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Mormon Church sued in Dublin’s High Court by abuse victim of U.S. missionary

Papers to be served on elder now resident in America



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A young Irish woman is suing the Mormon Church for damages after she was abused when still a minor by one of its elders who has since fled to America.

The woman, who can’t be named for legal reasons, has brought High Court proceedings in Dublin against the Church and her alleged abuser.

The Irish Times reports that the woman was still below the legal age for consensual sex when she was repeatedly abused by the Church elder who served as a missionary in Ireland for the Irish Association of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints Ltd.

In court papers, the woman says she has suffered ‘loss and damage as a result of alleged sexual abuse, assault and false imprisonment by the man’.

The victim is suing the Mormon Church for ‘alleged fraudulent concealment and for allegedly allowing the man have unsupervised contact with her, exposing her to risk of injury and allegedly allowing her to be exploited’.

The woman also claims that ‘the church disregarded its own guidelines and advice that female elders were at all times to accompany young female members and had also failed to take any adequate steps to investigate these claims’.

The man alleged to have abused the girl has since left Ireland. The Mormon Church refused to say where he is living due to data protection laws but her lawyers have now tracked him down to an address in America with the help of private investigators.

He will now be served with High Court proceedings at his US address.

The woman states in her claim that she converted to Mormonism in her teens. She alleges the abuse began in about March 2007 when the man took charge of her religious instruction and that the abuse took place at various locations outside Dublin where the man was serving as a missionary.

The victim says that the man began with inappropriate touching before advancing to more serious forms of abuse including oral sex. She also states that the man had forcibly restrained and sexually abused her on one occasion while another church elder acted as sentry and alerted the man that other church members were approaching.

The man told her that while it was a ‘sin for others to act in such a way’, it was not for him as he ‘worthy and had been chosen by God’. She also that he tried to convince her that ‘everything he did manifested through the holy spirit’.

The missionary also told the girl that ‘dreadful things’ would happen to her if she told anyone of the abuse.

The woman says that when she told senior church members what happened, they told her not to reveal it to her non-Mormon parents or police.

Having left the church in 2008, the victim claims the alleged abuse had a terrible effect on her life. She says her health, wellbeing and relationships with others have suffered and she now suffers from self-harm, sleep deprivation and an eating disorder.


Nster.com


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Phew! What a relief. Just when I though clerical child sexual abuse was an exclusively Holy Roman Catholic and Apostolic Church (HRC&AC) specialisation, up pop the good ol' Mormons to save us from eternal hell fire and damnation. Kinda refutes the ol' celibacy argument though.
@theOtter Whether the story is written well - kind of like your own response "a African" rather than "an" African - does not make it false. Yes, some people don't use the right word to describe a house of prayer/worship specific to the particular faith to which they refer. How true the article is will be discovered in the trial. Where is your pity for a young girl whose childhood was destroyed by a supposed religious figure?
sounds just like the founder joseph smith. 34 wives. some of them little girls and women already married that were bullied into it by threats of hell if they refuse.
I am a 34 year old women who was raised in the Mormon community. Abuse within any institution is commonly ignored but one that puts men in a position of absolute power and uses authority from God? Tells you not to question? It's not that hard to perpetrate abuse and the LDS church has a history of transferring Mormon missionaries out of these types of situations to avoid prosecution. I am an abuse survivor and I know 100's more. This story doesn't surprise me.
There are so many problems with this article it’s scary. Let’s break down some of the major ones: 1) There is no such thing as the “Mormon Church.” Would you refer to a Jewish group as the “Yid Church” or a African group as the “Nigger Church”? Please refrain from using slurs in your articles. 2) The opening paragraph states that the defendant is “one of [the Church’s] elders who has since fled to America.” If this elder was indeed a missionary (as the article later states), it seems highly unlikely that he “fled” to America; missionaries serve for a maximum of about three years, so if this alleged event occurred in 2007, his mission would be long since over by now and, as a non–Irish national, he would be required by law to return to his country of origin. 3) “The woman also claims that ‘the church disregarded its own guidelines and advice that female elders were at all times to accompany young female members.’” The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints doesn’t have any female elders, but even if it did, how could it possibly require that an elder accompany every member 24/7 for his or her entire life? That’s just ridiculous. Now, don’t get me wrong; crap happens, and with tens of thousands of elders between the ages of 19-22 serving full-time missions at any given time, there’s bound to be a few that screw up (and in rare cases, screw up big). If the abuse this woman alleges actually occurred, this man should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of both secular and ecclesiastical law. But whether it’s true or not, this article leaves a *lot* to be desired. It would be wonderful if Mr. Dervan could correct these issues, and might also be advisable for *Irish Central* to find someone besides its sports writer to handle this kind of news. ;-) Thanks!
If you google "southern baptists and child molestation, the results look like an out of control prison........It seems like the right wing ultra conservative churches abuse children all over the world. Including the Mormons..........Shows you what happens when power goes to ones head...........Power corrupts and when one speaks about or for God, well absolute power corrupts absolutely...........btw in my internet hunting I find very few cases of abuse by the mainstream and more flexible religions.
What' new in missonaries fleeing overseas, we've set a big enough precedent. Wev'e had hundreds fleeing to as far away to Australia, and their bishops have landed us with their riff raff, in many cases only to visit their sins upon Irish cildren.
As an active Mormon of 40 yrs I find this hard to believe although I am not saying it never happened. Why do I say this? Because missionary rules state that missionaries always remain in sight of each other and never leave each other's sight. I also have to ask, where was his companion as he would never be allowed to teach a female, plus male missionaries are not permitted to be alone with a female, they would always have a male chaperone. hence 3 individuals in the same room.
Frankly Irish Central, I'm surprised you published this report!
Well, this is nice another group rather than Catholic for once.
 




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