MORE News Articles On Rodriguez v. WTS Lawsuit

by MadApostate 13 Replies latest watchtower scandals

  • MadApostate
    MadApostate

    Jehovah's Witnesses congregation in Othello sued in sex abuse case

    This story was published 1/23/2002

    By Shirley Wentworth
    Herald Basin bureau

    OTHELLO -- A lawsuit was filed Tuesday against the Othello Spanish Jehovah's Witnesses congregation and its New York governing body, alleging they covered up the sexual abuse of a child.

    The suit filed in U.S. District Court in Spokane by Erica Rodriguez, 23, now of Sacramento, Calif., also seeks unspecified damages from Manuel Beliz, the man who abused her, and the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society.

    Rodriguez, who testified in Adams County Superior Court that she was raped weekly between the ages of 4 and 11 by Beliz, won two criminal court trials. Beliz, 49, first was convicted in 1998, but that conviction was overturned. He was convicted a second time last year, and his 11-year sentence was reinstated.
    Although the Herald usually does not report the names of people who report sexual assaults, Rodriguez has gone public in her quest to save other children from pedophilia.

    Rodriguez said after she moved to California at age 12, an elder in the church she attended there also began abusing her, which went on for four years. She said when she reported the abuse to church elders, the man was removed as an elder but not disfellowshipped from the church.

    When she told the elder that she planned to go to the police, she was told she'd be disfellowshipped. She did contact Sacramento police, who contacted Othello police, who arrested Beliz. Rodriguez also has filed criminal charges against the Sacramento elder, but that case has not yet gone to court.

    Although Beliz was disfellowshipped from the church, he was reinstated as an elder shortly before the trial. Rodriguez said she called the Watchtower legal department to ask why. "This guy said, 'It's none of your business, don't call again,' " she said.

    Jeff Anderson of St. Paul, Minn., the lead attorney in Rodriguez's suit, said he has sued just about every church denomination for covering up child sex abuse over the last 20 years.

    This is the second such suit he has filed against the Jehovah's Witnesses, with the other in New Hampshire.

    "The vast majority have been Catholic; I stumbled over that phenomenon in the early 80s," Anderson said. He filed the first pedophile case against the Catholic Church in 1982.

    Anderson said pedophilia is most likely to occur in "hierarchical, insular, religious organizations that are paternalistic and sexist and repress healthy sexuality."

    "They are secret ... they are run by one male or a small group of men," he said.
    Under Jehovah's Witness church policy, congregation members report transgressions of other members to a judicial committee made up of three or more church elders -- none of whom are women.

    The committee decides what disciplinary action to mete out, often using disfellowshipping as punishment.

    Disfellowshipping means the congregation -- including family members and friends -- shuns the culprit, who becomes invisible to them.

    When allegations of misbehavior are taken before the elders, at least two witnesses are required if the accused denies the charge -- which is particularly difficult to provide in accusations of sexual abuse.

    Rodriguez's lawsuit alleges the elders tell the victim not to talk to other congregation members or to report the abuse to law enforcement authorities under pain of sanction or disfellowshipping.

    However, Watchtower spokesman J.R. Brown, who had not yet seen the lawsuit and couldn't comment specifically, said the church does not interfere with the reporting of a crime.

    He said church elders are supposed to contact headquarters if they have questions about a case.

    "When we are contacted, we tell elders if they are in a state where (reporting pedophilia) is required," he said. "We want to make sure we are legally compliant."

    Brown said he is aware that numerous cases have been posted on Internet sites such as www.silentlambs.org or www.freeminds.org detailing pedophilia within the Jehovah's Witnesses church.
    But he maintains most of the stories were posted by people who underwent abuse back in the 1980s, when all of society was grappling with the issue.

    "Regrettably, many children probably were molested," he said.

    He said the church has made strong policy changes since then, including taking suspected or convicted pedophiles out of any position in the church, not allowing them to be alone with children and various other restrictions.

    . http://www.tri-cityherald.com/news/2002/0123/story5.html

  • Will Power
    Will Power

    Surely God's ONLY org on earth, His mouthpiece, can't be using the defense with a straight face:

    Well everyone else was doing it!
    Until Caesar makes a law in a certain state, we'll do what God wants and save our face.

  • expatbrit
    expatbrit
    But he maintains most of the stories were posted by people who underwent abuse back in the 1980s, when all of society was grappling with the issue.

    "Regrettably, many children probably were molested," he said.

    I can't believe he said this! It puts the WT society on the same level as "all of society". What about God's spirit direction and all that? Surely God's org. would be ahead of the rest of society in this? Surely the WT didn't have to wait for the rest of society to start figuring it all out in order to know what to do?

