Expos Reveals Network of Baptist Institutions That Shielded Child Molesters [View all]
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Exposé Reveals Network of Baptist Institutions That Shielded Child Molesters
By Terry Firma, December 10, 2018
Move over, Catholic padres.
My earliest memory of being molested was when I was four years old. It was Sunday school.
So begins the fourth and final installment of an extraordinary Fort Worth Star-Telegram investigation into child molestation in and around independent Baptist churches. Published yesterday after eight months of information-gathering, the story by journalists Sarah Smith, Shelly Yang, and Neil Nakahodo reveals how a network of churches and schools covered up nationwide sexual abuse and, in an all-too-familiar pattern, helped relocate the evildoers.
Here are a few gut-wrenching passages.
On religious impunity:
Even if criminal charges are brought against a church leader, he might be allowed to continue in ministry. Facing charges that he had sex with a 14-year-old, a pastor left his Indiana church for Miami, where he told his new congregation that the girl was promiscuous. Though he pleaded guilty to felony stalking in 2009, he didnt leave the church until 2014. He maintains his innocence. Hes one of nearly four dozen men who were allowed to continue in their ministry after facing sexual abuse allegations and even convictions, the Star-Telegram found.
A man convicted of sexual battery in 1999 went on to serve as a youth volunteer in Georgia, where he abused three more girls. He pleaded guilty in 2016 to sexual battery.
A principal at a Christian school affiliated with Bob Jones University was moved out of state when sexual abuse allegations came to the pastors attention. The deacons, said one deacons wife at the time, convened a secret meeting and then spirited him away, on the advice of Bob Jones University officials.
Et cetera.