LDS Church is not target of Scout suit, officials say
State says filing aims at the S.L. council of group
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is not a target of a federal and state lawsuit against the Boy Scouts of America that seeks to recover $14 million in costs of the 2002 East Fork Fire, the Utah Attorney General's Office said Thursday.
The Scout troop whose members authorities say started the fire is sponsored by the LDS Church, but the lawsuit target is the Great Salt Lake Council of the national Scouting organization and will remain so, said Assistant Attorney General Mike Johnson.
The Great Salt Lake Council, which has told the attorney general's office it has more than enough insurance to cover the costs, is not church-sponsored, Johnson added.
The Justice Department and the Utah Attorney General on Tuesday jointly sued the Scouts over the fire, which began at a Boy Scout camp in the Uinta Mountains on June 28, 2002.
The U.S. Attorney for Utah Paul Warner said the federal government was seeking $13.3 million for the costs of fighting the fire and reclamation of the charred land. The state attorney general's office is asking for more than $606,000 to cover the state's firefighting expenses.
Warner said the complaints were filed after negotiations with the Scouts during the past two years failed to get anywhere.
On Thursday, Johnson said his office hoped the lawsuit got the Boy Scouts of America's attention, especially given past statements that the Scouts had adequate insurance to repay the costs. "Our primary hope is we can get to the bargaining table with them," he said. "Either we work it out or we have to proceed" with the lawsuit.
Utah law requires the people who start fires to pay for the cost of fighting them.
The Boy Scouts have not admitted responsibility for the fire. Rob Wallace, a BSA attorney, said Tuesday questions remain about how the fire started.
Authorities say Scouts started the fire inside or near the East Fork of the Bear River Boy Scout Camp, about 35 miles south of Evanston, Wyo. The fire blackened 14,200 acres of the Wasatch-Cache National Forest and caused an estimated $150,000 in damage within the Scout camp to 12 camping sites, a rifle range, climbing towers, some latrines and several thousand feet of water lines.
According to court documents, Scout employees at the East Fork of the Bear Scout Reservation summer camp had been informed of fire restrictions that had been in place for at least a week.
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