Everyday thousands of children are being sexually abused. You can stop the abuse of at least one child by simply praying. You can possibly stop the abuse of thousands of children by forwarding the link in First Time Visitor? by email, Twitter or Facebook to every Christian you know. Save a child or lots of children!!!! Do Something, please!

3:15 PM prayer in brief:
Pray for God to stop 1 child from being molested today.
Pray for God to stop 1 child molestation happening now.
Pray for God to rescue 1 child from sexual slavery.
Pray for God to save 1 girl from genital circumcision.
Pray for God to stop 1 girl from becoming a child-bride.
If you have the faith pray for 100 children rather than one.
Give Thanks. There is more to this prayer here

Please note: All my writings and comments appear in bold italics in this colour

Sunday 27 March 2022

This Week's Global Pervs and Paedos List > 1000 kids missing from Ukraine refugees

..

Interpol to help Moldova investigate human trafficking

of Ukrainian refugees


Europe's train stations and airports have become candy stores for sex and child-sex traffickers - over 1000 children are missing!


By Adam Schrader
   
Passengers stand in line for entry procedures during the arrival of the first Ukrainian refugees coming from the Republic of Moldova by airplane at Frankfurt airport in Germany on Friday. Photo by Ronald Wittek/EPA-EFE


March 25 (UPI) -- Interpol said Friday that the international law enforcement agency has sent a team to support Moldova officials with investigations into reports of human trafficking of Ukrainian refugees and other crimes.

"Coming at the request of Moldova's Interpol National Central Bureau (NCB) in Chisinau, the mission is providing on-the-ground support to law enforcement and humanitarian agencies managing the large outflow of refugees entering the country from Ukraine," Interpol said in a statement.

Interpol said it has already received reports of human traffickers and smugglers waiting at Moldova's border with Ukraine "to prey on vulnerable populations" like unaccompanied children fleeing the Russian invasion.

"In this period of time, we need the support and assistance that Interpol can offer to overcome the challenges and consequences resulting from the region's evolving situation," Ana Revenco, the Minister of Internal Affairs, said. "We are grateful for INTERPOL's responsiveness and look forward to a productive collaboration."

Data from the office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees shows that more than 3.7 million refugees in total have fled Ukraine since the start of the invasion. More than 376,000 of them have fled for Moldova.

Most refugees, about 2.2 million, have fled for Poland while 573,000 have fled for Romania, 337,000 have fled for Hungary, and 264,000 have fled for Slovakia.

More than 1000 children missing!


Missing Children Europe, a group of 24 organizations dedicated to protecting children across Europe, said in a statement Friday that its member organization in Ukraine had reported more than 1,000 cases of missing children.

"While reported cases of children going missing are currently low, the current circumstances are putting children at high risk of being separated from their families, falling victims of trafficking and going missing," the statement reads. "This is particularly the case at the border crossings, train and bus stations."

The United Nations Children's Fund warned last week that children fleeing the war in Ukraine are at a high risk for human trafficking and exploitation.

UNICEF said in a statement Thursday that the war in Ukraine has led to the displacement of 4.3 million children and that 1.8 million of them have crossed into neighboring countries as refugees.

"The war has caused one of the fastest large-scale displacements of children since World War II," said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell. "This is a grim milestone that could have lasting consequences for generations to come. Children's safety, wellbeing and access to essential services are all under threat from non-stop violence."

Earlier this month, German police warned female refugees arriving by train in the country that law enforcement had received several reports of men posing as volunteers to lure young women and children upon their arrival in Berlin.





Friday 25 March 2022

Wolves Among the Sheep > Sex Harassment at Christianity Today; Houston, We have a Problem, or 2, or 3, as Hillsong comes apart at the seams

..

Former Christianity Today Editor, Advertising Director

Accused of Sexual Harassment

Amanda Casanova | 
ChristianHeadlines.com Contributor | 
Wednesday, March 16, 2022



Christianity Today has admitted that it failed to pursue consequences for two ministry leaders accused of sexual harassment at its Carol Stream, Illinois, office.

In its own report, Christianity Today, an evangelical Christian magazine, said “a number of women” reported “demeaning, inappropriate, and offensive behavior” from former editor-in-chief Mark Galli and former advertising director Olatokunbo Olawoye.

The two men were not investigated or disciplined, according to an external assessment of the ministry’s culture.

“We want to practice the transparency and accountability we preach,” said CT president Timothy Dalrymple. “It’s imperative we be above reproach on these matters. If we’re falling short of what love requires of us, we want to know, and we want to do better.”

How did you not practice that years ago?

Eight women said Galli touched them inappropriately, including one former employee who said he caressed her bare shoulder during an event. Another woman said Galli rubbed her back and got his hand “stuck under her bra.”

Three women reported to human resources that Galli had inappropriately touched them, and in 2019 he was reprimanded.

According to Christianity Today, the 2019 event was not the first time Galli had been reported to HR.

From the mid-2000s to 2019, about six employees reported harassment from Galli or Olawoye, but there was no formal report, warning or reprimand.

“The culture when I was there was to protect the institution at all costs,” said Amy Jackson, an associate publisher who left what she said had become a hostile work environment in 2018. “No one was ever held accountable. Mark Galli was certainly protected.”

Galli, however, told the Religion News Service that the claims were false or taken out of context. He told CT that he may have “crossed lines,” but he never had “any romantic or sexual interest in anyone at Christianity Today.”

Then why did you 'cross lines'? 

He said he was “deeply troubled” by the accusations and said he would be open to meeting with people to apologize.

Meanwhile, Richard Shields, CT’s HR director from 2008 to 2019, said HR did what it was supposed to do.

“I always took complaints seriously and very, very confidentially,” he told the CT news editor. “I’m very confident that we used the processes we had in place very consistently, very thoroughly, very effectively.”

Your definition of 'very effectively' may differ from the victims. It may also differ from God's.

The incidents included many one-on-one meetings with the men. During those meetings, Olawoye would reportedly sometimes say he wasn’t attracted to his wife and compliment other women. In another case, one woman told her manager that Olawoye was staring at her breasts during meetings. The manager’s response: “It helps if you wear a scarf.”

Olawoye was arrested in 2017 after a sting operation by federal agents. He had been trying to pay for sex with a teenager and was later sentenced to three years in prison. He is out of prison and living in Chicago as a registered sex offender.

He did not respond to requests for comment.

I'll bet he didn't. And if he did, you probably couldn't print it.

Christian organizations need to hire people who have an intimate relationship with Jesus Christ, not just an ability to market products. It's so sad that worldly abilities seem to trump spiritual relationships.




Hillsong Founder Brian Houston Accused of

Behaving Inappropriately Toward 2 Women

Milton Quintanilla | 
Contributor for ChristianHeadlines.com | 
Friday, March 18, 2022


A leaked letter issued to Hillsong members on Friday states that founder Brian Houston breached its code of conduct after two women alleged Houston of inappropriate behavior.

The Hillsong Global Board sent the letter to Hillsong members following a video conference between interim Global Senior Pastor Phil Dooley and 800 global members concerning Houston's 'indiscretions' between 2013 and 2019.

"We have sadly been dealing with two complaints made against Pastor Brian over the last 10 years," the board said.

