Victor
Arden Barnard, an American pastor wanted for 59 counts of sexual
assaults in Minnesota, was arrested by Brazilian authorities on Friday,
the office of the governor for the State of Rio Grande do Norte said
Saturday.
The 53-year-old
suspect was wanted by the Pine County, Minnesota, Sheriff's Office for
allegedly sexually abusing two young girls who were members of his
church, the U.S Marshals Service said.
Barnard -- who was featured on CNN's "The Hunt With John Walsh" in 2014 and again earlier this week -- was last seen in the United States in Raymond, Washington, in 2014.
In
April of that year, prosecutors in Pine County, Minnesota, issued a
criminal complaint that accused him of 59 felony counts of criminal
sexual conduct. The manhunt began after a two-year investigation into
allegations from two women about Barnard's alleged conduct while he was
preaching to a religious group in Finlayson, Minnesota.
Barnard
was featured on the United States Marshal's 15 Most Wanted List along
with a $25,000 reward for information leading to his arrest. He was also
wanted for unlawful flight to avoid prosecution.
A 33-year-old woman was also arrested, Brazilian authorities said.
Charismatic leader
As a
pastor, Victor Barnard inspired his congregants with his charisma and
apparent devotion to the teachings of Jesus Christ. "I had never met
anybody that I thought loved the word of God as much as Victor Barnard
did," Ruth Johnson, a former member of Barnard's River Road Fellowship,
told "The Hunt."
David Larsen, a former leader of the River
Road Fellowship, said he helped Barnard set up a so-called "shepherd's
camp" in the mid-1990s in Pine County to help bring more people into the
church. Several of his congregants, including Johnson, moved to the
rural area about 100 miles north of Minneapolis to be a part of the
camp.
In June of 2000, the charismatic
religious leader allegedly convinced some members of his congregation to
hand over their firstborn daughters to live with him in the secluded
campsite.
Lindsay Tornambe's name was
called and her parents allowed their 13-year-old daughter to join the
group of girls at the camp, called "The Maidens," under Barnard's
supervision. She and other congregants said the girls got up early,
sewed, cooked and cleaned for Barnard.
"Everything that a wife would do, they did for him," Johnson said.
Barnard proclaimed he was Christ on Earth.
"He
taught that in the Bible, the church was the bride of Christ and
because he was Christ in the flesh, the church was supposed to be
married to him," Tornambe said. "At that time I didn't really understand
the fullness of what it meant."he complaint filed in Minnesota says
Tornambe alleges that she was sexually abused by Barnard from the ages
of 13 to 22 while she and her parents were members of River Road
Fellowship. Tornambe told investigators the group of 10 young girls and
women were known as Alamoths, or maidens. Her group was sent to what she
thought was a summer camp, the document says.
Tornambe
told investigators that she estimated that Barnard sexually assaulted
her one to three times a month until she left in 2010 to be with her
parents, who had moved to Pennsylvania.
In
fall 2011, she was contacted by another former maiden who shared a
similar story: she said she was molested by Barnard from the time she
was 12 until she was 20, although she said the number of sexual acts
varied each month.
Tornambe and the
other woman went to the police in Minnesota. Barnard had moved to
Washington state after an admission to affairs with married women caused
the religious group to split, the complaint says.
The
ministry operated in a secluded area of Pine County from about 2000
until 2011 or 2012, Chief Deputy Steven Blackwell of the county
sheriff's office told CNN in 2014. The fellowship vacated the property
shortly after a new sheriff was elected and began investigating the
ministry, Blackwell said. The Salvation Army now runs a family camp
there, he said at the time.
No comments:
Post a Comment