Traditional Christian Family Values » 2008 » July

July 2008


“On a 160-acre farm, our girls and boys enjoy the unique experience of living as a farm family… Camp Tracey is a children’s home dedicated to the salvaging and changing of the lives of at-risk youth.”

Those words are part of the website description of Camp Tracey, the church-run facility for troubled youth located in northern Baker County. But those idyllic words don’t tell the scandals of sexual and physical abuse that have plagued the camp since the 1980s.

Camp Tracey Children’s Home was started in 1982 by Rev. Wilford McCormick under the auspices of Harvest Baptist Church in Jacksonville. The camp website calls itself “an integral and inseparable ministry” of Harvest Baptist Church.

Five lawsuits by former students have been filed since 2003 against the camp and Harvest Baptist Church citing repeated sexual and physical abuse by staff and senior residents. Three of the lawsuits are being appealed and two were settled out of court by the church for an undisclosed amount.

The church has denied all allegations.

Those lawsuits were not the first time Camp Tracey’s methods and operations have been in question. Complaints began almost immediately when the Florida Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services investigated child abuse allegations in 1983 by three camp runaways. The State Attorney’s Office cleared the camp at that time.

In 1987, a Baker County Grand Jury issued a report on Camp Tracey after years of physical abuse allegations. Their report criticized the camp for excessive corporal punishment and noted that physical restraints such as ropes and handcuffs were not to be used.

(Scroll down for more information on past allegations and the grand jury report)

Now new allegations of sex acts between students and abuse from a long-time camp employee, coupled with new arrests, have brought the camp back into the media glare.

The recent trouble began more than a month ago when investigators with the Baker County Sheriff’s Office began looking into allegations of sex crimes involving several students at the camp. During the course of the investigation, it was discovered that seven juvenile students ages 14 to 17 were possibly engaged in sexual activity with each other.

Legally, this is not in violation of the law since the boys were all juveniles and sex was consensual. But, during questioning, another student named Ben Lewis, was discovered to be 18 making him an adult legally and making any sex acts with the other students unlawful.

Lewis, a student at Camp Tracey for several years, was questioned about the allegations and admitted he had engaged in sexual activity with a 14-year-old juvenile. Lewis stated that he and the other student had been discussing the idea of having sex for a few days and one day while working on the farm they “went into the woods, removed each other’s pants and proceeded to masturbate each other.”

Lewis stated that he “really didn’t see what the big problem was” and said he was unaware that this was illegal. He was arrested and charged with lewd and lascivious conduct on a minor.

While interviewing the juvenile residents regarding the sex allegations, it was revealed that the dorm father, John Edward Wilson had been abusive to students.

Several of the students said Wilson, 46, would become physically physically abusive when he became angry. One victim reported that just a couple of days before “Brother John” came over to him and started choking him before slamming his head into the wall. Others told similar stories.

The police reports notes that a boy who witnessed the attack stated that Wilson had an anger problem that all of the juvenile residents are aware of and when he gets angry with his wife or one of the boys, he will take it out on all of them.

Wilson was investigated for nearly identical charges in 2003 when his adoptive son ran away and contacted the BCSO citing abuse. Those charges were deemed unfounded and were not pursued.

A warrant for Wilson was signed by Judge Joey Williams on June 30 and Wilson was taken into custody. The Department of Children and Family Services was contacted regarding the abuse and it is expected they will also conduct an investigation.

LAWSUITS

The lawsuits detailing sexual and physical abuse filed by former residents of the facility all raise similar abuse allegations about Camp Tracey.

May 2003 - Kirk Griffin filed suit naming former counselors Cedric McCormick and Robert Hood in “repeated acts of sexual abuse” against him while he lived at Camp Tracey between 1988 to 1992 when he was 12-16 years old. Harvest Baptist Church, headed by Rev. Wilford McCormick, Cedric’s older brother, was also named as a defendant.

Griffin said he was forced to perform oral and anal sex with two camp counselors two or three times a week. In the lawsuit he said the counselors befriended him, gained his confidence and “used the position of authority granted to them by Harvest to satisfy their perverse desires.”

June 2003 - A second lawsuit echoed allegations raised by Griffin’s claim. Jason Berglund’s lawsuit said his abuse beagn shortly after he arrived at Camp Tracey in 1993. It notes that “he was continuously subjected to extreme physical abuse and was forced to engage in anal and oral sex by those placed in charge of him.”