"We apologise unreservedly to the people affected by Pastor Brian's actions and commit to being available for any further assistance we can provide."

The letter, which was leaked to ABC News Australia, alleges that Houston sent "inappropriate" text messages to a former female staffer.

Dooley, who was emotional during the meeting, said that Houston's message was along the lines of "'If I was with you, I would like to give you a kiss and a cuddle or a hug,' words of that nature."

He added that Houston at the time was "under the influence of sleeping tablets, upon which he had developed a dependence."

"He immediately apologised to the person," Dooley said. "We also worked with Pastor Brian to ensure he received professional help to eliminate his dependency on this medication, and this was achieved successfully."

The female staffer, who resigned after receiving those messages from Houston, issued a complaint to Hillsong general manager George Aghajanian. After resigning, the woman was unable to find work outside of Hillsong, so Houston compensated her with "a couple of months' salary" out of his own pocket.

The second incident took place in 2019 when an intoxicated Houston spent nearly an hour with another woman inside a hotel room. At the time, Houston had been drinking with other Hillsong figures during its annual conference in Qudos Bank Arena in Homebush, New South Wales.

"Later that evening, Pastor Brian attempted to get into his room but didn't have his room key and ended up knocking on the door to the woman's room," Dooley noted.

The woman, who was not a member of Hillsong, opened the door and let Houston in.

"The truth is, we don't know what happened next," Dooley continued. "The woman has not said there was any sexual activity. Brian has said there was no sexual activity, but he was in the room for 40 minutes."

Following an investigation into the incident, the board found that Houston "became disorientated ... following the consumption of anti-anxiety medication beyond the prescribed dose, mixed with alcohol."

"Ultimately, the board found that Brian had breached the Hillsong Pastor's Code of Conduct," the board said.

In response, Houston paid for the woman's conference fee and returned her "Kingdom Builder" donation. The Hillsong founder also pledged to take three months off from ministry and abstain from alcohol, but "he didn't abide by that," Dooley said.

"He did conduct some ministry, I believe on three separate occasions... and he also did, as he would say, consume some alcohol," he added.

Dooley also dismissed allegations of cover-ups of the incidents, asserting that the board handled them "appropriately under the circumstances of the information given to them and with a desire to see Brian healthy."

During the meeting, Dooley stressed the importance of extending grace in light of Christ instead of exposing anyone. He also emphasized that anyone attending Hillsong should feel safe and should not have to fear facing "any form of abuse or harassment."

"We're deeply sorry for those victims and for what they've had to go through and what they've had to endure," he said.

Dooley acknowledged that Houston "has made significant mistakes" and asked for prayers for the Houston family at this time.

"Sin is messy, and it brings all kinds of pain," he concluded.

Earlier this year, Houston stepped down as Hillsong's Global Leader to challenge a criminal charge of concealment of his father's child sexual abuse.

The recent news adds to a line of scandals seen at Hillsong over the past several years.

Search this blog for 'Hillsong' for several other stories.

Several years ago I was delighted to find services from Hillsong Australia on TV. The song service was wonderful, and then Houston began to preach. I couldn't listen to the whole sermon, nor have I ever watched another Hillsong service since. Don't know what it was about him that I didn't like, but there was definitely something.




Satan likes to get in on the ground floor of any new Christian movement, and there has been none bigger in the past 30 years than Hillsong. Brian's father, Frank, was a gay paedophile, and it was he who began the church in Sydney that Brian would later turn into the first Hillsong. How this affected the many megachurches that later formed under the Hillsong banner is open to debate, but there seems to be a remarkable number of senior pastors having to step down because of sexual indiscretions. (See, also, 2nd and 3rd stories below).


Hillsong Founder Brian Houston Resigns as Global Senior Pastor


Milton Quintanilla | 
Contributor for ChristianHeadlines.com | 
Thursday, March 24, 2022

The resignation, which comes following recent revelations that Houston engaged in inappropriate behavior with two women, was confirmed by Hillsong’s board on Wednesday. Hillsong, founded by Brian and his wife, Bobbi Houston, in 1983, grew to be one of the largest megachurches in the world today, with multiple locations across the globe.


“We understand there will be much emotion at this news, and we all share these feelings. Irrespective of the circumstances around this, we can all agree that Brian and Bobbie have served God faithfully over many decades and that their ministry has resulted in millions of people across the world being impacted by the power, grace, and love of Jesus Christ,”
the board said in a statement.

“Hillsong Church was birthed out of Brian and Bobbie’s obedience and commitment to the call of God, and we are extremely grateful for all that Brian and Bobbie have given to build His house. We ask that you continue to pray for them, and the entire Houston family, during this challenging time.”

The board also announced that it will be undergoing “an independent review” of its “governance structure and processes,” adding that “this is a time of humble reflection, and we are committed to doing what is necessary to ensure God is honoured, and our eyes are fixed on Jesus.”

“We value your ongoing support and prayers. We are also praying for our entire church family at this time,” the statement concluded.

As Christian Headlines previously reported, Houston was accused of acting inappropriately towards two women. One of the women, a former Hillsong staffer, accused Houston of sending “inappropriate” text messages to her.

In a separate 2019 incident, Houston reportedly spent 40 minutes inside another woman’s hotel room after losing his room key during Hillsong’s annual conference. At the time, Houston was drunk and had consumed anti-anxiety medication beyond the described dose. According to Houston and the woman, no sexual activity took place.

In a statement last week, the Hillsong board confirmed that they had been dealing with these complaints “over the last ten years.” Following an investigation, they concluded that Houston had “breached the Hillsong Pastor’s Code of Conduct.”

Houston initially agreed to step down from his leadership role for a time but “failed to take all of the agreed steps which resulted in further action being taken by the board in late 2021,” the board added.

In January, Houston stepped down from his duties as global senior pastor to focus on legal charges he was facing for allegedly concealing his father’s sexual abuse of children. Taking Houston’s place are interim leaders Pastors Phil and Lucinda Dooley of Hillsong South Africa.




Former Hillsong Dallas Pastor Reed Bogard resigned

after he was accused of rape, investigation reveals

By Leonardo Blair, 
Senior Features Reporter|
Friday, March 25, 2022

Less than two weeks after Reed Bogard abruptly resigned as lead pastor of the now-defunct Hillsong Dallas in January 2021, an internal investigation commissioned by Hillsong Global showed that the married father of three was accused of rape by a junior female staffer with whom he had a monthlong affair while serving at Hillsong NYC years earlier.


The former junior Hillsong NYC staffer who asked not to be publicly named in this report when contacted by The Christian Post, said she has been trying to move on with her life. She confirmed she participated in a deposition concerning the allegation but would not say anything more than what was already included in the report.

“I think at this stage ... I’m not going to comment. Everything that you have in that deposition is obviously something that I did, and I said in the context of a legal deposition. I think I just want to leave it at that.”

The findings of the investigation conducted by the New York City law firm Zukerman Gore Brandeis & Crossman, LLP, are highlighted in a report reviewed by CP. The investigation was commissioned by Hillsong Global in October 2020, shortly after senior church officials first learned that the former junior staffer alleged that her first act of sexual intercourse with Bogard in his car after a late night out together was non-consensual. 

