PRESS- Silentlambs-More to Follow---

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  • silentlambs
    silentlambs

    The Mario Moreno and get down J.R. Brown Chronicles.

    How would you like these guys speaking for your church?
    and a few others...
    Paducah Sun- 1-5-01
     A spokesman at the church's headquarters in New York said there is no
    prohibition or discouragement in going to legal authorities in the event of
    child abuse.
     J.R. Brown, public affairs director for Jehovah's Witnesses at the
    church's headquarters in Brooklyn, N.Y., said in a statement that the
    members of the faith "abhor all forms of wickedness, including child
    abuse.''
     "If child abuse becomes known to our church elders, they strictly
    comply with applicable child abuse reporting laws. We also encourage the
    wrongdoers to do everything they can to set the matter straight with the
    authorities. Furthermore, we do not prohibit or discourage the victim or the
    victim's parents from reporting child abuse to the authorities even if the
    alleged perpetrator is one of Jehovah's Witnesses."
     Jehovah's Witnesses abhor all forms of wickedness including child abuse. We do not condone the actions of those who exploit children by this terrible crime and such persons are disfellowshipped (excommunicated) from the congregation. A known child molester does not qualify for appointment as a. church elder or for any other position of responsibility in any congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses.

    PR Statement 1-5-01 Channel 6 News
    If child abuse becomes known to our church elders, they strictly comply with applicable child abuse reporting laws. We also encourage the wrongdoers to do everything they can to set the matter straight with the authorities. Furthermore, we do not prohibit or discourage the victim or the victim's parents from reporting child abuse to the authorities even if the alleged perpetrator is one of Jehovah's Witnesses. If you would like to receive more information on how we report such matters, please contact Mario Moreno, Watchtower Legal Department. (845) 509-0416 or (845) 306-1000. A primary focus of Jehovah's Witnesses is to elevate me Bible's strong family values in all communities and to help willing ones come to know and serve God acceptably.

