A Westmoreland man was recently charged with sexually assaulting and molesting a young girl by a statewide grand jury that has been investigating sex abuse among elders in Jehovah’s Witness congregations across Pennsylvania for years.
Ronald W. Mangone, 69, who was a member of the Jehovah’s Witness congregation in New Kensington, allegedly abused the girl beginning at the age of 6 from 1991 to 1994, according to a police complaint filed April 2.
A second girl also was allegedly sexually abused by the suspect in the late 1980s, but law enforcement agents say they were unable to charge him because the statute of limitations had expired.
Mr. Mangone now faces three felony charges and five misdemeanor charges for sexually assaulting and endangering a minor.
He is the latest suspect in a wide-ranging investigation that has so far led to the arrests of at least 14 others from Jehovah’s Witness congregations on similar charges since 2022.
“What's going on in Pennsylvania has much much broader implications,” said Mark O’Donnell, a longtime advocate for sexual assault victims in the congregations and a witness who has appeared before the grand jury.
The sweeping investigation in Pennsylvania, launched by the attorney general’s office in 2019, is the first to target Jehovah’s Witness groups in what has been described by some law enforcement agents as a longstanding problem within the religious organization..
“It’s groundbreaking,” Mr. O’Donnell said. “This really hasn't been done in other states.”
Records show that Western Pennsylvania is “right in the epicenter,” he said, pointing to reports that show eight of the 15 alleged perpetrators charged so far from Allegheny, Beaver, Butler, Cambria and Westmoreland counties.
In 2022, a man from Butler County — Eric E. Eleam — was arrested on charges of rape and sexual assault of minors. When police appeared at his home to arrest him, he shot and killed himself before he could be taken into custody.
Jehovah’s Witness congregations have a long history in the region. The religious organization was founded in Pittsburgh in the late 19th century with a small group of Bible students. Soon, their ranks grew to thousands — and now millions — across the country.
A preliminary hearing for Mr. Mangone is scheduled for May 30.