Hillsong leaders were made aware years earlier of a sexual relationship between the two parties, but an investigation was not conducted by the church at the time. Church leaders were led to believe the relationship was consensual and "consequences to both [parties] were meted out accordingly," investigators revealed.

The report was submitted to George Aghajanian, general manager and a director of Hillsong Church Australia and its international entities, on Jan. 11, 2021.

It shows that Hillsong Church Australia first learned of the sexual affair between Bogard and the junior staff member in the second half of 2014. The relationship began in September 2013 and continued through the beginning of January 2014.

“At the time, the Church did not conduct any meaningful inquiry into the details or circumstances of the affair, and no one with appropriate training was assigned to look into matters,” investigators noted.

When contacted about the report in February, Hillsong Church said Brian Houston, who resigned Wednesday after it was revealed that two women made serious complaints of misconduct against him in the last 10 years, was not aware of the rape claims against Bogard when he was chosen to lead Hillsong Dallas in 2019. Houston is currently facing criminal charges for allegedly concealing sex abuse committed by his father decades earlier. 

“Brian Houston categorically denies he had knowledge of this serious allegation when Reed Bogard was selected as the Lead Pastor for Dallas,” Hillsong Church said in a statement to CP. “Hillsong Church has enormous compassion for the other party involved in this situation. We have been in regular contact with her and she has asked to remain anonymous. We ask that the media and all other parties respect and protect her privacy.”

As the coronavirus swept the world in late 2020, the church learned that the affair didn’t start out consensually. The report states that the junior staffer "resurfaced the issue" in October 2020, six years after initially confessing to having a consensual relationship. 

“More than six years later, on or about October 2020, Hillsong Church Australia learned of additional allegations concerning Ms. [redacted] and Mr. Bogard’s affair. Specifically, in discussions with certain leaders of Hillsong NYC, Ms. [redacted] asserted to them, apparently for the first time, that her sexual experience with Mr. Bogard, at least initially, had not been consensual,” the report said in a summary. “For the first time, Ms. [redacted] stated that at least in their initial sexual intercourse, Mr. Bogard had raped her.”

Investigators at Zukerman Gore said while it might be too late for Bogard’s accuser to seek civil damages against him or the church for what happened to her, “a criminal complaint for rape might still be timely, though that would not be expected to implicate the Church itself.”

There was no indication from the investigation that the rape allegation was reported to law enforcement. In 2019, New York state extended the state statute of limitations for reporting second-degree rape to 20 years and third-degree rape to 10 years. 

Investigators noted in the report that: "It is difficult if not impossible to say with certainty whether the initial sexual acts between Mr. Bogard and Ms. [redacted] occurred notwithstanding an express, verbal objection ('No') uttered by Ms. [redacted] in the moment."

Zukerman Gore Brandeis & Crossman, LLP, did not respond to requests for comment.

Bogard, who now works as a director of business development for Keller Williams in Michigan, said he was done with all things Hillsong as well.

“I don’t have any comment on that. I’m not going to discuss anything. I have nothing to do with Hillsong anymore. … I haven’t been a part of that organization for over a year,” he said when contacted by CP.

When Houston and his wife, Bobbie, announced they were pausing the Dallas campus in April 2021, they failed to mention that Bogard, 39, had been accused of rape.

“It was very disappointing to learn that, while some of you experienced the Bogards as dedicated pastors, many others have experienced leadership that failed to meet the commitments and standards of Hillsong Church,” Brian Houston said, in part, at the time. “I want to be the first to apologize to those who felt disappointed or hurt, and I pray that God does a swift work in bringing peace and healing.”

In addition to the allegation of rape, which allegedly took place one night on Manhattan’s Upper East Side in October 2013, details highlighted in the report show Bogard drinking heavily, using marijuana, and generally bullying staff while serving at Hillsong NYC prior to being promoted as lead pastor of Hillsong Dallas.

Ben Houston, Brian Houston’s son, who was leading Hillsong LA and serving as Bogard’s boss when the former junior staffer first revealed her sexual relationship with him to Hillsong senior leaders, told investigators that he had spoken with his father and members of the church’s global board about the relationship. Investigators reported that Bogard was "stood down publicly from the platform in Los Angeles for a period of either eight or twelve months," noting that "stories differ."

Houston told the investigators that "the nature and extent of such discipline were handed down by top leadership in Australia," the report reads.

"Thereafter, Mr. Bogard was returned to full Pastoral duties, and was eventually awarded a promotion to Lead Pastor in the newly created Church location in Dallas, Texas," the report adds.

“The board came up with a plan that Mr. Bogard would not be permitted to serve in leadership in any capacity for twelve months, he would not be on platform for 12 months and he would undergo counseling,” investigators said.

Both Bogard and his rape accuser offered varying accounts of their first sexual encounter which happened inside his car on Manhattan’s Upper East Side after they had a clandestine meeting at a local bar, investigators said.

“Ms. [redacted] stated that as soon as she and Mr. Bogard sat down at a table at the bar, they each ordered a drink. Ms. [redacted] recalls that right after giving their drink order, Mr. Bogard leaned in and tried to kiss her. Ms. [redacted] stated that she ‘probably’ participated in the kiss. Ms. [redacted] and Mr. Bogard then talked about Mr. Bogard’s frustrations with his upcoming move to California, and how he was unhappy in his marriage,” the report said.

While this was happening, Bogard’s accuser told investigators that she felt very conflicted being at the bar with him because she felt like she had put herself in that position and had been asking herself, “do I like him?”

“In part, Ms. [redacted] now believes that she went to the bar to satisfy her own curiosity,” investigators said. Bogard claimed that they arranged to meet at the bar around 2 a.m. or 3 a.m.

The former Hillsong junior staffer said they stayed at the bar for about 45 minutes, having only one drink each. Investigators said Bogard disputed the level of drinking.

“Mr. Bogard’s description of the amount of drinking is very different. Mr. Bogard’s position is interesting because he seems to ‘need’ to establish that he was too drunk to act responsibly as a way of soothing his conscience, yet he ignores or overlooks the fact that if Ms. [redacted], his subordinate, was similarly impaired, that she would have been incapable of meaningful consent in what happens after they leave the bar,” investigators explained.

The subordinate staffer recalls Bogard offered her a ride home, but the former pastor told investigators she asked for the ride home.

The alleged rape


Once they were in the car, things quickly got out of hand.

“Ms. [redacted] stated that when they got into the car (she in the front passenger seat and Mr. Bogard in the driver’s seat), Mr. Bogard leaned across the arm rest and kissed Ms. [redacted]. Ms. [redacted] admits that she kissed Mr. Bogard back.

“Mr. Bogard then began to climb over the arm rest until he was bearing down on top of her in her seat. Significantly, Ms. [redacted] now discloses that at the time she said, ‘no, I don’t think we should do this,’” investigators said.

“Ms. [redacted] says that Mr. Bogard ignored her comment and continued his climb on top of her. He then reached down between the seat and the door and pulled the lever that released the seat back. Ms. [redacted] recalled the disoriented falling sensation of the seat back suddenly going back when she’d not realized it was about to do so.

“Ms. [redacted] recalls that at around this point, Mr. Bogard undid his pants. Ms. [redacted] now reports that at this point, she said ‘no.’ Mr. Bogard began to apply his hands to Ms. [redacted’s] breasts. Ms. [redacted] reports that at this point, she ‘froze.’

