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Religion News Blog This web log highlights news items, articles and web sites of interest to Christian apologists, countercult professionals, researchers and others.

OREGON JEHOVAH'S WITNESS SHUN SEX MURDER CHRISTIAN LONGO

FBI agent: Longo confessed
10/02/2002
Associated Press
The FBI agent who accompanied Christian Longo from Mexico testified Wednesday that Longo confessed to killing his wife and three small children, and that Longo said he did it for religious reasons.
Agent Daniel Clegg said he sat by Longo on the flight from Mexico, and that he asked Longo why he killed his family.
Clegg said Longo first denied Clegg's suggestions that Longo had killed his family to cover up sexual abuse.
"I asked him, Why did you kill your wife and three young children?" Clegg testified.
"His response was, your scenario (sexual abuse) could not be further from the truth," Clegg said. "He said, 'I sent them to a better place."'
Clegg paused and the courtroom was silent for about seven seconds. Penny Dupuie, the sister of mother MaryJane Longo, sobbed quietly.
Christian Longo looks over paperwork, while Penny Dupuie, right, Mary Jane Longo's sister, and Kathy Baker, second right, Mary Jane Longo's sister in law, listen at a hearing at the Lincoln County Circuit Court. (AP Photo) The testimony provided the first clues to a motive for Longo since the discovery of the family's bodies around Christmastime last year.
Longo was once a Jehovah's Witness, but was excluded from the church after he pleaded guilty to using his laptop computer to print counterfeit checks. His wife and children continued to attend the church.
Earlier, Judge Robert Huckleberry had said he believed the defense argument that Longo's arrest in Mexico violated an international treaty may lack legal grounds.
"The fact that you don't agree with the way things shook out doesn't mean ... that (it) was illegal," Huckleberry told Longo and his two lawyers.
Longo's lead court-appointed attorney, Ken Hadley, argued Wednesday that his client would never have left Mexico voluntarily had he known it would expose him to the death penalty in Oregon.
"He got conned into waving his rights in coming back to face the death penalty," Hadley said.
Huckleberry's belief, however, may stymie the defense team's attempt remove the possibility of the death penalty for Longo before the trial begins. The defense has also filed a motion to suppress the confession Clegg gathered on the Continental Airlines flight from Cancun to Houston on Miranda grounds. Huckleberry has not ruled on that motion.
Clegg asked Longo to sign a document advising him of his rights outside the airport in Cancun. At the time, Longo was still in Mexican custody. Longo fled to the Cancun area of Mexico around Christmas time last year after the body of 5-year-old Zachery Michael Longo was found floating in an ocean inlet near Waldport just before Christmas.
His sister, 3-year-old Sadie Ann, was found three days later, cocooned inside a sleeping bag, a floral print pillow case containing a rock tied to her ankle. A few days later, the bodies of his wife, 34-year-old MaryJane, and their 2-year-old daughter Madison were found inside a suitcase in a Newport marina, and police began an international manhunt.
As an attorney in a capital case, Hadley's main goal is to keep his client alive.
http://www.kgw.com/news-
local/stories/kgw_1002_news_longo_update.7cf41e47.html 10/3/02 7:21 PM

MORE JEHOVAH WITNESS NEWS

[Jehovah's Witnesses] Banned church member sues Jehovah's Witnesses

Item 1188 • Posted on: 11/14/2002 • Weblogged by Religion News Blog

The Tullahoma News, Nov. 9, 2002

http://www.zwire.com/

By BRIAN JUSTICE

A Normandy resident who was disfellowshipped from Jehovah's Witnesses is suing the organization for $7 million on grounds the alleged action against her was wrong.

Barbara Joanna Anderson filed the lawsuit Thursday in Coffee County Circuit Court.

She is seeking $2 million in compensatory damages, plus $5 million in punitive damages.

The defendants are listed as:

* Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York Inc.

* Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania Inc.

* Watchtower Enterprises LLC.

* Watchtower Foundation Inc.

* Watchtower Associates LTD.

* Kingdom Support Services Inc.

* Christian Congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses.

* Religious Order of Jehovah's Witnesses.

* The Watchtower Group Inc.

* Manchester Congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses Elders.

* Lawrence A. Seely, Gary Hobson, Dale Dormanen, Robert E. Matthews, David Semonian, J.R. Brown, and John Does No. 1 through No. 4.

Mrs. Anderson and her husband, Joe, had publicly spoken about alleged sexual child abuse being widespread among the Jehovah's Witnesses denomination.

The Andersons are members of the Silentlambs, which was organized to stop what they say has been repeated sexual abuse permitted because of Jehovah Witness bylaws.

Mrs. Anderson had said the denomination has a policy that does not require pedophile incidences to be reported to law enforcement authorities. She added that Jehovah Witnesses say they handle such matters in house.

However, Mrs. Anderson said what in effect happens is pedophiles end up being protected by a cover-up which allows them to continue their illegal actions.

She added they are often moved about through the denomination's many locations, which allows them to continue their actions.

She said child sexual abuse cases have occurred in Coffee County.

Mrs. Anderson said her and her husband's efforts to help change the system have resulted in retaliation from the denomination.

The Andersons have been disfellowshipped by the Kingdom Hall in Tullahoma where they attended. Disfellowshipping, the equivalent of excommunication, is the harshest punishment handed down by the organization against members. Shunning is included as part of the punishment, which separates families.

Mrs. Anderson said she is no longer able to see or communicate with her son, Lance Anderson, or his family who live at Mishawaka, Ind. She added that Lance is a practicing Jehovah Witness and is bound by the denomination's rules.

Watchtower spokesman J.R. Brown previously defended Jehovah's Witnesses' policies.

"Clearly, with us having 95,000 congregations around the world and three to five to six elders in each, mistakes may have been made," he said. "But that does not mean that we don't have a strong and aggressive policy that shows we abhor child molestation."

Brown said that anyone found guilty of molestation by a church judicial committee is removed from all positions of responsibility and cannot evangelize door-to-door without being accompanied by a fellow Jehovah's Witness.

Mrs. Anderson says in the lawsuit that she can "no longer pursue her work to assist Jehovah's Witnesses who are child abuse victims because they are prohibited from speaking to a disfellowshipped person.

"This has caused irreparable harm to victims who are barred from taking to her."

The suit says Mrs. Anderson has "suffered severe emotional stress as a result of all of the foregoing acts complained of and that she has incurred medical expenses for treatment of her emotional problems which in turn caused physical problems."

The suit says she has suffered "severe emotional stress and the resulting medical expenses and physical problems were caused by the defendants with the specific intent to cause emotional distress and with a reckless disregard of the probability of causing that distress."

The suit also says that "the conduct of the defendants acting in concert with each other was extreme and outrageous and would be considered as such by the general public."

http://www.gospelcom.net/apologeticsindex/rnb/archives/00001188.html 11-15-02