Greyeyes said:
: Because my now ex wife was molested by her dad back in the 60's (while he was an elder), my dad and I were talking when he got back about how the issue of molestation was heavily discussed.
It was not heavily discussed. It was lightly discussed, and a new policy was stated. This policy was that, for the first time, elders are not to discourage anyone from going to the police about molestation. The old official policy of requiring reporting only in states or countries where the law requires it was reiterated.
What did not become policy was the converse -- that elders should always encourage molestation victims or their parents to report to the police.
The things that were said were repeated almost verbatim in a February, 2002 letter to Bodies of Elders.
: He also tol dme that the Society's stand on it had always been that of that it MUST be reported to the athorities.
He's wrong. The unofficial policy has always been to discourage reporting -- even in states where reporting is required. This is proved by Bill Bowen's experience where a guy in the Service Department told him not to report a molester in Kentucky.
: That there had been a problem for too long of local elders being the ones to sweep it under the carpet, to protect a friend.
That certainly has been done, but there are now court cases filed or soon to be filed where it will be proved that the Society itself told elders to sweep it under the rug.
: They also said that any elder who learns of it MUST report it to the police as their christian duty.
Nope. It might be a Christian duty, but it certainly isn't Watchtower policy. That policy is simple: report only in states that require clergy to report.
: The example used was that if a witness commits murder, that the elders would go to the police, and that this is no different.
Well that's a bad example. The Silentlambs website has (or had; you'll have to check) on file a letter from the Society to an elder instructing him to ignore the fact that a new JW had confessed to murdering several people before he became a JW.
: And that if an elder was found out to have hidden thetruth about a situation that he would be removed of all responsibility.
Posh! They get in trouble only by ignoring the Society's unofficial policies -- policies never written down, but communicated via oral presentations given by Circuit and District Overseers, and by phone calls to the Service Department.
AlanF