“Mr. Bogard then asked Ms. [redacted] to take off her pants. Ms. [redacted] admits that she complied. Mr. Bogard then asked Ms. [redacted] to crawl into the back seat, an act which was facilitated because her seat back was now lying flat. Again, she complied. The two then had sexual intercourse.”

Bogard told investigators that he has no recollection of the accuser "saying 'no' at any time while they were in the car."

After this encounter, Bogard’s accuser entered into a regular sexual relationship with him. She revealed that during the relationship she was sent a new employment contract with a non-disclosure agreement. When she asked about it, investigators noted: “Mr. Bogard told her ‘if you don’t sign this contract, you don’t work here.’”

Investigators found that despite the nature of the case, the failure to adequately investigate it and the substantial passage of time since it happened, a jury would have likely found that Bogard had sex with the former junior staffer against her will.

“There can be no doubt that given the extreme power imbalance between the two, as well as the ‘don’t say no’ culture which permeated the New York Church at that time, there was ample opportunity for Mr. Bogard to take advantage of a systemic inability for Ms. [redacted] to have meaningfully consented at the time in question,” the report noted. “Without discounting the strength of a prosecution case due to the passage of time, it is likely that a jury, evaluating the interplay, would have found that Mr. Bogard acted without obtaining (or, under the circumstances, having any reasonable expectation of being able to obtain) actual consent by Ms. [redacted].”

Along with the former junior staffer and Bogard, the following individuals were interviewed as part of the internal investigation: Jenna Babbitt, a former Hillsong NYC congregant; Shannon Kelly, a former creative director at Hillsong NYC; Amanda and Robert Fergusson, a husband and wife team of Bible teachers and key leaders of Hillsong Church; Jess Bogard, wife of Reed Bogard; Lauren Brooks (sic), a former creative producer at Hillsong NYC; Tolu Badders, chief operating officer and executive pastor at Hillsong Church NYC; Kane Keatinge, Hillsong NYC staff pastor; Carl Lentz, former Hillsong NYC lead pastor who was fired in November 2020 over “leadership issues” and moral failures, including being unfaithful to his wife; Laura Lentz and Ben Houston.

The investigators further explained that it was concerning that Hillsong Church never considered the power imbalance between the two — Bogard and his accuser — once they were informed about the relationship.

“The fact that no Church leader appears to have even considered this issue is a cause for concern," investigators said. "An additional cause for concern is that even within the parameters of the sexual relationship between them, it appears that the sexual activities between the two frequently suggest that they were designed to reinforce the power imbalance between them.” 

"In recounting various liaisons, Ms. [redacted] consistently talks about how ‘Reed wanted to have sex, so we had sex,’ and similar comments, always indicating that Mr. Bogard was the initiator.

“Mr. Bogard even summoned Ms. [redacted] to his own apartment on his last day in New York for sex, even though the building where he lived was occupied by most of the senior leaders of the New York church and Ms. [redacted] would be exposed to coming and going there.”

Investigators noted that Bogard’s decision to force his accuser into signing an NDA was also another example of his abuse of power.

“No compelling legitimate reason was given by Mr. Bogard for why this demand was made in the middle of the affair. And this is yet another example of the abuse of power that seems to have permeated the entire relationship,” they said.

Bogard was also painted as a leader at Hillsong NYC who “had a reputation for aggression, verbal abuse and unreasonable demands,” which witnesses called “UnChristian.” Investigators said in their interview with him, “Mr. Bogard did present as aggressive.”

Kelly told investigators that even if Bogard did not physically force himself on his accuser she did not have the ability to say no.

“Shannon stated that Mr. Bogard had an enormous amount of power and that Mr. Bogard was someone that if you said no to, it would be used against you in a lot of different ways. She stated people did not say no to Mr. Bogard,” investigators said.

“Shannon stated that from the way Ms. [redacted] spoke about the relationship with Mr. Bogard, it was something Mr. Bogard put pressure on Ms. [redacted] to do,” investigators added. “Shannon observed that from her point of view, of all the people Mr. Bogard could have chosen, Ms. [redacted] was probably the most vulnerable.”

==========================================================================================



Hillsong Atlanta pastor announces resignation in wake of

scandals surrounding global church

By Leah MarieAnn Klett, 
Assistant Editor Twitter| 
Wednesday, March 23, 2022

Sam and Toni Collier. | Hillsong

Sam Collier, the first-ever African American lead pastor of a Hillsong church, has announced he is stepping down from his position as a slew of scandals continue to surround the church and its founder, Brian Houston. 

Collier, who with his wife, Toni, led the Atlanta, Georgia-based branch of Hillsong, announced his departure from the church on Wednesday afternoon.

“My greatest reason for stepping down as Pastor of Hillsong Atlanta is probably not a secret to any of you. With all of the documentaries, scandals, articles, accusations and the church’s subsequent management of these attacks it’s become too difficult to lead and grow a young Church in this environment,” Collier, who is also an author, adviser to the King family, and founder of A Greater Story Ministries, wrote on social media.

“I have no shame in admitting I cried like a baby moments after I informed the Hillsong global pastor of my departure."

Hillsong Atlanta was launched in October 2020 with the goal of reaching and influencing the world “by building a large Christ-centered, Bible-based church, changing mindsets and empowering people to lead and impact in every sphere of life,” Collier told The Christian Post at the time. 

He told CP the church aimed to be a “multicultural, spirit-filled and theologically astute church” — one that models unity in a desperately divided time in history. 

“We’ve kind of dropped the ball, historically, when it comes to unity,” he said, quoting Martin Luther King Jr., who once described 11 a.m. on Sunday mornings as "one of the most segregated hours in Christian America." 

“The world models how to come together better than the church does,” he lamented. “We want to change that. Hillsong Atlanta wants to provide a model for how to be unified. We want to have a ministry that is multicultural and unified so we can help people learn to live together for the sake of the Kingdom of God.”

Collier’s announcement came just hours after Hillsong revealed that Houston, who founded the church in 1983 with his wife, Bobbie, had resigned from his role as global senior pastor.

It was revealed that Houston, who had initially stepped down from the church's boards last September after he was charged with “concealing child sex offenses,” had violated the church’s pastoral code of conduct by entering the hotel room of an unidentified woman for 40 minutes while under the influence of alcohol and prescription drugs during the church’s annual conference in 2019.

“We understand there will be much emotion at this news, and we all share these feelings," Hillsong said in a statement Wednesday. "Irrespective of the circumstances around this, we can all agree that Brian and Bobbie have served God faithfully over many decades and that their ministry has resulted in millions of people across the world being impacted by the power, grace, and love of Jesus Christ."

But other high-profile sexual misconduct scandals have plagued the megachurch and its campuses amid the COVID-19 pandemic, including the 2020 firing of Carl Lentz, who led Hillsong Church in New York City, over “leadership issues” and moral failures, including being unfaithful to his wife.

In April 2021, former Hillsong Dallas Lead Pastor Reed Bogard and his wife, Jess, abruptly resigned from their positions. It was revealed that the two were under investigation for “leadership failures,” resulting in the closure of that campus.


