Current:Home > MyA 5-year-old child is raped. Mormon church stays silent. Then comes the truly shocking part. -Ascend Finance Compass
A 5-year-old child is raped. Mormon church stays silent. Then comes the truly shocking part.
View
Date:2025-04-12 19:20:05
A creeper confesses to his bishop. He’s raping his 5-year-old daughter.
For seven years, the bishop tells no one outside his church – remaining silent, as a church lawyer advises him to do – and the abuse continues. Then the creeper starts raping another daughter, just six weeks old.
Last week, a Cochise County judge dismissed a lawsuit brought by several of the creeper's children against The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
It’s galling, though not surprising, that a judge would decline to hold the church responsible. While Arizona has a mandatory reporting law for teachers and doctors and such, members of the clergy are not required to report a confession that a child is being abused.
What is shocking – stunning, really – is that a key state legislator won’t even consider changing the law to carve out an exemption that might have protected that 5-year-old girl, her sister and God only knows how many other children.
Rapist's rights trump those of his victim
“The seal of confession is a sacred, sacred part of the Catholic church,’’ Rep. Quang Nguyen, who is Catholic, recently told Capitol Media Services' Howard Fischer.
Put another way, a rapist’s sacred religious rights trump a child’s sacred right to be protected from a sexual predator? Really, sir?
Social media emboldens abusers:Child sex abuse content is exploding online. We're losing the fight against it.
This horror story was brought to light last year, the result of an Associated Press investigation into the Mormon church’s handling of child sexual abuse cases.
Paul Adams, of Bisbee, a father of six, admitted during a counseling session with his bishop that he was raping his then-5-year-old daughter.
According to court records, Bishop John Herrod called the church’s help line, which is used by bishops to report child sex abuse to church officials in Salt Lake City, and was advised by attorney not to call the police or alert anyone outside the church. According to the AP, which based its report on court records, attorney Merrill Nelson advised Herrod and his eventual replacement, Bishop Robert "Kim" Mauzy, for more than two years not to report Adams.
So they didn’t – instead trying to persuade Adams to seek help – and the rest, as they say, is horrifying history.
Church's silence let abuse go on for years
The abuse went on until finally in 2017, Adams was arrested. It seems he videoed his perverted attacks of his children and posted them on the internet. Authorities in New Zealand and the United States traced one of the videos to Adams, who later died by suicide in jail while awaiting trial.
Three of Adams’ six children sued the church, the bishops and other church officials in 2021, accusing them of negligence and conspiring to cover up child sex abuse to avoid “costly lawsuits” and protect the church's reputation.
In a Nov. 3 ruling, Cochise County Superior Court Judge Timothy Dickerson threw out the lawsuit, saying the church had no legal duty to report that a child was being raped.
"Church defendants were not required under the Mandatory Reporting Statute to report the abuse of Jane Doe 1 by her father because their knowledge of the abuse came from confidential communications which fall within the clergy-penitent exception," Dickerson wrote.
Arizona legislator thwarts bill for clergy to report abuse
Church officials, who apparently sleep quite well at night, pronounced themselves “pleased” with the decision.
“Contrary to some news reports and exaggerated allegations, the court found that The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and its clergy handled this matter consistent with Arizona law,” the Mormon church said in a prepared statement.
Which bring us back to Arizona law and the people who make it at the state Capitol.
Rep. Stacey Travers, D-Phoenix, introduced a bill this year to require a member of the clergy to report abuse learned about during a confession or confidential communication if “there is a reasonable suspicion to believe that the abuse is ongoing, will continue or may be a threat to other minors.”
It didn’t even rate a hearing. Didn’t even get assigned to a committee.
'Sound of Freedom' is dangerously wrong:'Sound of Freedom' misleads audiences about the horrible reality of human trafficking
His rationale: Victims can turn to others for help
And, apparently, it won’t go anywhere next year either, as Rep. Quang Nguyen, the Prescott Republican who chairs the House Judiciary Committee, says he won’t give the bill a hearing. (He did say he would at least speak to Travers, so I guess there's that.)
Nguyen, in his interview with Capitol Media Services, said he believes that the bill "is an attack on the church," and he questioned why members of the clergy would need to call the police or state Department of Child Safety.
"The victim has the parents, the victim has the teachers, the victim has friends, the victim has relatives that he or she is close to," Nguyen said. "So, it doesn’t need a priest to be able to go to court and testify."
Tell that to the 5-year-old Bisbee girl who would endure seven years of assaults while devout daddy’s bishops stayed silent.
“They just let it keep happening,” the girl told the AP last year. “They just said, ‘Hey, let’s excommunicate her father.’ It didn’t stop. ‘Let’s have them do therapy.’ It didn’t stop. ‘Hey, let’s forgive and forget and all this will go away.’ It didn’t go away.”
For her, it likely never will.
Perhaps Rep. Nguyen can explain to her that her father’s rights were sacred.
“The seal of confession is never to be broken,’’ he said. “And priests will go to jail for it.’’
And children will live in hell because of it.
For shame, Rep. Nguyen.
Laurie Roberts is a columnist for The Arizona Republic and azcentral.com, where this column first published. Reach Roberts at [email protected]. Follow her on X, formerly Twitter, at @LaurieRoberts or on Threads at @laurierobertsaz
veryGood! (1243)
Related
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- California failed to track how billions are spent to combat homelessness programs, audit finds
- South Carolina’s top officer not releasing details on 2012 hack that stole millions of tax returns
- Water Scarcity and Clean Energy Collide in South Texas
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- As a Contested Pittsburgh Primary Nears, Climate Advocates Rally Around a Progressive Fracking Opponent, Rep. Summer Lee
- Henry Smith: Summary of the Australian Stock Market in 2023
- Aerosmith announces rescheduled Peace Out farewell tour: New concert dates and ticket info
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Got kids? Here’s what to know about filing your 2023 taxes
Ranking
- 'Most Whopper
- Shannen Doherty, Holly Marie Combs and More Charmed Stars Set for Magical Reunion
- Mississippi bill would limit where transgender people can use bathrooms in public buildings
- It's National Siblings Day! Video shows funny, heartwarming moments between siblings
- Sam Taylor
- Masters Par 3 Contest coverage: Leaderboard, highlights from Rickie Fowler’s win
- Social Security's COLA estimate rises. But seniors could struggle as inflation heats up.
- Federal appeals court hearing arguments on nation’s first ban on gender-affirming care for minors
Recommendation
Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
A Blair Witch Project Remake Is in the Works and Ready to Haunt You
Iowa governor signs bill that gives state authority to arrest and deport some migrants
Henry Smith: Challenges and responses to the Australian stock market in 2024
Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
Water Scarcity and Clean Energy Collide in South Texas
Justice Neil Gorsuch is not pleased with judges setting nationwide policy. But how common is it?
Desperate young Guatemalans try to reach the US even after horrific deaths of migrating relatives