Sect
leader set up own camp for virgins, Minnesota charges say
By Tom Olsen Pioneer Press April 16, 2014
http://www.twincities.com/localnews/ci_25570644/minister-minnesota-church-charged-sex-abuse-two-girls
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Victor Arden Barnard, 52, a
minister who led a cult-like religious sect in northern Pine
County, sexually abused numerous girls and young women who
lived apart from their families in a "Maidens Group,"
according to recent criminal charges. |
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Victor Arden Barnard, who
likened himself to Jesus, was charged last week in Pine County
District Court with 59 counts of criminal sexual conduct. He
was last known to be living in Spokane, Wash., and remains at
large. |
PINE
CITY, Minn. -- A minister who led a cult-like religious sect
in northern Pine County sexually abused numerous girls and
young women who lived apart from their families in a
"Maidens Group," according to recent criminal
charges.
Victor
Arden Barnard, 52, was charged last week in Pine County
District Court with 59 counts of criminal sexual conduct. The
charges pertain to two young women who reported being abused
during a period of several years while living on the
congregation's compound in Finlayson. But authorities said
there probably are more victims.
Barnard,
who likened himself to Jesus, was last known to be living in
Spokane, Wash., and remains at large. A nationwide warrant has
been issued for his arrest.
The
charges are the result of a more-than-two-year investigation
by the Pine County sheriff's office. Chief Deputy Steven
Blackwell said Tuesday that his office has compiled boxfuls of
evidence and logged countless hours trying to put the pieces
together.
"The
really difficult element about going in and trying to
investigate this is that they're a very tight religious
sect," Blackwell said. "It's very difficult to
get answers and information from that kind of community."
The
sheriff's office began investigating in 2012, when a
24-year-old woman, identified in the complaint as
"B," reported that she had been abused from the ages
of 13 to 22.
B said
she and her family joined a church called the River Road
Fellowship, which had a camp on land near Finlayson, in 1998.
Authorities said the congregation is an offshoot of The Way
International, a nondenominational Christian group that has
frequently been alleged to be a cult.
In July
2000, Barnard set up a group for young girls called the
"Maidens Group" or "Alamoth," according to
the complaint. The group was to stay virgins and never marry.
B was invited by Barnard, and she and her father agreed,
thinking it was a summer camp.
A group
of about 10 girls and young women, ranging in age from 12 to
24, moved away from their families to live together.
They
soon found that the group was meant to be permanent,
according to the complaint.
Investigators learned that Bernard
moved out of the house he shared with his wife and children and
into a lodge on the "Shepherd's Camp" portion of
the property where the Maidens lived.
B said the sexual abuse started
when she was 13.
"Barnard repeatedly preached
to her that he represented Christ in the flesh, that Jesus
Christ had Mary Magdalene and other women who followed him,
that King Solomon slept with many concubines, that the
firstborn child was to be sacrificed to God, and that it was
normal for Barnard to have sex with her because it was in
God's Word," the complaint states.
Barnard would call girls to the
lodge when he wanted to have sex with them, and would order
them to not tell anyone about it, the complaint alleges. B
reported that Barnard also prevented her from leaving the
Maidens when she was 15, and decided that she wanted to marry
someday.
In 2004, the Shepherd's Camp
property was sold and the group moved to another property near
Finlayson, where the abuse continued, the complaint alleges.
In 2009, the girl traveled to
Brazil with another girl from the group. When she returned,
most of the Maidens had moved to Washington state, B told
authorities. She learned that there had been a division in the
congregation because Barnard had admitted to having sexual
relations with several married women in the congregation. B was
upset by his confession and moved to Pennsylvania, where her
parents had since relocated.
In fall 2011, B was contacted by
another former Maiden, identified in the complaint as
"C." For the first time, they talked about the sexual
abuse and decided to report it to authorities.
C stated that she was abused
starting when she was 12 in 2000, and kept a calendar and noted
each day she was abused by Barnard
until he prohibited her from keeping calendars, according to
the complaint.
"(Barnard) began to explain
that sex with him was not wrong because he was a Man of God and
she would remain a virgin because of it," the complaint
states. "C said he quoted parts of Scripture, saying it
gave him the authority to do this because he was Christ in the
flesh."
C reported that Barnard kept a
calendar in which he would schedule a time to be with each
girl, the complaint states.
Both B and C reported that Barnard
would sometimes beat them. He also told both of their parents
that he might have sex with them, even though he already was,
according to the complaint.
C left the group in 2009 and moved
to Wisconsin. She stated that she never wanted to talk about
the abuse, but it began to make her depressed. She attempted
suicide in January 2011, according to the complaint.
Both women told investigators that
they had not told their parents about the abuse. Urged by
authorities, B eventually talked to her parents. Her mother did
not want to hear about it, but her father listened and later
gave a statement.
He told investigators that his
daughter always seemed happy with the group. However, in
hindsight, he said that he should have realized that she was
being sexually abused, the complaint states. He also described
to investigators the power that Barnard had over the
congregation.
"He described the atmosphere
in the congregation and said it is a very powerful force to
face the idea of losing everything -- family, home, friends,
business and being cast out of the church -- if you do not go
along with what Barnard wants you to do," the complaint
states.
In November 2012, a Pine County
sheriff's office investigator flew to Washington and worked
with local authorities to try to locate Barnard, according to
the complaint. They went to an address listed on his
driver's license and found one of the congregation's
elders, who was described as Barnard's "right-hand
man." The man declined to talk to them or help locate
Barnard.
Investigators monitored three
other addresses believed to be associated with Barnard or the
Maidens, but failed to locate anyone who would talk. A
Washington State Patrol sergeant spoke with another church
elder, whose two daughters were reported to be members of the
Maidens. He denied that there had ever been a group of young
females separated from the rest of the congregation.
Authorities decided to bring
charges without having Barnard in custody, and obtained an
arrest warrant in an effort to find him. Blackwell said a
fugitive task force in Washington is still checking addresses
of potential associates.
Because of the difficulty in
interviewing members of the congregation and obtaining
evidence, the two alleged victims who came forward were
instrumental in being able to bring charges, Blackwell said.
"There's been a lot of
frustration and a lot of digging in trying to corroborate what
the victims are saying, but we've finally come to the point
where we have enough to charge," Blackwell said.
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