Another Hillsong resignation is that of Darnell Barrett, the former creative director of Hillsong Church Montclair in New Jersey. He was accused of sending explicit photos to a Hillsong volunteer.



Meanwhile, on Thursday, Discovery Plus will premiere a three-episode docuseries titled “Hillsong: A Megachurch Exposed” that purports to highlight how the Australia-based global Evangelical church network has toed the “fine line between cult and culture.”

Prior to pastoring Hillsong Atlanta, Collier, who wrote the 2020 book, A Greater Story, served at Atlanta-based North Point Community Church, led by Pastor Andy Stanley

In his statement Wednesday, Collier said he truly loves the Hillsong family and believes “they will get through this storm and come out better than they were before.”

He revealed that this coming Sunday will mark his final service at Hillsong Atlanta, where he plans to share more information about a new church he’s launching on Easter Sunday.

“I have appreciated the Hillsong family and want to thank the Houstons for the love they have shown Toni and me,” he wrote.



Thursday 24 March 2022

This Week's Global Pervs and Paedos List > American pervert jailed for 50 years in Kenya; 2 Women get justice after 36 years; UK Courts, Councils revictimizing victims and kids

..

Paraplegic US pedophile, 59, jailed for 50 years in Kenya

after pleading guilty to child porn distribution

By AFP REPORTER
PUBLISHED: 12:59 EDT, 2 December 2014

An American man accused of sexually abusing Kenyan children and circulating the images on the internet will now die behind bars after being sentenced to 50 years in jail. 

Terry Ray Krieger, 59, was arrested in October after Interpol tipped off Kenyan police about an internet user in the country who went by the alias 'Babytoddler123' and was making and distributing pedophile material for overseas users.

His arrest came after Interpol investigations in Germany and the United States.

Krieger, from the state of Michigan, had initially denied the charges but then changed his plea to guilty last month.

Charged: The prosecutor reads out the charges to Terry Krieger in Nairobi court


His victims are aged between three and 10 and are from the area where Krieger lives in Olepolos in Ngong, Kajiado County, according to Daily Nation.

'Children occupy a special place in society and their rights must be protected,' Nairobi Magistrate Joseph Karanja told the court.

'The accused has robbed young children of their innocence and it is disturbing that these despicable acts have been going on undetected,' he said, dismissing the wheelchair-bound Krieger's contention that he was a paraplegic and should be shown some leniency.

Krieger allegedly exchanged 36 files between December 7, 2013 and May 18, 2014.

He would use online media platforms GigaTribe, Yahoo Chat and Skype to send the images. 

Krieger was also identified as a repeat offender, having been convicted in 1992 in the United States for criminal sexual conduct with an under 13, for which he served three years in prison.

He was released in 1995. 

The minimum sentence under Kenyan law is six years, but the judge ruled Krieger should face a maximum possible term of 50 years - meaning he will likely die behind bars.

Good judge!




36 years to justice


After a number of violent sexual assaults in Toronto in 1986, ​Raymond Burke escaped to the United States. Now, his victims finally see the potential for closure.


By Adam Carter
Mar. 23, 2022

WARNING: This article contains graphic content and may affect those who have experienced​ ​​​sexual violence or know someone affected by it.



Nicole Murdock dropped to her knees and vomited when she heard the crack of a gunshot echo in the empty field behind her.

It was a September night in southern Ontario in 1986, and after being abducted, threatened and repeatedly raped by a man named Raymond Burke, staring down the barrel of a gun sent her over the edge.

It was at that moment that she told Burke if he was going to kill her, he should just do it.

“I couldn’t think of any way to get out of it, [I] was just done. I couldn’t do it anymore,” she later testified in court. “I sat on the ground and said, ‘Just kill me.’”

Murdock survived that night — and now, after more than three decades and a trail of victims Burke left in both Canada and the U.S., the two women he attacked in Ontario in the 1980s are inching closer to justice.

This is a long and disturbing story about two women who were kidnapped, raped multiple times, had their lives threatened, and were brutally assaulted. Toronto's police and justice system did little to bring them any kind of justice until more than 30 years later. 

Please go to CBC for the story.




'It's highly disturbing': Courts 'scandal' robbing domestic

abuse victims of their children - sometimes to their abusers


Courts, councils are being accused of helping abusers land a huge psychological blow

on the victim and their child, by separating them and severely damaging their lives.


Jason Farrell
Home editor @JasonFarrellSky
Monday 27 September 2021 11:29, UK

Victims of domestic abuse are being discriminated against in the family courts and regularly lose custody of their children, sometimes to their abusers, according to campaigners, social workers and lawyers who've spoken to Sky News.

Courts and councils are accused of helping abusers to land a huge psychological blow on the victim and their child, by separating them and severely damaging their lives.

The situation is so bad, the domestic abuse commissioner says lawyers often advise clients not to tell the court they have been victims of domestic violence in case it is used against them.

Nicole Jacobs told Sky News that solicitors tell them: "The judge doesn't like it, it complicates things."

There seems to be a range of reasons why victims of domestic abuse fall foul of the courts


Barrister and advisor to the government on domestic abuse, Usha Sood, has described the situation as "scandalous", and is among many calling for greater transparency in the family courts.

One leading campaigner on child sexual exploitation (CSE), Sammy Woodhouse, says that victims of CSE who become mothers are facing similar problems with "hundreds of women" contacting her to say: "I wish I'd never come forward because now they're going to take my kids."

Sky News looked at the case of "Sally", whose daughter was removed from her care four years ago and given to her ex-partner, who she claims she had broken up with to escape from an abusive relationship.

Campaigners say that for the abuser, child custody is often part of a malicious game to gain control of the victim, who has otherwise escaped the violent behaviour.

Sally told us when her ex-partner applied for custody, that's how she viewed it.

She said: "I knew it was a game, I knew it was about control, I knew it was just going to be another abusive tactic to cause as much chaos and pain and drama as possible. And I just thought it was absolutely absurd."

There is much more on this very disturbing story at Sky News. Once again it is the children who suffer from the madness of men.

=====================================================================================

Saturday 19 March 2022

Perverted Lives of the Rich and Famous > Houston QB not charged with abuse of 22 women; Int'l Rugby Star - Monster; Celtic FC - Massive lawsuit

..

Deshaun Watson will NOT be charged over allegations he forcibly 

touched massage therapists and forced them to perform oral sex on him 

after grand jury rules there is not enough evidence to charge him


By ADAM MANNO FOR DAILYMAIL.COM and ASSOCIATED PRESS

PUBLISHED: 17:30 EST, 11 March 2022

A grand jury on Friday declined to indict Houston Texans quarterback Deshaun Watson following a police investigation sparked by lawsuits filed by 22 women who have accused him of harassment and sexual assault.

The grand jury's decision came about a year after the women first filed their suits accusing Watson of exposing himself, touching them with his penis or kissing them against their will during massage appointments. 

One woman alleged Watson forced her to perform oral sex.

Eight of the women who sued Watson filed criminal complaints against him with Houston police and appeared before the grand jury. Two other women who didn't sue Watson also filed police complaints. The FBI also had been reviewing the allegations.

A grand jury on Friday declined to indict Houston Texans quarterback Deshaun Watson, 26

Watson and his lawyers have denied the accusations. 

