcy is also not deterring parents from making their children members of the organization because of rule changes that ensure the mistakes of the 1970s and '80s won't be repeated."If anything, it made people want to work harder and make it work for the kids," Rose said.

Adults could be alone with scouts in the '70s and '80s

Rose told CNN his troop in Virginia actually had a meeting the night of the bankruptcy announcement. "We gathered the adults together and discussed it, then we gathered the scouts," he said. "It was kind of like a family saying, 'We can get through this.'"Rose himself was a member of the scouts in the early 1980s, when some former scouts allege the abuse took place, but said he does not remember much.Greg Euston of Marietta, Georgia, told CNN he was a scout during the late '70s and early '80s and remembered campouts where more than one adult was present."But there were also campouts where there was one scoutmaster with six or 10 kids," said Euston, whose two sons were also scouts. "It seemed very ordinary in the '70s. Things were different. It wasn't until now that you start to go back and think, 'Well, the opportunities were certainly there.'" Juan Carlos RiveraJuan Carlos Rivera says he was one of the victims. He says he was sexually abused by an older fellow scout around 1980 or 1981 in Florida, during a painting activity. Rivera says he has not received counseling or therapy as a result of the events, and he plans to file an abuse claim against the BSA.Rivera told CNN sister network HLN on Tuesday he still thinks the BSA is a good organization, but he wants to see it broken apart and "start from the ground up.""Right before the incident happened, I loved it," Rivera said. "I went ahead and went all the way to a Life Scout until this incident happened. I left because it was just shocking." Four law firms have now banded together to support plaintiffs such as Rivera. They're known as abusedinscouting.com and more than 2,000 men have come forward with allegations in the past 11 months, said Tim Kosnoff, an attorney who's represented some of the alleged victims. "The Boy Scouts of America should be liquidated, their assets sold off," Kosnoff said. "I think the world can survive without the Boy Scouts of America."

Today's rules prohibit one-on-one time with children

Both Euston and Rose told CNN they were involved in their children's troops. Euston's sons were scouts from about 2006 to 2018, he said. Rose has four children — including Hiroko — between ages 10 and 15 who are scouts. Both men said today's Boy Scouts organization has stricter rules on interacting with children. The policy these days is known as "Read More – Source

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