    Pah!!

    Expatbrit

  • Lionel_P_Hartley
    Lionel_P_Hartley

    expat,

    It's a standard excuse - as I recall Gillies in the UK in regard to organ transplants stated something to the effect that when organ transplants started to be introduced all religions and ethicists were struggling with what to do. Of course, he didn't add that the WTS, unlike worldly ones, knew what to do - for they alone speak for God.

    LPH

  • freeman
    freeman

    God works in mysterious ways, and the Watch Tower is no doubt his greatest mystery. Besides, back in the eighties, everybody had this stuff going on. Never mind logic, reason and least of all justice, you just believe what we tell you if you if know what’s good for you!

    Freeman (about to throw-up)

  • Mister Biggs
    Mister Biggs

    Here's another article and the link it came from...

    http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/020122/180/106q6.html


    Sexual Abuse Suit Filed Against Jehovah's Witness Leaders; Denomination's National Headquarters Called 'Negligent'
    Tue Jan 22, 2:16 PM ET

    To: National and State Desk

    Contact: Laura Barrett, 314-645-5915 or 314-443-5915 (cell) Jeff Anderson (attorney), 651-227-9990 or 612-817-8665, Timothy Kosnoff (attorney), 425-637-3070; or David Clohessy 314-869-7436, ext. 2426, or 314-903-3498 (pager)

    RITZVILLE, Wash., Jan. 22 /U.S. Newswire/ -- A Sacramento woman filed a civil lawsuit today seeking damages from a Jehovah's Witness leader who repeatedly raped her during childhood and from the New York-based denomination which "routinely" gives pedophiles "sanctuary, protection, sympathy and support" from church officials, the suit claims.

    Erica Rodriguez, 23 years old, is suing Manuel Beliz, the Othello Washington Spanish Jehovah's Witness congregation, and the church's official national governing body. Last August, Beliz was convicted of raping and molesting Rodriguez and was sentenced to 11 years in prison. Rodriguez says that Beliz abused her approximately once a week from the time she was four until she was 11, when her family moved to California.

    The case is significant because it is one of a relatively small number filed against the Jehovah's Witnesses' national headquarters.

    "The criminal case was to protect other kids from a dangerous molester," said Rodriguez. "This case is to protect many more kids from a dangerous denomination." She contends that "perhaps thousands" of youngsters are victimized because official Jehovah Witness policies enable known molesters to avoid detection and criminal prosecution.

    During the three-day criminal trial last year, Rodriguez testified that she reported the abuse to two Jehovah's Witness elders in Sacramento, Carlos Chicas and Milton Malendez. The men pressured Rodriguez to keep quiet, threatened to "disfellowship" or excommunicate her, and promised "we will take care of it," the lawsuit indicates. Chicas contacted Othello elder John White but no action was taken.

    After hearing Rodriguez' allegations, the Othello congregation protected Beliz as an elder within the church and shunned her family, Rodriguez said.

    Eventually, Rodriguez contacted the Sacramento police and Beliz was questioned and later prosecuted.

    "This pattern of forbidding abuse victims to contact police or 'outsiders' is standard operating procedure all Jehovah's Witnesses must follow, by direction of the national organization in New York," said Rodriguez' attorney, Timothy Kosnoff of Bellevue, Washington.

    By failing to contact civil authorities, the Jehovah's Witness elders violated Washington's mandatory child abuse reporting law, Kosnoff said.

    Rodriguez is also represented by Jeffrey Anderson of St. Paul, Minnesota, who has filed more than 400 cases of sexual abuse cases against clergy across the nation. Last summer, Anderson filed a civil suit against Jehovah's Witness leaders in New Hampshire for failing to report two women's abuse allegations to civil authorities.

    "The Jehovah Witness church and the Watchtower Society must protect kids and not molesters," said Rodriguez. "A lot of pain and suffering could be prevented if they would forget about the church's image, take sexual abuse seriously and start reaching out to the victims."

    Rodriguez believes Beliz molested other girls too and hopes her suit "will encourage them to seek justice and begin healing as I have."

    Two juries found Beliz guilty of victimizing Rodriguez. His first conviction was overturned when the deputy prosecutor admitted trying to exclude younger women during jury selection. An appellate court then ordered a re-trial.

    At both trials, dozens of Othello Jehovah's Witnesses and Beliz' family members spoke or wrote to the judge urging a lenient sentence. At the second trial, fifteen current and former Jehovah's Witnesses from across the country came to support Rodriguez and express their disapproval of the church's hierarchy.

