Defense attorneys and prosecutors scrapped Friday over admitting controversial evidence in the child molestation case of an ex-Minneapolis park police chief accused of abusing a boy for three years.
Friday's hearing was the first after a lengthy gap in the case of William Allan Jacobs, 68, of Deephaven, nearly two years after he was charged with two counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct and 15 felony counts of possessing child pornography. He is scheduled to stand trial in March.
According to the charges, a 15-year-old boy reported to authorities in January 2010 that Jacobs had been molesting him since 2007. Jacobs was the head of the park police from 1987 to 2001 and also worked at Blake and Breck private schools.
During Friday's hearing, prosecutors said that another alleged victim had come forward since news emerged of the Penn State University scandal involving a former football coach who allegedly molested children.
Jacobs' defense attorneys Joe Friedberg and Paul Engh argued that Judge Daniel Moreno should review counseling records of the teenager to determine whether they are admissible as defense evidence.
Engh said Friday that the boy told investigators he had been in counseling for three years before making the allegations. He contended that the records should be made available as evidence because the boy never told doctors or counselors of the abuse, even though he was probably asked about it. The evidence is important, Engh said, because it affects his credibility.
"He's routinely asked, we assume, 'Are things going well? How are you? Are you being hurt?' " Engh said. "For three years he has absolutely no concern about Bill Jacobs or what is allegedly happening to him."
Assistant Hennepin County Attorney Judy Johnston called it a "ruse" to gain private information about the boy, who will testify against Jacobs.