His lawyers have said 'some sexual activity' happened during some of the massage appointments but that he never coerced anyone. They have sought to balance their defense of the NFL star while simultaneously condemning sexual violence against women.

Watson's attorneys have called the lawsuits against him a 'money grab' and claimed that all 22 women who filed suit are lying - a strategy some experts and advocates say relies on long-used tropes designed to minimize such accusations. 

The 22 women are being represented by Tony Buzbee, who has said some of his clients have faced criticism and even death threats.

Even before the lawsuits were filed in March 2021, Watson had asked to be traded. The trade request and the lawsuits kept Watson out all last season. The Texans were expected to try and trade Watson this offseason.

The civil case against Watson will continue as attorneys for the 22 women have begun questioning him during depositions that are part of the lawsuits. 

Most of the women have already been deposed by Watson's attorneys. No trial date has been set for the lawsuits.

The lead attorneys in the case are two of the best-known lawyers in Texas. 

Rusty Hardin, Watson's lead lawyer, is a civil and criminal defense attorney who represented ex-pitcher Roger Clemens when he was acquitted in 2012 of charges that he lied to Congress by denying he used performance-enhancing drugs. 

Buzbee has handled various high-profile cases, including representing former Texas Gov. Rick Perry in an abuse-of-power case and settling lawsuits for 10 teenagers who had accused eccentric Texas millionaire Stanley Marsh 3 of paying them for sexual acts.

Wow! 22 women and they couldn't find enough evidence to charge him. That's astonishing!




Daughters of paedophile and former rugby international

David Tweed describe ‘monster behind the mask’


Former rugby international David Tweed (Paul Faith/PA)

Allison Bray
March 16 2022 07:59 AM

The daughters of convicted paedophile David Tweed have urged other survivors of incest and sexual and physical abuse to speak out to prevent their abuser from being protected by a wall of silence.

In a hard-hitting documentary on BBC One’s ‘Spotlight’ programme last night, the ex-wife and four daughters of the former international rugby star and Northern Ireland politician laid bare the years of physical and sexual abuse they endured by the man they described as “the monster behind the mask.”

Tweed, who served as a councillor for both the DUP and the TUV in Ballymoney, Co Antrim, died in a motorcycle accident last October.

But it was the glowing tributes from his former colleagues following his death – that have since been recanted – that prompted his family to speak out, according to his daughter Victoria.

"It wasn’t until he died that I had to take a stance and say what kind of a monster youse (sic) are singing praises about,” she told the programme.

"That’s when we all sort of stood together saying ‘we’ve had enough.”

Amanda Brown, the daughter of Tweed’s ex-wife Margaret from a previous relationship, described how she witnessed Tweed beating up her mother when she was a small child and Margaret was pregnant with her daughter Lorraine.

"He held her against the bathroom door choking her until Mum passed out,” she said of Tweed, who stood at 6’6” tall.

"He left her face in a really bad state where she’s had to hide away for weeks until it healed,” she said.

"My mum tried to leave a couple of times, but he would threaten to either hurt us or take us away or even murder her,” she said.

Lorraine Tweed recalled how her father issued ominous threats to her, like “I know this man, he is going to come after you with a chainsaw and saw your head off.”

She said he would also fly into violent rages over nothing and on one occasion she recalled how banged her head off the wall when she was a primary schoolgirl after she stuck her fingers in her ears to stop her mother admonishing her for something.

But it wasn’t until allegations of sex abuse by two other women against Tweed surfaced that the daughters discovered that they had all been sexually abused by him from an early age.

Amanda recalled how her father would “creep into the room at night,” starting when she was just eight years old.

"You just never felt safe, even at home, “ she said. "He’d just be there looming over you.”

Victoria added: “We all lived in fear.”

"I was petrified of the dark,” she said of her fear of a shadowy figure coming into her bedroom at night that she later realised was Tweed after suffering flashbacks of the abuse when she was 16.

"All I could picture was his face over the bed on top of me and breathing heavy.”

The sisters also revealed that their cousin Gemma Boyd had also disclosed to them that she had been abused by Tweed, her uncle. Yet despite reporting the abuse to police, it never went to court. And the Tweed sisters believe this may have been what drove her to take her own life at the age of just 20.

Even though Tweed was found guilty of sexually abusing his daughters and sentenced to four years in prison and four years on license in 2013, his conviction was overturned on appeal due to a technicality and he was released from prison in 2016.

But Amanda and Lorraine, who testified against their father in court, said the process was harrowing and took two years from the time he was charged until his court date.

"I felt like that wee child reliving it,” Lorraine said of having to face her father in court.

"You felt sick.”

Amanda also said that she felt she was in the prisoner’s dock and not her father when she was questioned by his defence team.

"I felt like I had done something wrong, the way I was spoken to,” she said.

Meanwhile, former Appeal Court Justice Sir John Gillen, who reviewed the way sexual assault cases are handled by the courts in Northern Ireland, told the programme; “If we’re going to have proper protection for women and girls and children in our community then it is necessary that we all stand up and complainants come forward and bring these matters before the justice system.”

You need to improve your justice system before people will willingly come forward. Both Ireland and Northern Ireland justice systems are more like 19th century systems that offer little or no protection for survivors of child sex abuse.

Meanwhile, Amanda urged other survivors of physical and sexual abuse to speak out.

"Our silence protected him,” she said of her father.

But now that the family has spoken the truth about their father, Amanda said a weight has been lifted off their shoulders.

"We can only grow stronger as each day passes,” she said.




Celtic to be served with court summons in multi-million pound

'class action' by sex abuse survivors


The club is being sued by up to 25 victims and lawyers say

'several' more have come forward with harrowing allegations in recent weeks.


By Alan McEwen Court Reporter
04:30, 9 NOV 2021UPDATED07:37, 9 NOV 2021

The case called at the Court of Session in Edinburgh (Image: PA)


Celtic will be served with legal papers after a judge gave the green light to a US-style “class action” lawsuit against the club by sex abuse survivors.

Up to 25 victims of historical abuse at Celtic Boys Club launched a multi-million pound damages claim using new powers under Scottish law.

Now judge Lord Ericht has allowed the case to move to the next stage which ensures lawyers for Celtic FC will need to answer the allegations.

A hearing took place at the Court of Session in Edinburgh on Thursday and a summons is expected to be served on Celtic within the next fortnight.

Thompsons Solicitors ­Scotland acts for 25 survivors.

Patrick McGuire, a partner with the firm, said the summons will set out the alleged relationship between Celtic and Celtic Boys Club. Celtic previously said it was “appalled by any form of historic abuse” but ­maintained it is a “separate entity” to the boys club.

Four men associated with Celtic Boys Club or Celtic have been convicted of abuse.

Just over a month ago, Thompsons paid for a public notice to be published in the Record - a required first step in the “group proceedings” action - which urged other survivors to come forward. Since then several people contacted the firm with claims they suffered abuse and may now join the group case.

Following Thursday’s hearing, Thompsons had to pay for a second public notice in today’s Record to again alert possible claimants about the “super case”.

Mr McGuire said: “This group action against Celtic has leapt the first hurdle. This an important milestone in the fight for justice for abuse survivors.