    Paducah Sun 1-28-01
    Mario Moreno, associate general counsel at the church's New York headquarters, said when church policy is applied to child molesters, "as a parent, an attorney and an elder, I'm comfortable with our policy."
    Moreno said while he believes in the church's policy, he knows that some members have been hurt, and "my heart goes out to them." But he said that some elders don't follow the policy as they should, and that's where trouble begins.
    Moreno said when a Witness goes to an elder with an accusation of abuse, the first step the elders should take is calling the church's legal department.
    He said there are then three factors considered: protecting the child, complying with the law, and protecting minister-adherent confidentiality, with the last receiving the least weight.
    The legal department will then advise the elders what is required by law. Twenty-two states, including Illinois and the District of Columbia, do not require clergy to report accusations of child abuse. In those states, Moreno said, the legal department generally advises the elders not to report the matter to law enforcement authorities.
    J.R. Brown, public affairs director for the church, said the reason for this is "we do not think, as an ecclesiastical authority, we should run ahead of Caesar's laws," using a biblical reference to secular authority. "Even if secular authority does not require it, generally we have endeavoured to be more zealous for enforcing and seeing that these laws are complied with. If Caesar has a law, and it does not conflict with God's law, we follow it."
    Brown said the church does not necessarily equate reporting the matter to law enforcement to protecting the child because "not all the time does government authority provide the protection the child needs. We don't say automatically that, but unfortunately too many reports show that's the case. You can be sure they're going to take what action is necessary to see that the child is protected."
    Both Brown and Moreno said that the elders, who volunteer and are essentially untrained clergy, might err in their application of a policy both believe puts protecting children first.
    "It's a matter of trying to balance confidentiality and protecting the child," Brown said. "It's not always easy. Have mistakes been made? Very likely, they have. We're trying to see that everyone is educated to what needs to be done to see that innocent children are not victimized."
    Moreno agrees with Bowen's claim that no investigation is initiated in the church if there is only one witness and the accused denies the charge, but he said elders have the responsibility to watch the accused more closely. He added that elders sometimes advise the accused to not put himself or herself in suspicious situations.
    He also said that when members are disfellowshipped, the congregation is told but no reason is given in order to protect confidentiality. When asked if the parents of the victim would be allowed to tell fellow congregates why a member is disfellowshipped, Moreno replied, "That would be their choice. We don't tell them that, but it would be their choice. Is that encouraged? No."
    He agreed with Bowen's charge that a congregation would also not be told if a pedophile had joined the flock. But he said because of the church's structure, the fact that such a member, if male, who would have fewer rights in the congregation, would not be serving in a leadership role would alert members that "he obviously lacks spiritual maturity."
    Moreno said he believes that while some of the church's critics on this topic have legitimate concerns, most "have a problem with pride" and "want the organization to change for them. We go by what we believe the Bible says, and we don't change for anybody."
    He also said he feels the church is "being picked on" and added that he would be willing to put the church's policy up against any other.
    Christianity Today 01-26-01
    J. R. Brown, director of the public affairs office of the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society (WTBTS) in Brooklyn, says he shares Bowen's concern. "We abhor what [molestation] does to children," he tells Christianity Today.
    Witness spokesman Brown says that the incidence of pedophilia is no worse in his religion than in others, but he admits that some elders have not reported suspicions of abuse. In 38 states, the law requires clergy and other professionals to report physical and sexual abuse of children. Some critics argue that even in the 22 states that do not require clergy members to report, Witness elders do not qualify for such a privilege because most are neither professionally trained nor paid employees of the organization.
    Although Witnesses comply with secular laws when necessary, Witness spokesman Brown says, the group prefers to deal with such matters spiritually. "We handle wrongdoing, sin, and transgression," he says. "This is what a religious organization is supposed to do. We're not getting into law enforcement. We're just going to handle the repentance."
    Louisville Courier-Journal, 1-4-01
    Church officials say elders alert authorities to suspected abuse in states that require reporting. But in other states they prefer to take steps to protect children that don't breach what they see as confidential communication between elders and members.
    A lawyer for the Jehovah's Witnesses church, which has nearly 1 million members nationally and 6 million worldwide, said it complies with those state laws that require church elders to report abuse.
    "If there is a law that mandates reporting, that takes precedent over any confidentiality, whether in church policy or statute," said Mario Moreno, associate general counsel for the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society, a legal corporation of the church.
    "In states where there is no reporting requirement, it's a different scenario," Moreno said.
    Elders might have the victim relocated away from the abuser or have the parent or guardian of the victim, or even the accused person, report the abuse to police, he said.
    "The laws of this country, as well as people's moral values, tell you there are some things that should be kept private. That's why laws protect confidential communications between clergy and their flock."
    But Moreno said elders who contact the church's legal department with cases of suspected sexual abuse -- as they must do -- are often advised to refer victims to police or other outside help, even if the law doesn't require it.
    Victims and their parents are free, Moreno said, to seek help from police or therapists and should not blame the church if they choose not to do so.
    "Parents are encouraged to do whatever they need to do to protect their child," said Moreno.
    Church attorney Moreno said church members know they can go to the authorities on a matter of abuse. "They haven't committed a sin by turning in a Jehovah's Witness to the authorities," he said. "It's a very personal decision."
    Moreno would not comment on whether elders violated the law in this case but said, "Once in a while, in a small minority cases, elders screw up. They screw up because they don't call here (the Watch Tower legal department). When they call here, they don't screw up."
    Moreno said that eventually, the truth comes out. "Somebody else comes out of the woodwork and now you can take action," he said. Moreno said two separate accusers would count as two witnesses when making a sexual abuse accusation.
    Church policy neither encourages nor discourages members to report suspected or admitted sexual abuse to police, Moreno said. Elders are instructed to always call the central legal department of the church in Carmel, N.Y., upon receiving an accusation.
    When elders call, church lawyers tell them whether state law requires them to report abuse to police, Moreno said. A still-valid 1989 church memo also tells elders to call for legal advice before being interviewed by police, responding to a subpoena or voluntarily turning over confidential church records, unless police have a search warrant.
    Moreno said church lawyers might advise elders to refer victims to police or other outside help. "That's a personal decision."
    A Jan. 2 statement from J.R. Brown, director of public affairs for the Jehovah's Witnesses, said church elders "encourage the wrongdoers to do everything they can to set the matter straight with the authorities."
    Ayers, Rees' stepfather, declined to comment, but church lawyer Moreno applauded the decision.
    "There is no duty to announce to people that 'John Brown' is a child abuser," he said. If the court had ruled otherwise, he said, it "would basically discourage people from going to their ministers and getting help."
    "If people could not count on confidentiality when they go and confess to a Catholic priest, there's going be quite a chilling effect on religion," he said.
    Church lawyer Moreno said it would be "ridiculous" for any elder to make such a threat, and if one did, it would contradict church policy.
    "That's not scriptural," he said. "We teach the Scriptures. The Scriptures don't say, 'If you file criminal charges against an abuser you're going to have eternal damnation.' The one in danger of eternal damnation is the abuser."
    Watch Tower officials are not consistent on how the church punishes child molesters.
    In a Jan. 2 statement, church public affairs director Brown Church said that child abusers are "disfellowshipped," or expelled from the congregation. Later, he acknowledged the church can use less severe penalties.
    He defended his original statement, saying that for "mass consumption it conveys the thought (that elders) do institute this discipline. They're not soft on abusers."
    Said Moreno: "I wouldn't be too happy myself if somebody abused my child and was reinstated. The bottom line is if an elder determines a former child abuser has demonstrated repentance, (he has) a scriptural obligation to reinstate him."
    Brown said pedophiles are restricted from working with minors and must also be with a well-respected church member when they go door to door.
    Pedophiles also might not be sent into neighborhoods where they might be recognized as molesters, Brown said.
    According to church lawyer Moreno, the system worked. Elders did their job, and victims and police did theirs, he said.
    "What was the harm?" Moreno said. "The report got made.
    "You've got a teen, who has been molested, upset at the elders for not calling the police?" he said. "You can call the police. You're the one injured.
    "Who makes the laws? Not us. Don't blame us for the laws, please. Talk to the state legislators of Colorado."
    Associated Press 2-11-01
    J.R. Brown, spokesman at the Jehovah's Witnesses' headquarters in the New York City borough of Brooklyn, said he believes Bowen does not have a full understanding of church policies.
    Members are free at all times to report abuse to secular authorities, Brown said. "This is a personal decision on how you want to handle this," he said.
    What is revealed to church leaders is generally kept confidential unless state law requires that allegations of abuse be turned over to police, he said.
    "We deal with sin, and law enforcement deals with crime," Brown said.
    In some cases, however, the matter is turned over to secular authorities regardless of the law, Brown said.
    Of Bowen, he said: "He's concerned about victims of child abuse, and we are, too."
    Brown said the faith does require at least two witnesses to prove any kind of wrongdoing -- including child molestation -- because that is what is taught in the Bible. But corroborating evidence can be used instead of a second witness to prove wrongdoing, Brown said.

