The trial was concluded on Friday, March 18, and the two elders have been found guilty of Class A criminal misdemeanor for violating provisions of the state’s mandatory reporter law, as reported on JWD here. They will be sentenced next Friday, 25th March.
In an earlier post I commented to jhine that we will know whether anyone cared and whether they acted responsibly when the case was held. Whether or not they cared the court has found they did not act responsibly. The basis for this finding is interesting because they claimed the confession in 2006 fell under clergy-penitent privelege. This claim was upheld and the judge did not consider the confession of the perpetrator in his ruling, but only the statements made by the child and another church member (her mother), which were not confessions and so not protected by the confessional process.
The elders also claimed that while the "most serious" acts occurred between
2013 and 2018, they knew nothing beyond the initial allegation they
heard in 2006. In the hearing on March 11 it was reported that the initial allegation was that the perpetrator had been “touching [the] private parts” of the victim. The more serious acts, including rape, occurred later and were unknown to the elders.
The lesson seems to be clear for any who rely on clergy-penitent privelege, whether JW, RC etc., is that even if the confession is protected disclosure in certain jurisdictions, if they hear of child sexual abuse from anyone apart from the penitent then that privelege falls away.