    Rodriguez' backers were led by church elder William Bowen of Calvert City, Kentucky, who quit his job last year to lobby for improvements in Witness policies towards abuse victims. Bowen heads "Silent Lambs," the only national support group for men and women abused by Jehovah's Witness officials ( http://www.silentlambs.org, 1-800-WTABUSE).

    "It took a lot of courage for Erica to overcome her trauma and speak out," said Bowen. "She should be praised for helping to save other children. Instead, her church has vilified her. Witnesses have treated other victims in the same way, and this 'shooting the messenger' has to stop."

    Today's civil suit, filed in federal court in Washington's Eastern District, seeks unspecified monetary damages.

    Beliz is now incarcerated at the Washington penal institution in Walla Walla.

    There are approximately one million Jehovah's Witnesses in the United States and six million across the world.

  • MadApostate
    MadApostate

    http://archives.seattletimes.nwsource.com/cgi-bin/texis.cgi/web/vortex/display?slug=jehovah23m&date=20020123&query=jehovah%27s

    Wednesday, January 23, 2002, 12:00 a.m.

    Church protects pedophiles, victim charges in lawsuit

    By Janet Burkitt
    Seattle Times staff reporter

    A California woman who was sexually abused as a child by a leader of a Jehovah's Witnesses church in Eastern Washington filed a civil lawsuit yesterday against the congregation as well as the church's national organization, alleging they protect pedophiles.

    In the suit, filed in U.S. District Court in Spokane, attorneys for the 23-year-old woman claim the church mishandled her complaints that she was sexually abused by a leader of the Othello Spanish Congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses in Adams County from the time she was 4 years old until her family moved to Sacramento when she was 11.

    Elders at her California congregation notified an elder at the Othello church when she told them of the abuse, but they discouraged her from calling police, the suit says.

    Her abuser, 48-year-old Manuel Beliz, who served as a ministerial servant and an elder for the congregation, was briefly disassociated from the Witnesses but was reinstated, according to the suit. Beliz, who is also named as a defendant in the suit, was convicted in August of raping and molesting the woman and was sentenced to 11 years in prison.

    "They knew he was a pedophile and they ignored it," Bellevue attorney Tim Kosnoff, one of the lawyers representing the victim, said of the church.

    J.R. Brown, a spokesman for the Brooklyn, N.Y.-based denomination, said he could not comment on the lawsuit because lawyers had not received paperwork.

    But "we have designed a policy to protect the victim of child molestation; to protect innocent children and not to allow pedophiles to circulate among us," he said of the church, which is officially known as the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society.

    The victim's lawyers paint a different picture in the civil suit, which seeks unspecified damages.

    They say the Witnesses' policy requires two eyewitnesses to the abuse "before a matter can be established," and requires the victim to produce witnesses or "tangible proof" such as photographs or DNA if the accused denies the allegation.

    Church elders are responsible for investigating accusations of child abuse, and accusers are required not to discuss the situation with anyone, and are often intimidated or discouraged from reporting suspected abuse to anyone outside the organization, the suit says.

    The church's policy "protects the predator and fails to protect the children," Kosnoff said. "Our primary goal is to change the way this church does business."

    At Beliz's sentencing, an elder admitted that the congregation knew Beliz "was a bad man in the 1980s and 1990s but told the court if you punish Beliz now, he will be punished for the man he was, not the man he is now," the suit says.

    Brown said the church — which has about 6 million members worldwide, including 1 million in the United States — requires two witnesses because the Bible requires that for establishing a sin.

    "Where the state requires that this be reported, we comply fully," he said.

    Janet Burkitt can be reached at 206-515-5689 or [email protected].

    Information from The Associated Press is included in this report.

    Copyright © 2002 The Seattle Times Company

  • MadApostate
    MadApostate

    http://www.spokesmanreview.com/pf.asp?date=012302&ID=s1089784

    Wednesday, January 23, 2002

    SPOKANE

    Lawsuit accuses church of fostering sexual abuse

    Kelly McBride and Bill Morlin - Staff writers

    A 23-year-old California woman filed a lawsuit Tuesday in Spokane against her former Eastern Washington church and the entire denomination, claiming their beliefs and policies allowed her to be sexually abused as a child.

    It is the second such lawsuit filed recently against the Jehovah's Witnesses, officially known as the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society. A similar suit was filed in Concord, N.H., last summer, but has not gone to trial.

    "The overwhelming majority of victims never sue and when they do, most are settled quietly out of court with gag orders," said David Clohessy, national director of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, based in Kansas City, Mo. His organization was founded to help victims of Roman Catholic clergy, but recently has been lending support to members of other Christian denominations.

