Current:Home > ContactFormer Mormon bishop highlighted in AP investigation arrested on felony child sex abuse charges -Capital Dream Guides
Former Mormon bishop highlighted in AP investigation arrested on felony child sex abuse charges
View
Date:2025-04-13 06:20:05
A former bishop in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints who was featured in an Associated Press investigation into how the church protects itself from allegations of sexual abuse was arrested by police in Virginia this week after being indicted on charges he sexually abused his daughter while accompanying her on a school trip when she was a child, according to court filings.
Police and federal authorities had been searching for John Goodrich after a grand jury in Williamsburg on Jan. 17 found probable cause that he committed four felonies, including rape by force, threat or intimidation, forcible sodomy, and two counts of felony aggravated sexual battery by a parent of a child.
Those charges were filed weeks after the AP investigation revealed how a representative of the church, widely known as the Mormon church, employed a risk management playbook that has helped it keep child sexual abuse cases secret after allegations surfaced that Goodrich abused his daughter Chelsea, now in her 30s, at their home in Idaho as well as on a school field trip to the Washington, D.C., area 20 years ago.
“I hope this case will finally bring justice for my childhood sexual abuse,” Chelsea Goodrich said in a statement to the AP. “I’m grateful it appears that the Commonwealth of Virginia is taking one event of child sexual assault more seriously than years of repeated assaults were treated in Idaho.”
A call Wednesday to John Goodrich’s cellphone went immediately to voicemail. Thomas Norment, a Williamsburg defense attorney for John Goodrich, declined to comment, saying he was still familiarizing himself with the case. The Williamsburg Police Department also did not respond to multiple requests for comment on Goodrich’s case.
Goodrich’s arrest in Virginia comes nearly eight years after he was arrested in Idaho on similar charges. Chelsea and her mother, Lorraine, went to Idaho police in 2016 to report wide-ranging allegations of abuse during her childhood.
Those charges were eventually dropped after a key witness in the case, another Mormon bishop to whom John had made a spiritual confession about him and his daughter, refused to testify. While the details of that confession have not been made public, the church excommunicated Goodrich.
The AP’s investigation was based in part on hours of audio recordings of Chelsea’s 2017 meetings with Paul Rytting, a Utah attorney who was head of the church’s Risk Management Division, which works to protect the church against sexual abuse lawsuits and other costly claims.
Chelsea went to Rytting for help in getting the bishop to testify about John’s spiritual confession. During the recorded meetings, Rytting expressed concern for what he called John’s “significant sexual transgression,” but said the bishop, whose position in the church is akin to a Catholic priest, could not testify. He cited a “clergy-penitent privilege” loophole in Idaho’s mandatory reporting law that exempts clergy from having to divulge information about child sex abuse that is gleaned in a spiritual confession.
Without that testimony, prosecutors in Idaho dropped that earlier case.
Invoking the clergy privilege was just one facet of the risk management playbook that Rytting employed in the Goodrich matter. Rytting offered Chelsea and her mother $300,000 in exchange for a confidentiality agreement and a pledge to destroy their recordings of their meetings, which they had made at the recommendation of an attorney and with Rytting’s knowledge. The AP obtained similar recordings that were made by a church member at the time who attended the meetings as Chelsea’s advocate.
The church also employed the use of its so-called sex abuse Helpline, which John Goodrich’s bishop had called after his confession. As AP revealed in 2022, the Helpline is a phone number set up by the church for bishops to report instances of child sex abuse. Instead of connecting church victims to counseling or other services, however, the Helpline often reports serious allegations of abuse to a church law firm.
In a statement to the AP for its recent investigation, the church said, “the abuse of a child or any other individual is inexcusable,” and that John Goodrich, following his excommunication, “has not been readmitted to church membership.”
News coverage of the Idaho case brought out another alleged victim. After learning about Chelsea’s allegations, a 53-year-old single mother accused him of having nonconsensual sex with her after giving her the drug Halcion, a controlled substance John Goodrich often used to sedate patients during dental procedures. She alleged that Goodrich drugged her the previous July after she cut off a sexual relationship with him.
In the end, John Goodrich reached a plea agreement in that case, and escaped sex crimes charges.
Chelsea Goodrich approached the AP with her story, she said, because her father remained free and practicing dentistry in Idaho with access to children.
On Tuesday, after authorities spent two weeks searching for him, Goodrich turned himself in to police in Williamsburg, a court official told Chelsea Goodrich, and he posted bond. He will be allowed to leave Virginia during legal proceedings, the court official said.
—-
Contact AP’s global investigative team at [email protected] or https://www.ap.org/tips/.
veryGood! (623)
Related
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Steelers name Russell Wilson starting QB in long-awaited decision
- Auto sales spike in August, thanks to Labor Day lift
- Ford becomes latest high-profile American company to pump brakes on DEI
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- California lawmakers pass bill that could make undocumented immigrants eligible for home loans
- Grand Canyon visitors are moving to hotels outside the national park after water pipeline failures
- In New Orleans, nonprofits see new money and new inclusive approach from the NBA Foundation
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- Bills' Josh Allen has funny reaction to being voted biggest trash-talking QB
Ranking
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- What is EEE? See symptoms, map of cases after death reported in New Hampshire
- Civil rights lawyer Ben Crump advertises his firm on patches worn by US Open tennis players
- Police fatally shoot man on New Hampshire-Maine bridge along I-95; child, 8, found dead in vehicle
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Brittni Mason had no idea she was eligible for Paralympics. Now she's chasing gold
- Nikki Garcia's Husband Artem Chigvintsev Arrested for Domestic Violence
- Georgia puts Cornel West and Claudia De la Cruz back on the state’s presidential ballots
Recommendation
A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
Autopsy determines man killed in Wisconsin maximum-security prison was strangled
Will Deion Sanders' second roster flip at Colorado work this time? Here's why and why not
Watch this stranded dolphin saved by a Good Samaritan
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
US economic growth for last quarter is revised up to a solid 3% annual rate
Concierge for criminals: Feds say ring gave thieves cars, maps to upscale homes across US
Heather Graham Reveals Why She Hasn’t Spoken to Her Parents in Nearly 30 Years