    Paducah Sun 2-12-01
    Editorial Page JR Brown Response to William Bowen
    We are writing regarding allegations made concerning our policy about handling accusations of child molestation. Some of these allegations have been reported in the media.
    We were very surprised to see that these statements were made, and we noted how inaccurate they are. Our position on pedophilia has been well-publicized for decades. Back in 1985, the Jan. 22 issue of Awake! devoted several pages to the subject and stated that the priority was protection of the child. It stated:
    "First, the child — and other children too — must be protected from any further abuse. This must be done, whatever the cost. In many cases the accused molester will have to be confronted. But whatever it takes, it is important that the child should feel confident that the molester will never be able to get at her (or him) again."
    Our Oct. 8, 1993, issue of Awake! featured a cover series of 14 pages entitled, "Protect Your Children!" In part it stated:
    "If your child discloses sexual abuse, you will no doubt feel shattered ... Praise the child for being so brave as to tell you what happened. Repeatedly reassure the child that you will do your best to provide protection; that the abuse was the abuser's fault, not the child's; that the child is not ‘bad’; that you love the child.
    "Some legal experts advise reporting the abuse to the authorities as soon as possible. In some lands the legal system may require this.”
    "Parents must therefore make every reasonable effort to protect their children! Many responsible parents choose to seek out professional help for an abused child. Just as you would with a medical doctor, make sure that any such professional will respect your religious views. Help your child rebuild his or her shattered self-esteem through a steady outpouring of parental love."
    Following are excerpts from the Jan. 1, 1997, issue of The Watchtower:
    "Depending on the law of the land where he lives, the molester may well have to serve a prison term or face other sanctions from the state. The congregation will not protect him from this."
    "A child molester is subject to severe congregational discipline and restrictions."
    "For the protection of our children, a man known to have been a child molester does not qualify for a responsible position in the congregation."
    In conclusion, we reiterate that Jehovah's Witnesses do not shy away from informing people about pedophilia. We abhor the practice and actively work to keep our congregations free from such harmful influences. Millions of copies of our journals, which contain numerous articles that decry child abuse in any form and instead promote safe, trusting, and strong family relationships, have been read by our members and distributed to the public internationally. (Currently, The Watchtower has a circulation of more than 23 million copies per issue, and for Awake! it is more than 20 million.) Through these magazines and in other ways, Jehovah's Witnesses strive to contribute to the safety of children and to the building of strong families in the community.
    J.R. BROWN
    Director, Public Affairs Office
    Jehovah's Witnesses

    AP
    Tuesday, January 22, 2002

    Lawsuit claims Jehovah's Witness church protects pedophiles

    Church spokesman J.R. Brown said he could not comment on Rodriguez's lawsuit because lawyers had not received paperwork.
    But he said there is no policy preventing notification of civil authorities of a crime.
    "What we handle is the transgression, or the sin, of child molestation. We distinguish that from the criminal aspect," Brown said. "Our view is, the church handles the sin, the secular authority - Caesar, if you will- handles the criminal activity."
    The church - which has about 6 million members worldwide, including 1 million in the United States - requires two witnesses because the Bible requires it for establishing a sin, he said.
    "Where the state requires that this be reported, we comply fully," he said. "We have designed a policy to protect the victim of child molestation; to protect innocent children and to not allow pedophiles to circulate among us."

    THE SPOKANE REVIEW

    Wednesday, January 23, 2002

    Lawsuit accuses church of fostering sexual abuse

    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.

    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."

    UPI
    Tuesday, January 22, 2002
    Sexual Abuse Suit Filed Against Jehovah's Witness Leaders; Denomination's NY Headquarters Called 'Negligent'
    No Comments

    TRI-CITY HERALD
    Wednesday, January 23, 2002
    Jehovah's Witnesses congregation in Othello sued in sex abuse case
    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.

    Seattle Times
    Thursday, January 23, 2002
    Church protects pedophiles, victim charges in lawsuit
    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.
    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.

    CNS News

    Friday, January 24, 2002

    Jehovah's Witness Church Accused of Hiding Sexual Abusers

    Jehovah's Witness church officials in New York deny that the church hides criminal activity. "We have no such policy. Our policy allows for anyone who wishes to report the matter to the authorities to do so," J.R. Brown, national spokesman for the Jehovah's Witness organization, said. "We strictly comply. We are not in any way resistive to the proper authorities being notified."

    Brown said that while he could not comment on the specifics of the case, the church typically follows general policy guidelines in such matters.

    "We follow a general policy that we do not support legally any Jehovah's Witness charged with a crime. We do not use our donated resources to defend any Jehovah's Witness accused of a crime," Brown said.

    But Brown said the core issue is not the church's image.

    "If someone were to feel that our concern for our resources were greater than that for innocent victims, that simply is not true," Brown said. "We are concerned, just as any other organization, about our public image. We are concerned about our resources because we are recipients of donated funds for non-profit charitable work. But we are primarily ministers who are concerned to act as shepherds in a protective and spiritual sense over the members of the congregation," he said.

    "If anyone has been abused by anyone else in the congregation or whether that person is an appointed elder or not, we view this as a horrific crime to inflict on a child or anyone else," Brown said.

    SACRAMENTO BEE

    Saturday, January 26, 2002

    Woman sues Jehovah's Witnesses in sex abuse

    Church officials would not comment on Rodriguez's lawsuit, but did say they report crimes to the proper authorities.
    "We have no objection to a crime being handled," said J.R. Brown, director of the Office of Public Information for the national organization. "In no way do we conflict with how police or other authorities handle these cases."
    But church officials strongly denied Anderson's allegation.
    "The two-witnesses requirement applies to how we handle transgressions or sins as a church," Brown said. "It has nothing to do with how we handle a crime.
    "We are a church made up of families ... We would not allow predators to get away with this," Brown said.

    THE SPOKANE REVIEW

    Sunday, January 27, 2002
    SPOKANE
    Reluctant Witness feels betrayed
    Members of the faith found guilty of wrongdoing by church elders can be disfellowshipped, said church spokesman J.R. Brown in New York City. When that happens other members are encouraged to cease all contact with the individual.
    "That is a biblical standard," Brown said. "We are pretty strict when it comes to interpreting the Bible."
    While Brown said he can't comment on the lawsuit, he said the church has published several articles over the last 20 years encouraging members to report sexual abuse and child molesters.
    "We handle transgression and sin," he said. "But if that involves criminal activity, we say that should be reported to the government."
    NEWYORK POST

    Monday, January 28, 2002

    SUIT ALLEGES JEHOVAH'S KIDDIE-SEX COVERUP
    A church spokesman yesterday insisted that the church does not hide abuse.
    LOUISVILLE-COURIER
    Wednesday, May 8, 2002
    Jehovah's Witnesses act against abuse-policy critics

    The Jehovah's Witnesses Office of Public Information declined to comment specifically on the four cases, citing confidentiality policies.

    Leaders of the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, as the organization is formally known, have disputed these claims, saying they obey all laws requiring the reporting of child abuse and do not interfere with police investigations.

