Church elders told to destroy documents
Jehovah’s Witnesses church elders in New Zealand have been told to destroy documents, and child sex abuse survivors fear that will lead to the cover up of cases.
A survivor network has given the Royal Commission of Inquiry into Abuse in Care copies of the church’s edicts, urging the commissioners to take action. It has approached the church, which it said assured the commission such documents won’t be destroyed.
However, the thrust of church instructions dating back to 2015, and emerging from its world headquarters in the US, and from its Australian regional centre, are counter to this.
RNZ has obtained recent church orders to its highly regulated Australasian congregations with these instructions about hearings and investigations into ‘‘wrongdoing’’:
‘‘When the matter has been finalised, all written records from both the original and appeal committees should be destroyed.’’
‘‘In any case, if it is determined that some brief personal notes need to be taken during a hearing, they should be destroyed once a summation of the hearing has been prepared.
Under a heading ‘‘Filing’’: ‘‘Did the judicial committee chairman destroy all other correspondence, except any letter of disassociation or resignation?’’
Elders are required to sign a form saying they have destroyed all electronic and hard copy documents except one official one, when they expel a believer for sinning.
The Australian Inquiry into Child Sex Abuse was told of 1800 likely victims and 1000 perpetrators within the Jehovah’s Witnesses across the Tasman. The inquiry found no evidence the church had reported a single case to the police.
It found seven serious faults in how the church handled cases, including:
If the accused does not confess, an inflexible requirement that there be two eyewitnesses to an incident of child sexual abuse.
Women entirely absent from the decision-making processes of the internal disciplinary system.
Survivors guess there could be several hundred unacknowledged cases in New Zealand, where Jehovah’s Witness believers number
14,000 out of a global following of
8 million.
A video of the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ headquarters records a manager telling elders everywhere to destroy documents was leaked last year to the Philadelphia Inquirer paper; in it the manager refers to judicial authorities as the devil, Satan.
The edicts do not specifically include or exclude documents relating to abuse, but New Zealand survivor network organiser Shayne Mechen, who spent years in the Jehovah’s Witnesses, is in no doubt child sex abuse records are in jeopardy. ‘‘There is already evidence that destruction of those documents has happened, they are no longer complete. They go to court and seal up all records.’’
He has given leaked church documents to the Royal Commission of Inquiry into Abuse in Care, including a recent letter to elders.
The commission then delayed hearing his evidence to consider the information, which showed it was taking it seriously but also carried risks, he said. ‘‘That letter there is a reminder of something that started back in around 2015, after the Australian royal commission. It may be too late.’’
The church’s Australasian headquarters declined an interview, and issued a statement. ‘‘In answer to your key question, ‘does this order include documents relevant to child sex abuse in the church?’, the letter you reference does not give any direction to destroy documents relevant to child sexual abuse,’’ it said.
The church maintained that elders had been told not to destroy abuse documents.
RNZ has obtained other new church edicts that show the leaders are now allowing believers to go to police with child sex abuse allegations; and also telling elders to be more open with congregations about abuse allegations and perpetrators. – RNZ
‘‘There is . . . evidence that destruction of those documents has happened.’’ Shayne Mechen