    While such suits are fairly common when it comes to large denominations, there have been relatively few against the Jehovah's Witnesses, a church with roughly 1 million members in the United States, 6 million worldwide.

    Erica Rodriguez was born into the faith. When she was a child, her family attended the Othello Spanish Congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses. It was there, she charges, that she was molested weekly, from age 4 until her family moved when she was 11. The assailant was church elder Manuel Beliz.

    Beliz, was convicted of molesting Rodriguez in a trial last summer, and is serving an 11-year term in the Washington State Penitentiary.

    After her family moved to Sacramento in 1990, Rodriguez revealed the abuse to her parents, who reported it to the elders of the Las Palmas Congregation, also a Jehovah's Witnesses church.

    The suit claims that those elders promised the problem would be handled by the church. It further claims that church elders will investigate such claims only when there are two or more eyewitnesses.

    "These sort of closed-off, insular, male-dominated, hierarchical religions have a way of keeping these cases under wraps," said Tim Kosnoff, a Bellevue-based attorney on the case.
    Church officials deny that charge.

    In an interview from his home in New York on Tuesday, church spokesman J.R. Brown said elders are told to comply with the laws requiring professionals to report all allegations of child abuse.

    "It ought to be clear, the church handles all sins and transgressions in house," he said. "If such sins are criminal, then it's up to the police."

    Brown said he could not comment specifically on the lawsuit.

    Jehovah's Witnesses is an apocalyptic faith founded in Pennsylvania. Followers believe the end of world as we know it will be soon. Individual churches, known as Kingdom Halls, are run by a board of elders, or qualified men selected by the congregation.

    Elders are not paid. The only church employees are those who work at church headquarters or other national offices. The structure makes it difficult to tie the actions of an individual or even a congregation to the broader international organization.

    Unlike Catholic priests or most Protestant clergy, Jehovah's Witnesses elders are not officially licensed by the church, nor are they trained at any church-run seminary.

    Still, they are expected to uphold policies and practices that are instituted at the national level, Kosnoff said.

    "They are following the dictates of the national organization," Kosnoff said. "It's those destructive and evil policies that fail to protect children and instead protect the predators."

    During the seven years of abuse, Rodriguez says, she was warned by Beliz that she would be shunned by her congregation and the Jehovah's Witnesses church "if she told anyone about the abuse," the suit says.

    Brown, the church spokesman, denied that victims are discouraged from reporting abuse or other crimes.

    "We make it clear that it is up to the individual whether to report. As you know, many choose not to," he said. "We don't chastise them."

    Spokane attorney Richard Eymann, who is on a team of lawyers representing Rodriguez, said there is national interest in the case.

    "Organizations that allow their employees or agents to abuse young children -- even worse, try to cover up the conduct through intimidation of the victim -- should be brought to justice," Eymann said.

    Another member of the team representing Rodriguez is Jeffrey R. Anderson, a Minneapolis attorney who specializes in church-related sexual abuse cases. He has gotten several multimillion-dollar judgments against religious organizations.

    The suit says Rodriguez's mother was sanctioned by the church for reporting her suspicions of Beliz's abuse.

    At the same time, elders of the Othello Spanish Congregation spoke on Beliz's behalf when he was sentenced to prison for the criminal conduct.

    That pattern, the suit says, shows the Jehovah's Witnesses' "long-standing policy and practice of minimizing, defending and tolerating abuse by congregation" elders.

    When the sexual abuse occurred, Washington state had a law requiring the reporting of suspected child abuse to law enforcement authorities.

    "None of the elders of the Othello Spanish Congregation reported the suspected abuse of Rodriguez to any designated authority," the suit claims.

    Rodriguez and her lawyers are hoping the suit will force the church to change its policies.

    "Manuel Beliz has been dealt with," Kosnoff said. "Now we need to deal with the organization that allowed him to commit his crimes by giving him sanctuary."

    •Kelly McBride can be reached at (509) 459-5449 or by e-mail at [email protected].

    Bill Morlin can be reached at (509) 459-5444 or by e-mail at [email protected].

  • hawkaw
    hawkaw

    I have alerted the Ottawa Citizen, Toronto Star, Globe and Mail and Whig to all of these.

    Sick question and I hate to ask - but I know one reporter who would do the story if their was a Canadian angle - ie someone in the Ontario area who want to go public with their story - its completely up to you.

    Let Bill Bowen know or notify me via the board.

    hawk

  • MadApostate
    MadApostate

    bbbbbbbbbbttttttttttttttt

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