    They say that in states that do not require reporting of abuse, they prefer taking steps to protect children while not breaching what they see as confidential communications between elders and members.
    Church officials say they might advise elders to move victims out of abusive homes or refer them to counseling.
    In its statement, the Jehovah's Witnesses Office of Public Information quoted biblical references in saying elders must use church discipline to ''shepherd the flock of God in their care.'' ''In fact, they are required by the Holy Scriptures to see to it that the congregation remains clean and unified,'' the statement said. ''No hasty decision is made in this process.'' The goal is not to expel a member, but to follow the Apostle Paul's injunction to ''try to readjust such a man in a spirit of mildness,'' the statement said.

    One suit filed in January by Erica Rodriguez, who said she was repeatedly abused by a church member years ago, claims an elder at her former congregation in Washington state threatened her with excommunication if she reported her abuser to police.
    A Watchtower statement denies this, saying that there are no sanctions against anyone who chooses to go to police, and that church elders and Watchtower did not know of the abuse until years after it had occurred.
    PRESS STATEMENT
    For Immediate Release
    May 8, 2002
    In harmony with what the Bible teaches, elders of Jehovah’s Witnesses ‘shepherd the flock of god in their care.’ They have the spiritual welfare of each congregation member in mind. (1 Peter 5:2) This pastoral work is done confidentially, out of respect for the congregation and the individual(s) involved.
    Even as the local elders are concerned about the spiritual health of each member of the congregation, they are also concerned for the spiritual welfare of the congregation as a whole. In fact, they are required by the Holy Scriptures to see to it that the congregation remains clean and unified. (1 Corinthians 1:10) No hasty decision is made in this process. It is never the goal of local elders to remove someone from the congregation. Rather, every effort is made, in harmony with Paul’s words, to “try to readjust such a man in a spirit of mildness.” ---Galatians 6:1
    Contact J. R. Brown, telephone: (718) 560-5600
    NEWSDAY-NY
    Jehovah's Witnesses Allege Sexual Abuse

    Wednesday, May 8, 2002
    Pandelo and the others say they are being targeted because of their outspokenness, especially on sexual abuse of minors.
    A national spokesman for Jehovah's Witnesses, which says it has 6 million members worldwide, categorically denied the allegations.
    "You cannot be a known sex offender and hold any position of responsibility within the organization," said J.R. Brown, the spokesman. "We have a very strong and aggressive policy for handling any sexual molestation that might take place."
    Jehovah's Witnesses spokesman Brown said only one hearing has been held so far and no action has been taken yet against anyone.
    Bowen fights excommunication for criticizing witnesses
    NewsChannel 6
    Bowen fights excommunication for criticizing witnesses
    Members at Bowen's old Kingdom Hall in Draffenville say the church does not bar them from reporting abuse. They say they may council abusers to report their actions to authorities. But they admit discouraging members from telling just anybody. "The difference between needless gossip, let's say, and withholding information from those who have a right to know is two different things completely," says Jehovah's Witness Bruce Waite.

    J.R. Brown, national Jehovah's Witness public information director, says proceedings against Bowen are confidential.
    New York Post
    FOUR FACING JEHOVAH OUSTER
    Thursday, May 9, 2002

    A spokesman for the Brooklyn-based religion called that claim "absurd."
    Both sides agree that all Witnesses - including relatives of the four - would risk excommunication by having contact with any excommunicated person, except under certain circumstances.

    While the four believe the show's impending broadcast has spurred the church's actions, church spokesman J.R. Brown said that before Tuesday, church headquarters had no idea that these people would be on the show.

    He also said local congregations decided to charge them with various spiritual violations.
    AP/CNN
    Four Jehovah's Witnesses fight church's handling of child abuse cases
    Thursday, May 9, 2002

    In a statement issued from their headquarters, the Jehovah's Witnesses said that church leaders are "required by the Holy Scriptures to see to it that the congregation remains clean and unified."

    J.R. Brown, a spokesman for the denomination, said that parents are not punished by the church for going to the police first in cases of child molestation.
    And he said that anyone found guilty of molestation by a church judicial committee is removed from all positions of responsibility and cannot evangelize door-to-door without being accompanied by a fellow Jehovah's Witness.


    Steve Lyons, an elder at Bowen's Draffenville church of about 60 members, said Jehovah's Witnesses are responsive to allegations of child abuse.
    "I think we do as well as we can do," he said. "We comply with all local laws when it comes to reporting. We do our best to protect children in cases where even there's just been an alleged abuse."

  • silentlambs
    silentlambs

    We made England!!!

    . http://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/0,,61-292689,00.html

    TIMES ONLINE
    ENGLAND
    Court & Social
    May 11, 2002
    Faith News
    COMPILED BY LUKE COPPEN
    An American man faces expulsion from the Jehovah’s Witnesses after he questioned the religious group’s handling of child sex abuse allegations. William Bowen, a 44-year-old former church elder, was threatened with “disfellowship” after he accused the group of failing to disclose allegations to secular authorities. Mr. Bowen was due to appear before a judicial committee yesterday at his church in Draffenville, in western Kentucky.

  • silentlambs
    silentlambs

    OH CANADA!!!
    . http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?GXHC_gx_session_id_=5df914070a696388&pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_PrintFriendly&c=Article&cid=1020981681614

