Will 2023 also be the year from Hell for Jehovah's Witnesses? “It’s going to take efforts from all states to fully peel it away.”

by was a new boy 10 Replies latest watchtower child-abuse

  • was a new boy
    was a new boy

    2023 will be Year from Hell – Martin Armstrong

    https://rumble.com/v1cvw9r-2023-will-be-year-from-hell-martin-armstrong.html

    CO.

    'In the affidavit, one witness said Swisher told them to not tell anyone about what he did. However, he said even if they did tell someone, Swisher reportedly told the victim "no one would believe" them anyway because of who Swisher was.

    One witness, who left the Kingdom Hall, told investigators victims were afraid to report the incidents because they would lose privileges in the Kingdom Hall or be excommunicated. According to the affidavit, an elder was removed from their position because they wouldn't stop investigating the claims against Swisher.

    According to the affidavit, witnesses allege other elders "didn't do anything" regarding Swisher despite being told by numerous people of the allegations.'

    https://krdo.com/top-stories/2022/12/21/court-docs-eight-victims-listed-in-sexual-assault-on-a-child-case-against-jehovahs-witness-elder/#vf-conversations-container

    PA.

    'Jeffrey Fritz, a Philadelphia attorney,... even the organization’s policies on S-77 forms are rooted in evading accountability. “The wall is beginning to come down,” Fritz said. “It’s going to take efforts from all states to fully peel it away.”

    'Hill volunteered, as recently as two years ago, at another congregation in Berks County, but was removed from that position because of complaints about inappropriate contact with 11- and 12-year-old boys, investigators allege.' Why hadn’t elders reported Hill to law enforcement?'

    'The committee likened Hill’s crimes to alcoholism: “ … so it was with Brother Hill’s addiction when around young boys,” they wrote on the form, which was later mailed to the Witnesses’ leadership, the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York.'

    https://www.inquirer.com/news/jehovahs-witness-records-pennsylvania-sex-abuse-children-20221222.html#loaded




  • was a new boy
    was a new boy

    '“That form is to be kept, literally, in a safe, never to be opened, or shared with anyone at a congregation,” he said. “In some cases, what I’ve seen is, they destroy the records at the local congregation level, and a copy is kept at their headquarters, in New York.”

    Fritz argues that transporting written evidence from local cities and counties — where crimes would be prosecuted — to New York is a move meant to stymie investigators.

    “It’s somewhat a shell game,” he said. “Local law enforcement doesn’t have the resources to do interstate investigations.”

    That culture of secrecy, though, is starting to crack.

    “The wall is beginning to come down,” Fritz said. “It’s going to take efforts from all states to fully peel it away.”

    The Attorney General’s Office asks others who have abuse allegations to contact a special hotline: 1-888-538-8541.'

    With Fritz saying, “It’s going to take efforts from all states to fully peel it away.”

    Will be interesting once report is public, if the Pennsylvania grand jury investigation got all 50 USA state records or just the records from the state of PA.

  • was a new boy
    was a new boy

    'All the Apostate Stuff pushed to the bottom' - 2:13

    https://www.reddit.com/r/exjw/comments/zvvo62/pid_public_information_department_one_goal_is_to/

    2023 could have started out better.

    Jehovah’s Witnesses abuse scandal is a reminder to end cover-up culture | Editorial

    A disturbing pattern of denial and concealment emerges across sexual abuse scandals that rock secular and religious organizations. Bringing the abuse to light is a critical first step.

    The Jehovah's Witnesses world headquarters in Warwick, N.Y. Records of sexual abuse by members of the religious denomination are coming to light as part of a Pennsylvania grand jury investigation led by the state Attorney General's Office.
    The Jehovah's Witnesses world headquarters in Warwick, N.Y. Records of sexual abuse by members of the religious denomination are coming to light as part of a Pennsylvania grand jury investigation led by the state Attorney General's Office.Read moreTim Tai

    Locked inside the Jehovah’s Witnesses world headquarters are secret files detailing sexual abuse by members of the religious denomination. Some of those files are slowly coming to light thanks to a grand jury investigation by state Attorney General Josh Shapiro’s office that was spurred by The Inquirer.

    With Shapiro scheduled to be sworn in as Pennsylvania’s 48th governor on Jan. 17, hopefully the investigation will continue at full steam. Shapiro has been fearless in taking on influential religious institutions, starting with a 2018 grand jury report of the Roman Catholic Church that detailed decades of sexual abuse by more than 300 priests in Pennsylvania.

