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Brothers Who Won Landmark Supreme Court Case Over Secret Pedophile Files Settle Cases with BSA
Five New Salvation Army Sexual Abuse Cases Filed
Idaho Legislature Passes Bill Giving Victims More Time to File Suit
LDS Church Told Turn Over Financial Information
Landmark Abuse Case Filed in Idaho this week
Mormon family's Sex Secrets
New Idaho Law Gives Adult Survivors of Child Sexual Abuse the Hope of Justice
Sex abuse victims to promote awareness of new law
Spokane Catholic Diocese Bankruptcy Payments to Victims
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Brothers That Won Landmark Supreme Court case Exposing Secret BSA Pedophile Database Settle
April 02, 2007
Former Victims Speak Out Praising New Law Giving Rights to Victims
April 02, 2007
New law gives abuse victims more time
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Mormon family's Sex Secrets
This is a prototypical story which perfectly describes the phenomenon we repeatedly encounter in the Mormon Church culture. It comes from the Brisbane Times of Australia which further demonstrates the world-wide nature of the phenomenon of the Mormon church hiding child molesters, failing to report the sexual abuse of children to the police and by the church persistently dealing with the problem internally through scripture reading and prayer. It has to stop but the ruling hierarchy of the church either remains in denial about the nature and extent of the problem within its ranks or it approves of the hiding of child molesters by its lower clergy.
Mormon family's sex secrets
A Brisbane teenager was quoted religious scripture and banned from taking the sacrament as punishment for molesting a female relative after the girl's parents decided against reporting the offence to police, a court has been told.
The family instead left it to a church bishop to discipline the boy, but the strategy failed and the teenager went on to commit multiple sex offences against young girls over a 15-year period, ending with the stalking of his wife's 16 year-old sister last year.
Now aged 29, the man admitted at Brisbane's District Court yesterday to spying on his sister-in-law on eight separate occasions while she used the bathroom.
He also pleaded guilty to seven counts of indecent dealing with children under 12 and 16, stemming from the molestation of his younger sister and two female cousins between 1991 and 2006.
The court heard the man, who cannot be named, had been just 13 when he began sexually abusing the girls, the youngest of them aged 11.
The abuse continued for years, with one of the attacks occurring in the back of the family car while the man's mother and father were present.
When one of the girls complained, her father was persuaded to allow her attacker to be counselled by the church bishop for six months, instead of going to the police.
"The bishop quoted scriptures to him and the discipline was that he was not to take the sacraments for a period of time," Defence counsel Tim Ryan said.
"It didn't have the desired effect."
Mr Ryan told the court of his client's "dysfunctional" upbringing in a Mormon household of eight children "where there were completely inappropriate [sexual] behaviours."
Mr Ryan said the man and his brother had been sent out to trawl through recycling bins in search of pornographic magazines for their father, who would discuss his sexual exploits at the dinner table and play "inappropriate" movies while the children were present.
The man's father was convicted in 2004 of sexually abusing his daughter and two other young girls.
Although the prosecution yesterday argued for a two year jail term for the man, Judge Robert Pack was asked to take into account the impact of his father's behaviour on shaping his own "abnormal" sexual conduct.
The judge sentenced him to serve four months behind bars, with a probationary period of three years.

