9/21/08 – AP: Church Compound Quiet After Child Porn Raid
Associated Press
September 21, 2008
By JON GAMBRELL
Church compound quiet after child porn raid
FOUKE, Ark. (AP) — A 15-acre church compound was quiet Sunday morning following a raid by federal and state law enforcement officers as part of a child-abuse and pornography investigation. A prosecutor said an arrest warrant was likely.
A man at the gate of the Tony Alamo Christian Ministries turned away an Associated Press reporter Sunday morning. He refused to give his name and said no one was available to comment.
Police said the church complex would be allowed to open for Sunday services.
More than 100 state and federal officers hit the compound Saturday in a raid that ministry leader and convicted tax evader Tony Alamo claimed in a telephone interview was part of a federal push to legalize same-sex marriage while outlawing polygamy.
Prosecutors once labeled Alamo as a polygamist who preys on girls and women.
The raid started an hour before sunset at the complex in tiny Fouke, in southwestern Arkansas. Armed guards regularly patrol the headquarters, but there was no resistance as agents moved in, state police said.
No one was arrested, but U.S. Attorney Bob Balfe said before the raid that he expected an arrest warrant for Alamo to be issued later. The federal investigation centered on the production of child pornography, while state police were looking into allegations of other child abuse, he said.
Social workers interviewed children who live at the complex, which critics call a cult. A two-year investigation involves a law that prohibits the transportation of children across state lines for criminal activity, said Tom Browne, who runs the FBI office in Little Rock.
In a phone call to The Associated Press from a friend’s house in the Los Angeles area, Alamo — who was also once accused of child abuse — denied involvement in pornography.
“We don’t go into pornography; nobody in the church is into that,” said Alamo, 73. “Where do these allegations stem from? The anti-Christ government. The Catholics don’t like me because I have cut their congregation in half. They hate true Christianity.”
Alamo and his wife Susan were street preachers along Hollywood’s Sunset Strip in 1966 before forming a commune near Saugus, Calif. Susan Alamo died of cancer in 1982 and Alamo claimed she would be resurrected and kept her body on display for six months while their followers prayed.
In 1988, following a raid near Santa Ana, Calif., three boys whose mothers were Alamo followers were placed in the custody of their fathers. Justin Miller, then 11, told police that Alamo directed four men to strike him 140 times with a wooden paddle as punishment for minor offenses. Alamo was later charged with child abuse but prosecutors dropped the charge, citing a lack of evidence. (NOTE: This statement is not entirely accurate. According to an LA Times article titled “Abuse Charges Against Evangelist Are Dropped: Prosecutors won’t pursue case against Tony Alamo, accused in beating of an 11-year-old, because he has been imprisoned for tax evasion”, prosecutors decided not to pursue the child abuse case because Alamo would probably have served only five months in state prison if convicted and it wasn’t a long enough addition to the federal prison sentence to fight what would have been a difficult trial.)
Alamo was convicted of tax-related charges in 1994 after the IRS said he owed the government $7.9 million. He served four years in prison.
Prosecutors in the tax case argued before sentencing that Alamo was a flight risk and a polygamist who preyed on married women and girls in his congregation.
Associated Press writer Thomas Watkins in Los Angeles contributed to this report.