June 2005 - Three lawsuits were filed by brothers Joseph and Jeremy Holt along with Morris Shedd Jr. All said they were at Camp Tracey between 1989-1996 because of problems at home or school and say they immediately began facing sexual and physical abuse that continued until they left.

The Holt brothers lawsuit alleges Arthur Houde, the camp’s spiritual adviser and boys’ dean, would force them to perform sex acts. In addition, they faced assaults by older boys. Shedd names Cedric McCormick as his abuser. The lawsuits allege physical abuse including beatings, hard labor, denial of food and shocking with an electric cattle prod.

Circuit Judge Aaron Bowden has recently thrown out the Holt and Shedd lawsuits saying repressed memory and dissociative amnesia, which the men said blocked them from reporting the abuse earlier, are not generally accepted conditions in the scientific community. Attorneys are appealing that decision.

GRAND JURY REPORT

The 1987 Baker County Grand Jury report on Camp Tracey noted there was no qualified medical personnel on the premises and emergency medical procedures were inadequate and “woefully lacking.” The report also criticized that there was no qualified physical, mental, or psychological evaluation upon admission.

In addition the Grand Jury report cited:

•”There is no adequate system in operation to document medical injures for the review diagnoses or record keeping of cases of suspected physical abuse of residents.

•There is no procedure as does exist for other child and youth facilities for contacting of the state of Florida’s Health and Rehabilitative Service (HRS) Agency in cases actual or suspected child abuse on resident of Camp Tracey. The attitude of the management and staff of Camp Tracey is both resistant and opposed to this necessary protective review of the program operation.

•There is no individual knowledgeable nor trained in health or nutrition to review or oversee the preparation of proper meals.

•The educational program at Camp Tracey is sub-standard and frequently resulted in loss of grade matriculation of students when returning back to public schools. This has had detrimental consequences to the students.

•More disturbing findings noted that children residing at Camp Tracey should not be forced to work for private citizens and runaways should not be labeled “misfits” or given GI style haircuts as a disciplinary action. The report found that physical restraints such as ropes or handcuffs should never be used as “has been done at Camp Tracey.”

original story here

The Catholic Archdiocese of Denver on Tuesday announced a $5.5 million settlement of 18 cases of sexual abuse by three priests against young parishioners between 1954 and 1981.

Of the cases, 17 involved deceased priests Harold Robert White and Leonard Abercrombie. One claim was against Monsignor Lawrence St. Peter, also deceased.

read more here

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — The Southern Baptist Convention’s Web page lists the names of pastors both indicted and convicted of sexual abuse among its database for finding clergy members.

The listings, at SBC’s MinisterSearch, include a former Cordova, Tennessee pastor charged in October with rape and sexual battery.

Leaders of the Southern Baptist Convention have condemned sexual predators and are urging churches to flush out molesters using federal background checks.

David Brown, an abuse victim and coordinator for the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests in Memphis and a Southern Baptist, calls the listings a “double standard” by the church.

Church spokesman Roger Oldham says the minister search, which has more than 10,000 names, is simply a directory and not an endorsement.

original story here

EDINBURG - A sex abuse scandal tore apart Trinity Worship Center in Pharr four years ago.

More than half the congregation left the church after word spread that its music minister was sexually involved with a 14-year-old boy.

Now, the church is fighting allegations that could prove even more damaging - that its top leaders knew of several previous relationships Robert Franklin had with young boys and hired him anyway.

In a civil trial that began Monday, the family of Franklin’s teen victim alleges church leaders knowingly put their son in danger.

“Trinity Worship Center made a conscious decision not to follow up on information that Robert Franklin gave them himself,” said the family’s attorney, Hector Canales. “No inquiry was done.”

Current church leaders maintain they knew nothing about Franklin’s past until his arrest.

“This is not a situation where somebody found out and tried to cover it up,” said the church’s attorney, Rex Leach. “When this happened it was a tremendous blow.”

History of abuse

It is The Monitor’s policy not to identify victims of sexual abuse or their family members to protect their privacy.

In the lawsuit against the church, the family is only named as Jane, Jim and John Doe.

