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PREDATOR IN THE CLUBHOUSE:THE BOSTON RED SOX CHILD MOLESTATION STORY

PREDATOR IN THE CLUBHOUSE:THE BOSTON RED SOX CHILD MOLESTATION STORY
By Gary G. Tavares

GENRE: Period Piece, Sports Drama
LOGLINE:

In 2001, Will, now a survivor in his thirties, is determined to break the silence, confront the truth, and seek justice after he and many other young black boys were molested in 1981 by a white Red Sox clubhouse manager at Florida's Chain of Lakes Ballpark, where the team held spring training and the boys worked as Clubbies.

SYNOPSIS:

Predator in the Clubhouse: The Boston Red Sox Child Molestation Story is a dramatic account of child sexual abuse and institutional exploitation, set at a Boston Red Sox spring training facility in Winterhaven, Florida, in the 1980s, and framed by the recollections of Will, an adult survivor, now 35, who tells his story in 2001 to Doctor Ross during a therapy session. It is based on actual events. The story follows a pattern in which a trusted adult, Fitzy, with access, authority, and community credibility, gradually gains influence over vulnerable young boys and their families. Through promises of opportunity, mentorship, financial help, gifts, and proximity to professional sports and athletes, the abuser is portrayed as creating a system of dependency and silence that is difficult for children to resist and for adults around them to recognize. Fitzy was a Boston Red Sox Clubhouse Manager who recruited these young boys, who would later work at the facility as Clubbies.

A central theme of the script is the misuse of institutional trust. Fitzy is portrayed as widely regarded as generous, helpful, and committed to local youth, allowing harmful behavior to remain hidden behind a public reputation for service. Parents, coworkers, and community members often view access to the sports organization as a benefit rather than a risk, and the script emphasizes how that perception creates openings for manipulation. The story also shows how social inequality, family stress, and the desire for opportunity can leave children especially vulnerable to grooming and control.

The script also focuses heavily on the emotional and psychological effects on the young people involved. Several characters show fear, confusion, withdrawal, shame, and difficulty speaking openly about what is happening. When disclosures do occur, they are sometimes dismissed, minimized, or redirected, reinforcing the sense that the children are isolated and not fully protected by the adults around them. This dynamic contributes to a broader atmosphere of secrecy, leaving survivors to cope alone while the harmful behavior continues.

Another major element is institutional complicity, whether active or passive. The script suggests that some adults in positions of authority either suspect wrongdoing, fail to intervene, or prioritize the organization's reputation and functioning over children's well-being. As a result, the abuse is portrayed not merely as the acts of one individual but as something enabled by silence, normalization, and a lack of accountability. The narrative, therefore, broadens from a personal story of victimization into a critique of systems that fail to recognize or stop exploitation even when warning signs are present.

Overall, the script tells a story about grooming, power, denial, and the long-term human cost of institutional failure. Rather than functioning only as a personal tragedy, it frames the events as part of a larger pattern in which access, admiration, and authority can be weaponized against children. Its primary dramatic force comes from showing how abuse can remain hidden in plain sight when communities trust the wrong people, dismiss early signs, and fail to listen to the most vulnerable.

PREDATOR IN THE CLUBHOUSE:THE BOSTON RED SOX CHILD MOLESTATION STORY

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Marcos Fizzotti

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