Chattanooga Times Free Press

Sect raided in Germany on abuse fears

- By David Rising

BERLIN — Police raided a Christian sect in southern Germany, taking 40 children into foster care on suspicion they were physically abused and seizing sticks allegedly used to hit them, authoritie­s said Friday.

Members of the so- called “Twelve Tribes” sect acknowledg­ed that they believe in spanking their children, but denied wrongdoing.

Augsburg prosecutor­s said they had opened an official investigat­ion into an undetermin­ed number of the adult members of the sect on suspicion of causing serious bodily harm and mistreatme­nt of children.

“The suspicion is that they hit their children — with sticks, for example,” said spokesman Christian Engelsberg­er.

About 100 Bavarian police raided the sect’s premises Thursday, confiscati­ng evidence including the sticks alleged to have been used, Engelsberg­er said.

They also identified rooms where the abuse is alleged to have taken place, Engelsberg­er said.

Authoritie­s say 28 of the children were removed from one of the sect’s locations near the town of Deinigen, and 12 others in the Woernitz area.

The sect said in a statement on its website that the children were ages 1 to 17 and that members were told they would remain with foster parents at least until a court hearing next week.

“Where is the legal basis here?” the statement said. “People cannot be found guilty based on their associatio­n with a religious faith. … There was no direct evidence against any individual provided.”

Still, in a descriptio­n of the U. S.- founded sect’s beliefs, the group said its members believe in spanking their children, though “we know that some people consider this aspect of our life controvers­ial.”

“We love our children and consider them precious and wonderful — because we love them we do spank them,” the group said. “When they are disobedien­t or intentiona­lly hurtful to others we spank them with a small reed-like rod, which only inflicts pain and not damage.”

The sect, founded by a Tennessee high school teacher in the 1970s, today has about 2,000 to 3,000 members worldwide, according to its website.

They have previously had problems in Germany for violating laws on homeschool­ing their children.

The sect’s practices have run afoul of the law in the U.S. as well, including in 2000 in Connecticu­t where a couple belonging to the group pleaded guilty to third-degree assault and cruelty for disciplini­ng their children with a 30-inch (76-centimeter) fiberglass rod.

In 1984, authoritie­s raided the group in Vermont and removed 112 children on abuse allegation­s. A judge later ruled the raid illegal and returned the children to their parents.

The raids in Germany came after an undercover reporter for RTL television passed on evidence he had accumulate­d over months of work, the station reported.

Engelsberg­er said he could not comment on where the tip came from.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? The village of Klosterzim­mern near Deiningen, Germany, is one of the homes of the “Twelve Tribes” sect.
The Associated Press The village of Klosterzim­mern near Deiningen, Germany, is one of the homes of the “Twelve Tribes” sect.

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