    TORONTO STAR

    May. 10, 01:00 EDT

    Sex scandal hits church

    Four Jehovah's Witnesses face ouster for protest

    LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Four Jehovah's Witnesses face excommunication for sowing discord in the faith by speaking out against the church's handling of allegations of child molestation.
    William Bowen, a 44-year-old former church elder, complains that child-sex allegations are generally not reported to secular authorities by the Jehovah's Witnesses because of the church's closed nature and its insistence on dealing with problems internally.
    The Jehovah's Witnesses shun the outside world in many respects. They refuse to bear arms, salute the flag or participate in secular government. They also refuse blood transfusions.
    Bowen is to appear before a judicial committee today at his church in Draffenville, a small town in far western Kentucky.
    Two others, Carl and Barbara Pandelo of Belmar, N.J., had their hearing this week and are awaiting a decision.
    Barbara Anderson of Normandy, Tenn., has also been summoned to appear before a committee. Anderson has said she learned about the church's handling of abuse cases while she worked at its headquarters in New York City.
    Like Bowen, the Pandelos say the real motivation is to silence them within the denomination, which claims about 6 million members worldwide.
    In a statement issued from their headquarters, the Jehovah's Witnesses said church leaders are "required by the Holy Scriptures to see to it that the congregation remains clean and unified."
    J.R. Brown, a spokesperson for the denomination, said parents are not punished by the church for going to the police first in cases of child molestation. And he said anyone found guilty of molestation by a church judicial committee is removed from all positions of responsibility and cannot evangelize door-to-door without being accompanied by a fellow Jehovah's Witness.
    Bowen disputed that, saying he has heard of cases in which parents were punished for contacting the police first, and instances in which abusers were allowed to go door-to-door on their own.
    Bowen, who spent two years working at the Brooklyn headquarters, said he took up the cause a couple of years ago, when he read a confidential file alleging a member had molested a child in the early 1980s. He said he was frustrated in his efforts to try to bring the problem to the attention of the church hierarchy.
    "They did not want to face child molestation issues," Bowen said. "They did not want typically to turn perpetrators in. And they used the control of the organization as more or less an undisclosed way to prevent that from happening.''
    Bowen resigned as a church elder in 2000 in protest, and has formed a support group for alleged abuse victims.
    He said he has heard from thousands of alleged victims in the past year. The allegations involve both rank-and-file members of the church and, like the scandal engulfing the Roman Catholic Church, leaders of the faith.
    Bowen warned that the denomination could face a flurry of lawsuits unless it changes its ways.
    Two lawsuits already filed against the denomination in the past year in New Hampshire and Washington state accuse church elders of failing to follow state laws on reporting suspected abuse to police.

  • silentlambs
    silentlambs

    . http://www.tennessean.com/local/archives/02/05/17418642.shtml?Element_ID=17418642

    Saturday, 05/11/02 | Middle Tennessee News & Information

    Abuse charges put Witness at risk of shunning

    ERIC PARSONS / STAFF
    Barbara Anderson, of the Manchester Congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses, faces possible disciplinary action.

    _____Today's Top Stories_____
    • Abuse charges put Witness at risk of shunning
    • Faithful brave rain to watch tournament
    • State joins suit against the Vatican
    • Murfreesboro gets 'urban' label
    • Unusual group led WWII mine search

    By LEON ALLIGOOD
    and EMILY HEFFTER
    Staff Writers
    TULLAHOMA, Tenn. — A Coffee County woman faced congregation disciplinary action yesterday after alleging that leaders in the Jehovah's Witness faith have, for years, downplayed or ignored child sexual abuse by congregants.
    Barbara Anderson feared that she would be disfellowshipped, the equivalent of excommunication, for her appearance on an upcoming episode of the NBC news show Dateline, in which she joins other alarmed members in speaking out against the denomination's alleged unwillingness to report abuse and to keep confessed pedophiles away from young children.
    After the 1-hour, 45-minute meeting with three congregation elders yesterday, Anderson was hopeful that she would not be shunned for comments that appeared on a Web site run by a former Jehovah's Witness.
    ''Right now I am hopeful that disfellowship will not happen, but we'll see,'' she said as she left the worship center of the Manchester, Tenn., congregation of the Jehovah's Witnesses. This has been her spiritual home with her husband, Joe, for many years, although she stopped attending services in 1997 in protest of what she viewed as lax judgment on the part of the international organization's leaders.
    A New Jersey couple, Barbara and Carl Pandelo, of Belmar, were disfellowshipped this week after speaking out against the organization's handling of their daughter's allegations of sex abuse by another member of the faith, Barbara Pandelo said last night. The Pandelos also had spoken to Dateline.
    ''What she (Anderson) alleges is not true at all,'' said J.R. Brown, a spokesman for the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York Inc., the incorporated name of the Jehovah's Witnesses.
    Brown said he had been talking to Dateline about the show's story for a year but said he and other organization leaders did not know which members television producers had interviewed.
    ''We have no idea what she told Dateline,'' Brown said of Anderson.
    Dateline spokeswoman Caryn Mautner would not go into details of the story or when it is scheduled to air. Mautner confirmed that Dateline had interviewed Anderson for a story about ''accusations that the church was covering up cases of molestation.''
    Anderson has been a Jehovah's Witness for most of her life, as has her husband of nearly 45 years. She was summoned last week to yesterday's meeting.
    She feared the worst.
    ''Most people don't understand what disfellowship would mean for a Witness. What I would lose is my family. Witnesses are not to associate with anyone who has been disfellowshipped,'' she said. While she would remain married to Joe, a congregation elder, Anderson said, her relationship with her son, also an elder, her daughter-in-law and her young grandchild would be jeopardized.
    The consequences of excommunication are severe for a reason, Brown said. It is hoped that the harsh isolation that disfellowshipped members feel will draw them back to the organization.
    Other members of the faith are not allowed to speak to disfellowshipped members. They can't greet them in a store or share a meal with them. Live-in family members can speak to the person but never about spiritual issues.
    ''Our statistics bear out that you have many people every year be reinstated,'' Brown said.
    ''My son said he thinks what I'm doing is a noble thing, but he disagrees with going public,'' Anderson said. In fact, she said she was reluctant to take her story public but said she had concluded that Jehovah's Witness leaders were not going to change the organization's policy unless forced to do so.
    ''They are accusing me of causing division, but this is not a theological question. This is a question of whether the church is doing everything they can to protect the children of Jehovah's Witnesses,'' Anderson said.
    Brown said Jehovah's Witnesses have a strict policy about child sexual abuse. If parents come to congregation leaders with concerns that their child is being abused, the leaders follow state law, he said. If state law requires parents to report the abuse, congregation leaders tell them that.
    People in the organization who are accused of sex abuse are subject to a hearing like the one Anderson attended yesterday, Brown said. They are automatically removed from leadership positions and can't go door-to-door without other members' being present.
    Anderson said she knew of pedophiles in four Middle Tennessee congregations who had confessed to elders and who had not been disciplined. She said those elders did not go to authorities with what they knew.
    There was no way yesterday to corroborate the accusations that Anderson made. Brown said they were false. A call to the local district attorney at his home yesterday did not yield a return call.
    Yesterday, the Tullahoma woman was charged with speaking ill of the organization on an Internet site run by a former Jehovah's Witness. The article was sent as a personal e-mail but was picked up by the dissident Web site and used without her permission, Anderson said.
    ''I explained this to the three elders, who listened. They treated me fairly, I think,'' she said.
    None of the three elders who questioned Anderson yesterday would speak to reporters.
    Anderson said none of the elders were aware that the three other Jehovah's Witnesses who spoke to Dateline faced disciplinary hearings this week.
    ''All they had was a request from New York for them to settle this issue,'' said Anderson, who thinks action was taken now to discredit the upcoming Dateline show.
    ''If you're disfellowshipped, then Jehovah's Witnesses everywhere cannot watch the show and they can tell their friends that we are disgruntled Witnesses and bona fide apostates and what we say can't be trusted,'' Anderson said.
    The dilemma she finds herself in is distressing. ''The church has been our life. We have sacrificed greatly,'' said Anderson, noting the decades of service that she and her husband had put in at Witness headquarters in New York.
    Anderson said she was risking her reputation in the organization because of her belief that abuses could be curtailed if leaders would take appropriate measures.
    ''The people in the congregations don't know who they're sitting next to. People don't know who they are inviting into their homes,'' she said.
    The Associated Press contributed to this report.
    About Jehovah's Witnesses
    Charles Taze Russell founded the denomination in Pittsburgh in 1872. There are about 6 million Jehovah's Witnesses worldwide, including about 1 million in the United States.
    Jehovah's Witnesses believe they practice the oldest religion on earth. They refer to God as Jehovah, a name translated from the Bible's Old Testament.
    Jehovah's Witnesses don't believe in the Trinity. Instead, they worship Jehovah and believe Jesus is God's son, born as a man and resurrected as a spirit. Witnesses refuse to bear arms, salute the flag or participate in secular government. They also refuse blood transfusions.
    Source: The Associated Press