“The court has authorised the papers to be formally served on Celtic. That means in due course - probably early next year - the club will have to provide a formal written response to the case we set out in law. “We expect there will be a hearing before a judge in the new year.

“This should leave Celtic in absolutely no doubt that we’re serious about this fight and will pursue it with absolute commitment. This process will continue until justice is secured. “We would hope, with this being so clear, that the time for Celtic’s obfuscation has ended and the time for proper, meaningful dialogue is here. Celtic will have to defend this in court.”

At the brief hearing on Thursday no one representing Celtic was required to attend.

Mr McGuire said the papers served on Celtic will “set out the factual and legal position in general terms that need to be resolved in court”. He added: “The heart of that will be the relationship between Celtic and the Boys Club.”

Group proceedings were only enacted into the country’s legal system last year and this case is one of the first of its kind to call before a judge. Such actions allow groups of two or more people with the same, or similar, claims to raise a single action in the Court of Session.

Last June, Thompsons started formal legal action against Celtic in connection with historic child abuse. Two “test cases” brought by victims are currently before the Court of Session while the firm represents a total of 25 survivors.

Last night a Celtic spokesman referred to the club’s statement issued last month when asked for comment. That statement read: “The club is continuing to deal with these sensitive matters in conjunction with its advisers.

“The club again expresses its sincere sympathy, regret and sorrow to those affected and reiterates that it will stand by its responsibilities, respecting the due process of law.”




Approaching Sodom > Trans Swimmer wins US College Title; PCMad School, County drive girl to suicide; LGBTQI+ and Climate Change in UN

..

Protests as trans swimmer storms to US college title


Trans swimmer Lia Thomas dominated the field to take gold at

the NCAA swimming championship


© Mike Comer / NCAA Photos via Getty Images


Lia Thomas has become the first transgender swimmer to win an NCAA championship after she blitzed her rivals to win the 500-yard freestyle on Thursday, but the victory has again initiated a debate as to the Thomas' right to compete against biologically-born women. 

The University of Pennsylvania's Thomas began the NCAA women’s swimming and diving championships as the top seed and duly delivered on expectations by touching the board first in the 500-yard freestyle event with a season-best time of 4 minutes 33.24 seconds.

Olympic silver medalist Emma Weyant came in second place more than a full second behind at 4 minutes 34.99 seconds. 

“I didn’t have a whole lot of expectation for this meet,” said Thomas afterwards. “I was just happy to be here and race and compete the best I could.”

Thomas's win, though, didn't come without some added controversy. The former male swimmer for Penn began the transition to female in 2019 when she started hormone replacement therapy but has become central to a heated discussion about the fairness of her status alongside biologically-born female athletes.


A number of protestors were noted outside the Georgia Tech facility which hosted the event, with some holding placards which read 'Save Women’s Sports' - something Thomas said she did her best to ignore.

“I try to ignore it as much as I can,” Thomas said. “I try to focus on my swimming and just try to block out everything else.”

Also among the protestors was Idaho state Rep. Barbara Ehardt, the author of a proposed law which would have restricted transgender athletes' ability to compete in competition based on their gender identity. 

The law was subsequently blocked by a federal court.

Nonetheless, Martina Navratilova, who was one of the world's first and most prominent openly-lesbian athletes, said that Thomas' win should come with an added asterisk next to it in the record books.

“It's not about excluding transgender women from winning ever," Navratilova said. “But it is about not allowing them to win when they were not anywhere near winning as men.

“You try to keep it as close as possible to what it would had been, were you born in the female biological body in the first place,” she added.

“And even saying that, people take exception to - biological female. People don't even want to use those words. I don't know what else to say. Other than that.”

Navratilova also suggested that medals should be withheld from competitors such as Thomas.

“But the solution perhaps for now is to swim in a lane; you can compete but you don't get the medal,” she said.

“Because the rules are not correct. But right now, the rules are what they are. Maybe put an asterisk there.”




'I knew the hormones wouldn't work.

Why did they play with her life?' 


Bereaved mom blames LA County for her teenage daughter's suicide, claiming school

pushed her to transition to a male instead of properly treating her depression


By JOSH BOSWELL FOR DAILYMAIL.COM
PUBLISHED: 13:59 EDT, 18 March 2022

A California mother says the government wrongfully took away her daughter, pushed the girl into transitioning to male and is to blame for his suicide age 19.

Andrew Martinez, born Yaeli, stepped in front of a train on September 4, 2019.

In an exclusive interview with DailyMail.com, bereaved mother Abigail Martinez accused her Los Angeles County school of encouraging Yaeli to take hormones and undergo gender reassignment surgery as a child, while failing to properly treat her severe depression.

Martinez, a mother of four, claimed school staff told Yaeli not to speak to her mother about transgender issues, but secretly had her join an LGBTQ group that persuaded the girl that the only way to be happy was to transition.

The El Salvador-born mother said an older trans student 'coached' Yaeli on what to tell social workers to put her into foster care, so that the state would pay for her gender reassignment. 

Abigail Martinez told DailyMail.com her daughter Yaeli (pictured before her transition to male) was 'the girly girl in the house' among her three daughters, but said she began questioning sexuality as a sophomore in high school

Andrew Martinez, born Yaeli Galdamez, died by suicide at the age of 19 by stepping in front of a train
in Los Angeles on September 4, 2019


And in a 2020 civil lawsuit filed against LA County and its Department of Child and Family Services (DCFS), Martinez claims the government is responsible for her child's untimely death.

Martinez said among her three daughters, Yaeli was 'the girly girl in the house', dressing as a princess and talking about the boys she liked at pre-school.

She was bullied for her looks in middle school, and by eighth grade began showing signs of depression, her mother said.

I don't understand this, she was a beautiful girl. How can schools allow this bullying to happen in the 21st century? It's absurd.

'Once she moved to high school, by the beginning of sophomore year things changed drastically,' she said.

'She talked to her sister about how she liked girls. She was questioning her sexuality. It was a shock, but she was trying to find out her identity. It's normal, what children don't go through that at that age?

'But I never imagined what the school would do.

'The school was telling her to go to these LGBT groups behind my back. She went from questioning her sexuality to her gender.

'She had these peers at school two years older than her. They were the ones who brought these ideas – 'Maybe you're depressed because don't you feel like you're a boy?' – and the school was supportive of that.

'The school told her these groups were the place to go, and I didn't need to know about it.

'I asked her what was going on, and she tried to deny it, because she was told that if she talked about it at home, I would not support it.'

Martinez said she agreed to her daughter's request to be called 'Jay' and tried to help her change her appearance, buying her masculine clothes to go with a short haircut – which Yaeli later asked her to mask again with long hair extensions.

But the mother claimed it was Yaeli's depression that was the problem, not gender dysphoria.

Yaeli had already tried to overdose on pills in eighth grade in 2014, and tried to jump off a bridge near the freeway in her hometown of Arcadia in her freshman year, shortly after she cut her hair short, attracting the attention of social workers.

'I just wanted my daughter back. I didn't want to be the mean mom to say 'no no no.' I wanted to give her the help she needed at that time. But I knew the haircut or whatever she was trying to do wouldn't make her happy,' Martinez said.

'I didn't like the idea [of transitioning]. But I just wanted her to find out what was leading her to go that way.