Franklin, 42, pleaded guilty in 2005 to having a sexual relationship with the teen, now 18, over a three-month period.

The two met when the boy’s mother asked him to counsel her son, but their friendship quickly grew to involve drug use, overnight sleepovers and eventually sex, Franklin said at a sentencing hearing.

Throughout, the former music minister maintained their relationship had been consensual and that the teen had initiated the sexual acts.

But Canales told a different story during his opening statements Monday.

Franklin had played out a similar pattern for years in congregations around the world, he said. He identified young boys in troubled family situations, plied them with drugs and then slept with them.

Allegations of sexual abuse arose at Assembly of God churches in Glendive, Mont., and Pensacola, Fla., where Franklin had either worked as a staff member or a volunteer, according to court filings.

No criminal charges were filed in either case, but the former music minister has since admitted to an inappropriate relationship with a teen in Montana that prompted Assembly of God leaders to strip him of his ability to minister.

The documents also accuse Franklin of sexually abusing a teen in Romania while on a mission trip. He eventually had to flee the country under threat of death from the alleged victim’s father, according to court documents.

But none of that seemed to concern Trinity Worship Center leaders when they hired Franklin in 1999, Canales said.

‘The stain of Robert Franklin’

Trinity’s former pastor, Robert L. Kane, hired the young minister on recommendation of a friend - John Kilpatrick, the head of Franklin’s former church in Florida.

But Kilpatrick, who is expected to testify on behalf of the victim’s family, said he also warned Kane of Franklin’s past. Witnesses testified Monday that the stories later became fodder for office gossip at Trinity.

Kane left the church before the music minister’s 2004 arrest and is now living in Mississippi.

Trinity’s current pastor, Robert Richardson, took over leadership at the church less than a month before Franklin was accused. He said he was never briefed on the music minister’s past and suspended him within days of finding out.

But it was too late to prevent another incident.

“Trinity Worship Center - to this day - wears the stain of Robert Franklin,” said Leach, whose firm represents The Monitor in unrelated matters.

The victim’s family is asking for unspecified damages to compensate them for pain the abuse inflicted. Since Franklin’s relationship with the teen came to light, the boy has contemplated suicide and feared that Franklin would try to kill him and his family, their lawsuit states.

He has also been hospitalized several times and his spleen had to be removed because of complications suffered during a beating the family alleges Franklin instructed other youths to carry out.

Franklin remains incarcerated on an 18-year state prison term. Although state District Court Judge Mario E. Ramirez initially sentenced him to six months in jail and a 10-year probation term for the crime, he revoked it in 2006 after Franklin was charged with drug possession months after getting out of jail.

Testimony in the civil trial is expected to resume this morning.

original story here

ST. GABRIEL, LA (WAFB) - The music director of a church in St. Gabriel faces up to 800 years in prison on sex charges. Lawrence Mercadel was booked into Iberville Parish Prison Monday night after turning himself in.

St. Gabriel police say the 50-year-old man was caught in the act with a 16-year-old girl. They also say Mercadel has ties to a church in Baton Rouge. Lawrence Mercadel is charged with 50 counts of carnal knowledge of a juvenile. He’s also charged with 20 counts of aggravated crimes against nature. The pastor of New Jerusalem Baptist Church in St. Gabriel, where Mercadel is the music director, was not available to comment on the arrest.

Police say the alleged incidents went on from December of 2007 to this past June. “It expanded. We confiscated her cell phone. She came in and gave officers a video statement of the relationship that’s been going on about six months,” says Chief Kevin Ambeau. St. Gabriel police say the victim in this case is a member of the New Jerusalem Baptist Church.

Mercadel had a Baton Rouge address listed on his arrest warrant, and police say he also had connections to the Promise Land Church in North Baton Rouge. “This type of stuff, you know, he need to be in jail, you know. People put their faith in the spiritual beliefs and they turn around and do something like this here. It’s a devastating blow to the community this size or anywhere else,” the chief says.

According to police documents, Mercadel is also on probation for a charge out of Alabama. He was accused of impersonating a peace officer there. His probation is scheduled to run through 2012. On the 50 counts of felony carnal knowledge, Mercadel faces up to ten years in prison on each charge. On the crimes against nature charges, he faces three to 15 years on each of the 20 charges there.

original story here

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