  • silentlambs
    silentlambs

    FRANCE!

    Normandy Post

    . http://www.normandypost.com/p/53/bd8b4d6ef242.html

    Sat, 11 May 2002 WN Business Broadcasts WN Europe
    Jehovah's Witnesses Kick Out Couple
    The Associated Press, Fri 10 May 2002

    LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — A woman said Friday she and her husband have been excommunicated from the Jehovah's Witnesses after speaking out against the church's handling of their daughter's allegations of sex abuse by another member.

    Barbara and Carl Pandelo, of Belmar, N.J., had been awaiting a decision since Monday, when a judicial committee of the church met in New Jersey to consider ousting them, a practice which the denomination terms disfellowshipping.

    ``They've just made it official now,'' she said Friday night in a telephone interview.

    They are among four Jehovah's Witnesses who were threatened with disfellowship for sowing discord in the faith by speaking out against the church.

    One of them, William Bowen, a 44-year-old former church elder from Draffenville, Ky., has complained that child-sex allegations are generally not reported to secular authorities by the Jehovah's Witnesses because of the church's closed nature and insistence on handling problems internally.

    Anthony Valenti, an elder in the Pandelos' church, did not immediately return phone calls Friday night.

    But J.R. Brown, a spokesman for the denomination, said earlier this week that parents are not punished by the church for going to the police first in cases of child molestation. He said anyone found guilty of molestation by a church judicial committee is removed from all positions of responsibility.

    The Pandelos' dispute with the denomination dates to 1988, when their 12-year-old daughter said she was molested by her paternal grandfather, also a member of the faith. The grandfather has returned to the denomination.

    Carl and Barbara Pandelo have not been active in the church for some time, she said, but she regrets losing the friends they made.

    ``To take someone and shun and abandon them is the most psychologically damaging thing you can do,'' Pandelo said.

    Barbara Anderson of Normandy, Tenn., has also been summoned to appear before a committee. Anderson has said she learned about the church's handling of abuse cases while working at its headquarters in New York City.

    | | | | | | | | | | | |

  • silentlambs
    silentlambs

    . http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A3813-2002May10.html

    washingtonpost.com
    In Brief
    Saturday, May 11, 2002; Page B08
    Ouster Looms for Critics Of Sex Abuse Policy
    Jehovah's Witnesses who publicly criticized their denomination's handling of sexual abuse allegations say it has started the process of ousting them.
    A former elder, a former researcher in the Jehovah's Witnesses' headquarters in Brooklyn, N.Y., and the parents of a girl who was abused say they were summoned to meetings with local judicial committees.
    J.R. Brown, a national spokesman for the Jehovah's Witnesses, confirmed that the four had been called to the hearings, but he said the proceedings may focus on "sins" unrelated to public comments on sexual abuse. He provide no specifics.
    The judicial committees will decide whether the four should be "disfellowshipped," the group's term for excommunication.
    William Bowen, the former Kentucky elder, resigned about 18 months ago to protest the denomination's response to child molestation. Bowen has been accused of apostasy and plans to meet with a judicial committee this month.
    The others summoned were former researcher Barbara Anderson of Tennessee and Carl and Barbara Pandello of New Jersey, whose 12-year-old daughter allegedly was molested by her grandfather, a Jehovah's Witness.
    The Pandellos have already had their meeting, but no decision has been released.
    -- Associated Press

  • silentlambs
    silentlambs

    KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia!!!!

    . http://library.northernlight.com/EC20020509450000047.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc

    Title: Religion News in Brief

    Summary: KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) -- Religious leaders from Muslim nations disagreed at a meeting this week over whether suicide bombings in Israel should be condemned or considered legitimate means of resistance.

