AP/ September 20, 2012, 8:29 PM

Tulsa megachurch rattled by sex abuse claims

Victory Christian Center is shown on Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2012, in Tulsa, Okla.

Victory Christian Center is shown on Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2012, in Tulsa, Okla. / AP Photo

(AP) TULSA, Okla. - A 17,000-member megachurch deep in Oklahoma's Bible Belt has been rattled by allegations that five employees waited two weeks to report the rape of a 13-year-old girl in a campus stairwell, allegedly by a church worker.

Tulsa police say the girl is among at least three victims of alleged sex crimes by two former employees of Victory Christian Center who face criminal charges. A child crimes investigator says more victims could surface as police continue to investigate.

Authorities, however, fear some parishioners in the large, tight-knit south Tulsa congregation may choose to pray about the allegations rather than provide concrete evidence.

Police said this week that the worldwide ministry's pastor and co-founder, Sharon Daugherty, whose daily broadcasts are beamed via satellite to more than 200 countries, knew about the abuse allegations, but trusted ministry employees to follow in-house policies on reporting such incidents.

Former church employee Chris Denman, 20, was arrested Sept. 5 for allegedly raping a 13-year-old girl in a stairwell before a church service on Aug. 13. He also is charged with molesting a 15-year-old girl sometime between Aug. 13 and Aug. 17. He has pleaded not guilty and faces an Oct. 11 preliminary hearing, court records show.

Another ex-employee, 23-year-old Israel Shalom Castillo was arrested Thursday morning after turning himself in at the Tulsa jail. He is charged with making a lewd proposal to a child and using a computer to commit a sex crime.

Prosecutors this week also charged five church employees — including Daugherty's son and daughter-in-law, who are both youth pastors — for failing to report the alleged assault between Aug. 15 and Aug. 30. John Daugherty, Charica Daugherty, Paul Willemstein, Anna George and Harold "Frank" Sullivan each face one misdemeanor count of failing to report child abuse and are due to be arraigned Wednesday in Tulsa County District Court.

Tulsa attorney Jason Robertson, who is representing the five employees, did not return a phone message seeking comment Thursday afternoon. An assistant in his firm indicated he was out of town.

The ministry — founded in 1981 by Sharon and the late Billy Joe Daugherty and shaped in a similar mold to Tulsa televangelist Oral Roberts' charismatic Christian ministries — issued statements this week accepting responsibility for the lapse in reporting. A request to interview Daugherty was declined by a public relations firm hired by Victory Christian Center.

In a statement to The Associated Press issued Wednesday, the church said its employees failed to follow a written policy requiring any allegation of abuse to be reported by employees to the state's Department of Human Services, and internally within one hour to their department head and the director of human resources.

The church explained that staff in the ministry's youth department learned of the allegations and spent about a week checking it out before reporting it to supervisors and human resources. Once the complaint reached HR, "that department did not follow its own reporting policy," the ministry admitted in the statement.

It was unclear from the ministry statement which of the allegations the youth department checked into on its own.

Sullivan, the HR director, fired the two men Aug. 24, and then left a message with a member of the church who works with an anti-child trafficking organization to seek advice on whom to contact. Sullivan was advised to call police on Aug. 27. The ministry said Sullivan exchanged voicemails with an officer until Aug. 30, when they finally connected and the officer told Sullivan to dial 911, which he did that day.

"We deeply regret that our employees did not report these incidents to authorities within the proper amount of time. This failure within our organization weighs heavily on us, because our purpose is to help people and minister to their needs," the church said in the statement to AP. "Our internal response was unacceptable, and we are taking the proper steps to correct it."

The five employees charged with failure to report abuse have been suspended by the ministry while it decides disciplinary action, the organization said.

Police Det. Cpl. Greg Smith, who works in the child crisis unit, said the ministry has fully cooperated with investigators since the alleged abuse was reported.

"There was a couple of weeks in which they were either unsure of what to do or didn't do it, or who knows what," he said. "There was a couple weeks where we probably lost some evidence."