    » READ MORE: ‘Brother Hill’s addiction’: Secret records show Jehovah’s Witnesses tolerated abuse

    The Catholic Church has faced perhaps the most intense scrutiny for the widespread sexual abuse across the country, around the world, and leading straight to the Vatican. But in the 20 years since the abuse and systematic cover-ups were first uncovered, it is painfully clear the Catholic Church doesn’t hold a monopoly on these horrific crimes.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Similar sexual abuse scandals have recently rocked other religious organizations. The Justice Department is investigating the Southern Baptist Convention. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, known as the Mormon church, reportedly diverted calls to its abuse hotline away from law enforcement, leaving victims vulnerable. An independent investigation found scores of sexual abuse cases at Jewish summer camps.

    The abuse is also not limited to religious organizations. Last year, the Boy Scouts of America agreed to pay $850 million to settle sexual abuse cases involving 60,000 men and stretching back decades. USA Gymnastics and the United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee agreed to pay $380 million to hundreds of female gymnasts who said they were abused by the former team doctor of the national gymnastics team.

    While each case is different, there are troubling parallels. A person in authority uses their position to take advantage of vulnerable children, teens, or in some cases adults. When the sexual abuse is brought to the attention of those in charge, there is an effort to cover it up, deny wrongdoing, and discredit the accuser.

    In the case of the Jehovah’s Witnesses, The Inquirer first documented a pattern of secrecy surrounding abuse allegations in 2018. From there, the Attorney General’s Office launched an investigation.

    » READ MORE: For Jehovah's Witnesses, an insular culture and archaic rules have created a 'recipe for child abuse.'

    In October, four Jehovah’s Witnesses were charged with sexual abuse of 19 people who were all minors, including some victims who were relatives. Perhaps just as disturbing, the investigation found Witnesses leaders were aware of the abuse but did nothing.

    In one instance, one of the men charged in October confessed to a committee of Witnesses elders that he had “affairs” with at least nine children in 1998. The confession was part of the secret files maintained at the Jehovah’s Witnesses headquarters outside of New York City.

    But rather than report the abuse to law enforcement authorities, the Witnesses leaders tried to cover it up while the sexual predator remained in their midst. That has been part of the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ playbook going back decades.

    The Inquirer obtained a 1989 memo that instructed elders not to cooperate if police ever showed up with a search warrant. A 1997 memo advised elders not to tell congregations about any known sexual predators, leaving parents unaware and children vulnerable.

    The organization issued a statement in 2020 that said, “Any suggestion that Jehovah’s Witnesses foster or enable abuse is false.”

    Similar denials have been issued by other religious organizations before. Those with information about abuse would be wise to try a higher authority and call the attorney general’s special hotline at 888-538-8541.

    Published
    Jan. 3, 2023
  • TonusOH
    TonusOH
    One witness, who left the Kingdom Hall,

    I wonder if this is what will finally force some useful -if not sufficient- changes in policy. Did that person leave the KH and move to another, or does "left the Kingdom Hall" refer to disassociating themselves or otherwise leaving the JW religion? The GB can protest until they are blue in the face, but nothing will make the cognitive dissonance go away when people are confronted with a clear problem and they get to witness how the organization fails them and their children.

  • road to nowhere
    road to nowhere

    Friend lives close there. A big well known family with ties, the kind who run things their way. The " branch" seems to be washing their hands, leaving the locals to hold the bag. An operating committee is the go between for t h e h all titled in WT hands and the sheeple.

    If there is more I will post it if this old phone will work.

    PS. Simon, I still cant get my password figured out to use the new reliable phone

  • was a new boy
    was a new boy
    Mark O'Donnell is reporting that every congregation in PA has been subpoenaed for CSA records going back to 1987! Jehovah's Witnesses have hired the law firm that defended the Catholic Church! This. Is. Huge!'

    @ 1:02:55

  • was a new boy
    was a new boy

    List of counties in Pennsylvania

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_counties_in_Pennsylvania

    Lackawanna County 069 Scranton is where this book was written.



  • enoughisenough
    enoughisenough

    was a new boy....I just watched the video earlier...I caught part of it live...it's all good but for those on a tight time limit, it isn't long after time line 1:48 that Mark talks about PA. I bet a lot of those elders are anxious--

  • was a new boy
    was a new boy

    Going back to 1987 records; some of those elders have passed. I think 2 elders passed that were involved with Brother Hill. The rest maybe sweating somewhat, if they helped cover it up.

    Pennsylvania's new attorney general — Michelle Henry.

    'Henry praised members of the congregation for stepping forward and says some faith leaders are enablers that could lead to further prosecutions.'

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/other/pennsylvania-attorney-general-michelle-henry-brings-local-roots-to-her-new-job/ar-AA17xyz6

  • Vidiot
    Vidiot

    Wow.

    The Tide rose a couple feet there.

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