    Source: AP Online
    Date: 05/09/2002 12:03
    Price: Free
    Document Size: Short (1 or 2 pages)
    Document ID: EC20020509450000047
    Subject(s): Religion columns
    Religious studies
    Document Type: Articles & General info
    ------= Jehovah's Witnesses say they may be ousted over sex abuse comments
    NEW YORK (AP) -- Jehovah's Witnesses who publicly criticized how their denomination handles claims of sexual abuse say the religious group has started the process of ousting them from the fellowship.
    A former elder, a former researcher in the Jehovah's Witnesses' Brooklyn headquarters and the parents of a girl who was abused say they were summoned to meetings with their local judicial committees.
    J.R. Brown, a national spokesman for the Jehovah's Witnesses, confirmed the four had been called to the hearings, but he said the proceedings may focus on ``sins'' unrelated to any public comments on sexual abuse. He would not provide specifics.
    The judicial committees will decide if the four should be ``disfellowshipped,'' the religious group's term for excommunication.
    William Bowen, the former Kentucky elder, resigned about 18 months ago to protest the denomination's response to child molestation. He has since launched the Web site www.silentlambs.org to highlight the issue.
    Bowen has been accused of apostasy and plans to meet with a judicial committee later this month.
    The others summoned were former researcher Barbara Anderson of Tennessee; and Carl and Barbara Pandello of New Jersey, whose 12-year-old daughter was molested by her grandfather, also a member of the faith. The Pandellos have already had their meeting, but Brown said no decision has been released in their case.

  • silentlambs
    silentlambs

    . http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=4111321&BRD=1614&PAG=461&dept_id=161052&rfi=6

    Whistleblower could lose her church, family

    MARY REEVES, Special to The News May 11, 2002

    When Barbara Anderson of Normandy walked into the Kingdom Hall of the Manchester Jehovah's Witnesses Friday afternoon, there was more than a religious affiliation at stake.
    Her family, the children of the congregation, the children of Coffee County, and common sense and decency were her main concerns.

    She has been a member of the religious group for decades, even working for The Watchtower at the Brooklyn homebase for more than 11 years.

    But because of the denomination's policies toward pedophiles, she has not attended since 1997. Because of the church's attitude toward whistleblowers, she is afraid she will never be able to attend again.

    "They've ordered me to a judicial (within the church) hearing," said Mrs. Anderson. "They say I'm being divisive in the congregation."

    Jehovah's Witnesses, more than 100 years old and tallying more than 1 million members in the United States alone, has several sanctions to apply to members who act outside of the bounds of established church policy. The most drastic is "disfellowship", or excommunication. Members are disfellowshipped, or DF'd in their own terminology, are shunned by other members of the congregation. Even those who live with the DF'd member are forbidden to speak with her on spiritual matters.

    Prior to the meeting with the church elders. Barbara was uncertain of the specific charges brought before her on which the proposed disfellowship would be based, but she feels she knows the true reason. It all deals with pedophiles, JW policy, NBC's Dateline television news magazine, and the actions she and others have taken against both.

    While charges of child molestation rock the Catholic foundations, priests around the world are condemning the acts and condemning the church for protecting the perpetrators. According to Barbara, and Jehovah's Witness Bill Bowen of Kentucky, the Jehovah's Witnesses are doing something much worse.

    According to Bowen, Barbara, and the Silent Lambs organization that Bowen established for abused Jehovah's Witness children, the denomination has protected confessed child abusers, even sending them back out into the field, going door-to-door to profess their faith.

    And the victims?

    At least two cases have been reported in which it was the victims who were disfellowshipped.

    In one case, Erica Rodriguez approached the elders to tell them of another elder (the governing members of the church, always male) had been molesting her. She was told that if she notified the police, she would be the one disfellowshipped. She was shunned. Her abuser was convicted, disfellowshipped by the congregation, and was eventually reinstated.

    In another case, the Pandelo family faces being excommunicated and has already been shunned for reporting their daughters' abuser - her own grandfather.

    The Jehovah's Witness policy is such that members are encouraged to solve their problems within the church, according to Barbara.

    "They say going to the police is a personal decision of the elders, if they know of a pedophile. Not everywhere. In some states, in Tennessee, they are required to report the abuse," she said.

    JW policy also states that two witnesses or a confession are needed to prove the abuse occurred, but Anderson siad that even confession didn't protect the victims and futere victims of abuse.

    "I know of two in this area - confessed molesters," she said.

    Although the policy does indicate that those known molesters should only go door-to-door in the company of another Witness, Barbara stated that this was not always the case.

    "The worst part is, I can't tell anyone. I can be disfelloshipped for slander, when he has confessed to being a molester and is not disfellowhipped," she said.

    Barbara was not the only one to see the problem. Bowen, who also faces disfellowshipping this week, was outraged and established Silent Lambs. The organization not only serves as a support group for victims and their families, but as an advocate for change within the church.

    It is that advocacy that now threatens Barbara's standing in the church. She, Bowen and the Pandelos were all interviewed for a Dateline segment about the issue, tentatively scheduled to air later this month. She, Bowen and the Pandelos all faced charges of "divisiveness" and other spiritual crimes in the same week.

    In an interview with the New York Post, JH spokesperson J.R. Brown stated that the threatened exco0mmunications had nothing to do with the Dateline interview and that "church headquarters had no idea that these people would be on the show."

    Yet research displayed more than six internet announcements on the program, updates and names, all linked to the Silent Lambs and the Watchtower sites.

    Brown also said that local congregation decided to charge the members with various spiritual violations.

    "That is not true," said Barbara, who considers the elders of the Manchester Kingdom Hall to be good friends. "That is a lie. They didn't know what it was about. Those orders came down from Brooklyn."

    After the meeting , Barbara stated that the specific charges against her dealt with an article she had supposedly written for an apostate publication - apostate meaning one whose teachings were against the faith. Members can be disfelloshipped for visiting an apostate website, much less for writing for one. The article had been cobbled together from private emails she had sent to a friend, one who has since had a nervous breakdown. As for the charges of her being divisive within the Congregation, Barbara shook her head.

    "They (the local elders) didn't even know about the pedophile cover-up," she said. "How can I be divisive if they didn't even know the work was doing on that?'

    Apparently her leaders agreed, and told her they were sending a letter to the headquarters saying there was no proof of the charges levied against her. In bizarre Catch-22, she was asked if she could write to the apostate publication and request they explain the source of the article and remove it - and act that could get her disfellowshipped.