Smith said police are pursuing cases involving at least two more victims and another suspect. In one of the cases, police have failed to connect with the accuser. In the other, the victim's parents are not cooperating, Smith said,

"They made a comment that the church is handling the situation and they're going to continue to pray about it," Smith said Thursday. "We're still hoping to convince them to go forward with it."

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
23 Comments Add a Comment
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Kymbee23 says:
Please join us on our journey to justice and healing.

This page is dedicated to exposing the truth behind the silence of Victory Christian Center after a 13 year old girl told her advisers she was raped at VCC by a Center employee on August 13.
www.facebook.com/TriumphOverVictory
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moonglowsun says:
This just makes my blood boil. How DARE they cover up a crime this violent? This... THIS is why I am so cynical about organized religion. I wonder what Jesus would do if He were here now?
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GhostCoyote replies:
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This is why I'm cynical about humanity. Also, I work with paroled sex offenders, so I've had to look in the eyes of men that have done far far worse things than this and smile. Its enough to motivate a man to wear a cape and become a vigilante
I_am_3rd replies:
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I guess he would handle it perfectly? Any organization that big is going to have some criminals and bone-heads in it. Just like Penn State, the Clinton admin., etc. It just stinks that fools were in a position to sit on knowledge of a crime and thus commit a crime themselves.
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endrepubs says:
Anyone care to defend the Church?
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GhostCoyote replies:
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I'll defend Christianity, not the Church. Just as I will defend Islam, but not many practitioners
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margroks says:
There are no legal "in-house" ways of handling rape! That's called a cover-up. I hope the people who tried to cover-up this crime get punished severly.
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eroteme2 says:
Their hired Public Relations Firm should be able to handle this easily.
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formerlyluvnut says:
Ah yes, religion; do as I (we) say, not as I (we) do. Religion is the root of ALL evil.
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GhostCoyote replies:
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Yeah, because Leninism, Stalinism, and Maoism never hurt anyone. This has nothing to do with religion. It has to do with power. Predators are naturally drawn to professions where they are given power over others: Religion, Law Enforcement, Politics, etc. There are sincere people in each profession that want to actually help people, but the trust placed in them is also why these incidents are so widely reported. The ONLY reason this was nationally reported is because it occurred in a church, and not in a welding shop, lumber yard, or accounting firm.
obabyo replies:
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Two types of wrong do not make a right, GhostCoyote...
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Hutterite says:
Religion these days is obsessed with sex. Who gets to have sex, with whom, and why. Gays, abortion, marriage. All about sex. Yet time and again those that claim to have the moral high ground don't just fail, but actively conspire to hide some nasty things under the church rug. It's time to start looking at religion a lot more suspiciously, and most definitely get it out of politics.
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Solarrays247 replies:
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I agree completely with this post. In addition, I believe that any church organization that becomes involved in politics should lose their tax free standing, and be made to pay taxes just like all "profit" organizations.
I_am_3rd replies:
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Political organizations don't pay the taxes that religious orgs are exempt from. Churches and the like still pay sales tax and payroll tax. Maybe more I am not aware of. They just aren't taxed on donations like all charities and religious orgs.

I think society is, has been, and always will be obsessed with sex. Religion is a part of society.
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wizardlady says:
So it is not only the CATHOLIC PRIESTS who are involved in sexual acts and abuse. Apparently these folks are not as 'clout' covered as the Catholics for NO local police action gets taken upon their members, only the church gets to transfer the culprit.

If the government would assess a financial penalty upon these churches, maybe that would curtail the activities (and help our deficits). Unfortunately, it would not prevent further abuse.
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88Ronin replies:
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Better yet, prosecute those organizations under RICO and tax them out of existence.

Religion benefits only self-appointed "holy" men.
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DavidInMaine says:
Another church thinking they are above the law.
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nancy_naive says:
Give a man a Bible and a sense that his God is on his side, and all manner of creepy behavior is possible...
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