In the wake of reports about alleged sexual abuse within the storied organization, the Boy Scouts of America emailed a newsletter to parents Wednesday night entirely focused on "Youth Protection."
Earlier this week, it was revealed that there have allegedly been more than 12,254 victims of sexual abuse within the Boy Scouts over the course of seven decades.
(MORE: More than 12,000 Boy Scout members were victims of sexual abuse, expert says)Since that number was publicized during a Tuesday news conference held by a lawyer representing victims, Boy Scouts officials have been pointing to safeguards the organization has in place to protect children from predators -- and this newsletter is the latest example of that outreach.
In the top article of the newsletter, Mike Surbaugh, BSA's chief scout executive, acknowledged "painfully, there have been incidents of abuse that occurred in our program, and we sincerely apologize that some despicable individuals used their positions in Scouting to harm children."
(MORE: Boy Scout officials say they don't track what happens to ousted troop leaders after abuse claims)The letter goes on to describe the creation of the Boy Scout's volunteer database, which was created "long before there were smart phones, email, fax machines, the internet, criminal databases or other modern methods available to identify or track predators."
Sarbaugh noted, as the BSA stated repeatedly in the past week, that files kept on allegedly offending volunteers were made in an effort to stop them from rejoining the organization after being removed at the first report of misdoings.
"I want to be clear – the Boy Scouts of America has never knowingly allowed those who have committed inappropriate acts with children to remain in our program," Sarbaugh wrote.
Other articles highlighted in the newsletter include one about how child safety is the first chapter in scouting handbooks and another about the BSA's call to establish a national volunteer screening database as a way to protect "children go beyond our organization."
(MORE: Congress looking into alleged sexual abuse in USA Swimming and other Olympic sports)The BSA has been calling for a national volunteer database -- modeled in a way similar to the national sex offender registry -- at least for several months.
In December, Sarbaugh sent a letter to Congress about protecting children from abuse where he pushed for the establishment of a volunteer registration and clearing screening process that would help "to reduce the risk that potential abusers can gain access to children by moving across state lines or to other youth serving organizations."