    The real reason behind the charges she believes, is the Dateline program. If all the members scheduled to appear on the show are excommunicated before it airs, no practicing Jehovah's Witness will watch the program, shunning it - and the information it might supply.

    Her status within the church is still in question. According to Barbara, she still faces the threat of excommunication, a result that would be devastating.

    "This is my life," she said. Her husband of almost 45 years, Joe, is an elder, and her son, daughter-in-law and grandson are all members. If she is DF'd, her husband faces his own sanctions, and her son and his family would have to shun her. It is not a future Barbara wants at all, but it is a result she can live with if she must. The final result she said, must be a change in the church policy that protects pedophiles, so that it protects the victims instead.

    "I'll lose my son to help Jehovah's Witness children," she said. "I'll lose my own grandson to help Jehovah's Witness children."

  • bluesapphire
    bluesapphire

    Uh, isn't this slander and defamation of character:

    he said the proceedings may focus on "sins" unrelated to public comments on sexual abuse
    I would SUE THE PANTS OFF OF JR BROWN PERSONALLY AND THE WATCHTOWER HE IS SPEAKING FOR!
  • silentlambs
    silentlambs

    . http://www.tennessean.com/local/archives/02/05/17601862.shtml?Element_ID=17601862

    Jehovah's Witnesses downplay sex abuse, women say

    LARRY MCCORMACK / STAFF
    Melissa Trice, 30, of Spring Hill says she was molested by an elder from the Jehovah's Witnesses organization.

    By LEON ALLIGOOD
    Staff Writer

    Two Middle Tennessee women said they have a full understanding of a Tullahoma woman's claim that the Jehovah's Witnesses organization has downplayed or ignored child sexual abuse for years.

    ''In fact, nothing happened to the man who molested me,'' said Melissa Trice, 30, of Spring Hill, about an incident she says occurred in Shelbyville 22 years ago.

    ''One of the elders asked me, 'What were you wearing?' like I had provoked it. I will never forget that. I was 8 years old, for God's sake.''

    The other woman, who asked that her name not be used, alleged that a teen-ager in her Middle Tennessee congregation molested her repeatedly between the ages of 6 and 8.

    ''They prayed with him, but he didn't go away,'' said the 25-year-old woman who lives in the Nashville area.

    The women were prompted to disclose their experiences after reading a story in Saturday's Tennessean about a Tullahoma woman who faced disfellowshipping, the equivalent of excommunication in the Jehovah's Witnesses faith. That woman, Barbara Anderson, risked shunning because she believed the organization repeatedly had ignored child sexual abuse by congregants.

    Anderson was one of four Jehovah's Witnesses who told their stories to the NBC news show Dateline, which has been investigating the denomination for more than a year. A spokesman for the show said the segment is tentatively scheduled to be televised May 28. Two of the four were disfellowshipped last week, while Anderson awaits a decision. The fourth individual, a Kentucky man, is scheduled to have a meeting with local elders in a few weeks.

    The Midstate women who said they had been abused were relieved to know someone was talking about the issue.

    ''Finally, I thought, 'Somebody is trying to do something about this,' '' said Trice, who identified the person she said abused her, now deceased, as a member of the congregation her family attended.

    The man was at her home to do odd jobs for her father on the day of the molestation.

    ''He sent my sister into the front room and called me to him. The elders tried to pass him off as old and senile, but he called me by my name. I don't think he was senile,'' she said.

    Henry Carr of Shelbyville, who was identified by Trice as an elder in the church at the time of her abuse, would not comment on the woman's allegations.

    ''I'm not free to say anything on it, I guess. I don't want to get into all that stuff,'' Carr said in a telephone interview.

    After the molestation, Trice said, she ran to her room and waited for her parents.

    ''I told them he touched me,'' Trice remembered. ''They took the matter to the elders because that's what you do in Jehovah's Witnesses.''

    ''You don't have associations outside church,'' said the other woman, who said her abuser also went unpunished by law because the now 18-year-old case never was turned over for prosecution.

    According to state law, the women's cases should have been reported to authorities.

    Since 1972, Tennessee has required that child abuse be reported even if someone only suspects abuse and has no direct knowledge of the abuse, said Carla Aaron, spokeswoman for the Department of Children's Services. Under the law, people who suspect abuse but do not alert authorities can be charged with a misdemeanor.

    Trice said church elders advised her parents to keep peace in the congregation by inviting the abuser to dinner.

    ''Can you imagine how I felt, sitting across the table from him in my own house?'' Trice said.

    The allegations of abuses in the Jehovah's Witnesses organization, which has 1 million members in the United States, follows numerous press accounts of allegations of cover-up of pedophilia by Catholic priests nationwide.

    Officials at the New York office of the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, the incorporated name of the Jehovah's Witnesses, deny that there is an organization-wide attempt to avoid prosecution of child molesters so the organization will not be held up to public inspection.

    Elders, parents and victims are encouraged to report suspected abuse to authorities, according to church officials and literature.

    On one section of the Watchtower's Web site, officials deal with the subject of child abuse through statements from church officials.

    Trice and the unnamed woman said the sexual abuse they suffered still affects them.

    ''I'm in my 20s, and I'm still not over what happened. I suffer with security issues and self-confidence issues. There's a lot that can affect a child for years and years,'' said the woman who asked to remain nameless.

    She hasn't been to a meeting at her local Jehovah's Witnesses Kingdom Hall since 1997, which she said has caused a rift between her and her parents, who are still active in the organization.

    ''My parents and I are not on speaking terms. They don't understand.''

    Trice said she was left ''thoroughly confused'' by her abuse.

    ''Nobody explained to me that what happened wasn't my fault, and I thought that I was supposed to respond in a sexual way when a man took an interest in me,'' she said, saying her promiscuity led to disfellowship as a teen.

    ''It took me a long time to understand that I didn't do anything, but I'm still working through it all, but it's hard.''

    Both of the women are mothers and said they have taken extra precautions to make sure their children are not sexually abused.

    ''This is not going to happen to my child. I don't want it to happen to anybody's child,'' Trice said.

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