'I explained to the social workers it's not going to work. My daughter needs mental health help. You have to go from the inside out. If she's happy with herself that's all we need. Focus on that.'

Instead of proper treatment for mental illness, Martinez said her daughter was encouraged by the school and her LGBT support group to take hormones and pursue gender reassignment surgery, and cut Martinez out of the process.

Yaeli was allegedly told by her trans peers that the only way she could get it paid for by the state was if she was in foster care. 

Martinez said one trans friend and their parents 'coached' Yaeli, persuading her to run away from home in July 2016 and tell the Department of Child and Family Services (DCFS) that her mother had slapped her in the face.

'I never was abusive to my children. I love my children,' the mother said. 'I never slapped her. But she was coached by this family what to tell the authorities so they cannot send her back home with me.'

Although Martinez kept custody of her three other children and continued to work as a nanny, an LA family court judge ruled Yaeli – who now went by Andrew – would be placed in foster care with brief, monitored visitation rights by his mother.

'On the visit days, when she came to my house, I was told not to talk about God,' Martinez said. 'They told me if you do that, you'll never see your daughter.

'But I brought meals to share with her on Saturdays, and we prayed before eating. She would close her eyes and bow her head.'

When Andrew turned 19 in 2019 he was sent to an 'independent house', but was struggling to get by and was hospitalized after another overdose attempt, Martinez said.

'She called me and said, "Mom, I don't have any food, my last meal I'm giving it to a friend because she's pregnant," Martinez said.

'I told her I'm going to Costco and dropping off food. She sent me a message, she said, "Mom, I wanted to cry because no matter what you're always there for me."

'[Social workers] asked me not to call her by her first name. I just say "My child, I love you." It was very hard.'

One day in September that year, Martinez said she was filled with dread and didn't know why. 

'I didn't feel good, I felt a pain in my chest the whole day,' she said. 'I wanted to run and cry, it was a weird feeling I'd never felt before. I got a phone call, they said it was Pomona Police.

'Around 9:30pm that night, she walked in front of the train tracks facing a train. She went on her knees, raised her arms up and just laid on the tracks.

'I wasn't able to recognize my daughter. I couldn't see her for the last time. I was told if I wanted to see her I needed to sign a form because there was not much to see.'

Martinez said she and her family are now 'broken', and that although the state's intervention in Andrew's care was meant to protect her, in fact it had the opposite effect.

'I knew that the hormones wouldn't work,' she said. 'She was taken away from my house because they wanted to save her life. My question to all of them is where is my daughter now? Why did they play with her life?

'I'm broken. My family life is not going to be the same ever again.'

A former civil rights director for the federal Department of Health and Human Services who helped Martinez with her case claimed that the Arcadia school district and LA County put politics before Andrew's wellbeing. 

In an emotional message to Martinez months before her death, Yaeli told her mother she was the 'best mom anyone could ask for' 

Roger Severino told DailyMail.com that he believes district officials were afraid of losing funding and desperate to show their pro-trans credentials after being sued by the Obama administration in 2013 for discriminating against a trans boy, and inappropriately pushed gender reassignment on children as a result.

A July 2013 settlement between the Department of Justice and the district obligated schools to 'promptly inform' any gender-transitioning student of 'their right to request a support team of appropriate individuals to ensure that the student has equal access to and equal opportunity to participate in the District's programs and activities.'

'The state got between a young girl in trouble and the person who loved her the most, her mother,' said Severino.

'Instead of working through the underlying depression, they put Abi's daughter on a one-way track straight to transition and chemical interventions that would lead to permanent sterilization as a kid.

'Because the state took Abi's daughter away, her depression got worse. And without having her mother's love, she took her own life.

'I think the school district ultimately is responsible for her death.'

'To them, my child was a number in the system. It's all political,' said Martinez.

'I want them to change this broken system, not to play with our children's lives, to give them what they really need. Not to go for what they believe. We are the parents, we raise these children.

'I don't want any other parent to suffer and go through what I've been going through. This pain doesn't have a beginning or end.'




Yes! There can be no doubt! Homosexuality and Transgenderism are directly related to Climate Change!!!



U.S. Diplomats Ramp-Up LGBT Advocacy at UN Negotiation

By Stefano Gennarini, J.D. | 
March 17, 2022

NEW YORK, March 18 (C-Fam) The U.S. government and the European Union are pressing UN Member States to add homosexuality and transgenderism in a draft UN agreement about the impact of climate change on women.

Delegates from the United States and Europe have added multiple references to “sexual orientation and gender identity” and “LGBTQI+ persons” to the draft agreement of the UN Commission on the Status of Women, a UN body that crafts gender policies that are incorporated in the work of the entire UN system.

I think we need a UN body that crafts policies in keeping with common sense and truth.

According to progressive delegations that promote LGBT issues, it is not enough to focus on the impact of climate change and other disasters on women alone. They want to make sure that, under the rubric of “gender”, UN agencies also have a mandate to design LGBT-specific international policies and programs.

“Persons with diverse sexual orientation, gender identity and expression and sex characteristics (SOGIESC) are at increased risk of gender-based violence and multiple and intersecting forms of discrimination when attempting to access protection and assistance in the aftermath of disasters,” according to a statement of the U.S. Government, the European Union, and the thirty-seven other governments that form part of LGBT Core Group, a negotiating bloc at the United Nations.

The LGBT Core Group called for a global framework “for monitoring and reporting for gender-responsive climate change policies and programs and disaster risk reduction” at the opening of the annual Commission on the Status of Women on Monday.

The agreed conclusions of the commission, which meets every year in March, is focused this year on “gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls in the context of climate change, environmental and disaster risk reduction policies and programmes.”

Linking gender to climate change policies would help feminist and LGBT groups access up to $100 billion in annual global climate financing, according to reports from Organization for Economic Development and Cooperation (OECD).

Proposals for including LGBT-related language in the commission’s draft agreement, called “agreed conclusions,” are not limited to explicit references to “sexual orientation and gender identity” and “LGBTQI+ persons.” These explicit terms are frequently rejected by UN member states. Proposals from progressive delegations include ambiguous terms like “multiple and intersecting” discrimination and language about “diversity,” which are more likely to be accepted in the agreement of the commission.

These obscure terms, added by the U.S. Government, European Union, and their allies, to several dozen paragraphs of the agreement, are already used by UN agencies to add LGBT-specific policies and programs to implement existing UN agreements.

Explicit LGBT language has repeatedly been rejected by UN member states at past UN commission, but recent developments raise the possibility that the U.S. Government and the European Union may try to force an agreement with explicit recognition of “sexual orientation and gender identity” and “LGBTQI+ persons” in the agreed conclusions, expected to be finalized and adopted next week.

In December the General Assembly adopted a resolution that included “sexual orientation and gender identity” unanimously for the first time.

America's Anthony Blinken removed Nigeria from "The most persecuted religious countries" list in exchange for Nigeria backing the LGBTQ language. Persecution of Christians in Nigeria is astonishingly high and violent and is getting worse each year. This was an anti-Christian and most despicable deal.

A tense and nail-biting finish for the commission is all the more likely since the chairman of the commission is from South Africa and the lead negotiator for the agreed conclusions is from Germany, and both countries are part of the LGBT Core Group.