CHICAGO
— Federal prosecutors on Friday for the first time provided details of
sexual abuse allegations against J. Dennis Hastert, the former speaker
of the House, asserting that he molested at least four boys, as young as
14, when he worked as a high school wrestling coach decades ago.
Mr.
Hastert, 74, is not charged with abuse because of statutes of
limitation, prosecutors said, but he was accused last year of illegally
structuring bank withdrawals to pay one of his victims in an effort to
hide the abuse. He pleaded guilty in October to the banking violation,
and suffered a stroke in November while awaiting sentencing, set for
April 27.
In
a court filing late Friday, making suggestions for a judge who will
decide Mr. Hastert’s sentence, the prosecutors described specific,
graphic incidents that they say occurred when Mr. Hastert was a popular,
championship-winning coach in a small Illinois town in the 1960s, 1970s
and early 1980s. The “known acts,” the prosecutors said, consisted of
“intentional touching of minors’ groin area and genitals or oral sex
with a minor.”
“The
actions at the core of this case took place not on the defendant’s
national public stage but in his private one-on-one encounters in an
empty locker room and a motel room with minors that violated the special
trust between those young boys and their coach,” the prosecutors wrote.
A
lawyer for Mr. Hastert did not reply to a request for comment on the
prosecution claims. In a court filing earlier this week, Mr. Hastert,
who has stayed largely out of view since the charges emerged nearly a
year ago, requested probation and said he was “profoundly sorry” for
past conduct, though he did not specify those actions. On Friday, Mr.
Hastert also filed under a seal a response to the government’s
pre-sentence investigation. A hearing is set for next week on whether
his filing remains under seal.
According
to the prosecutors, Mr. Hastert gave one boy, a 14-year-old freshman
wrestler, a massage in the locker room, then performed an unspecified
sex act on him. Another boy, Stephen Reinboldt, who died in 1995, was
sexually abused by Mr. Hastert throughout high school in the late 1960s
and early 1970s, his sister and others told the prosecutors. A third
boy, who was 17 and remembered Mr. Hastert sitting in a recliner-type
chair with a direct view of the locker room shower stalls, said Mr.
Hastert had told him that one way to make his wrestling weight was to
get a massage, then performed a sexual act. And prosecutors said Mr.
Hastert had massaged another boy’s groin area after asking the boy to
stay in his hotel room during a wrestling camp.
That
incident became the center of the prosecution’s case. It was also the
reason that the allegations, which were never exposed during Mr.
Hastert’s eight years as the Republican speaker of the House, came to
light. The boy, known in court documents as Individual A, confronted Mr.
Hastert years later, around 2010, asked him why he had done what he
did, and sought a settlement — beginning the payments that would be Mr.
Hastert’s downfall.
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In
late 2014, as law enforcement authorities were investigating unusually
large withdrawals from Mr. Hastert’s bank account, Mr. Hastert said that
he was doing nothing unusual with his money — and that he simply did
not trust banks. Not long after, his lawyer told the investigators a
different story: The lawyer said that Mr. Hastert was paying large sums —
and promising as much as $3.5 million, the authorities say — to
Individual A because Individual A was extorting him for false
allegations of abuse.
After
a series of recorded phone calls, with Mr. Hastert’s cooperation, the
investigators concluded that there was no extortion, but that Mr.
Hastert was actually carrying out an agreed-to settlement for real
abuse.
Even
when Mr. Hastert told Individual A, as investigators listened in, that
he needed more time to come up with more money, Individual A “did not
make any threats” and even “expressed understanding,” the prosecutors
said. At another point, Individual A seemed agreeable, even empathetic,
suggesting that they settle on smaller amounts and keep the payments as a
“private, personal matter.” Individual A even pushed Mr. Hastert to
tell his wife about the payment agreement, and suggested that an outside
lawyer or confidante might be called in.
Of the abuse of Individual A, prosecutors said there was “no ambiguity.”
Prosecutors
said the motel incident had happened during a trip to a wrestling camp,
in which several other boys shared a room but where Individual A and
Mr. Hastert spent the night together. Individual A told prosecutors he
did not know why Mr. Hastert had singled him out.
The
court filing says Mr. Hastert had the boy strip naked and lay on a bed
under the guise of treating a groin pull, but it “became clear to
Individual A that defendant was not touching him in a therapeutic manner
to address a wrestling injury but was touching him in an inappropriate
sexual way.” The boy then ran across the room, confused and embarrassed,
before Mr. Hastert asked him to get onto Mr. Hastert’s back and to give
the coach a massage. “Defendant lay on the bed in only his underwear,
and Individual A gave him a back massage,” the prosecutors said. “They
then went to sleep in the same bed.”
When
Mr. Hastert was charged last year, the accusations rattled the town of
Yorkville, Ill., about an hour west of here. Mr. Hastert, a Republican
who served as House speaker from 1999 to 2007, was regarded as a hero by
many in Yorkville, where he had taught high school. But prosecutors
said Mr. Hastert’s life had been “marred by stunning hypocrisy.”
They
alluded to a fifth boy from Mr. Hastert’s days in Yorkville who
recalled Coach Hastert brushing against his genitals during a massage at
one point. But he said he was unsure whether the contact was
intentional though he found it “very weird.”
Of
the boys, prosecutors said: “He made them feel alone, ashamed, guilty
and devoid of dignity. While defendant achieved great success, reaping
all the benefits that went with it, these boys struggled, and all are
still struggling now with what defendant did to them.”
In
the court filing, prosecutors said they believed Mr. Hastert should
face up to six months in prison, as suggested under federal guidelines.
Prosecutors
took note of Mr. Hastert’s poor health, but said that Mr. Hastert could
continue getting medical care in prison if needed.
Steven
A. Block, an assistant United States Attorney, said that Mr. Hastert’s
sentencing judge should “balance the positive nature of defendant’s
public service with the need to avoid a public perception that the
powerful are treated differently than ordinary citizens when facing
sentencing for a serious crime.”
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