Los Angeles Times

Fewer charges for church head

Extortion counts are dropped against La Luz del Mundo leader Naason Garcia.

- By Leila Miller

A Los Angeles County Superior Court judge has thrown out several counts of extortion against the head of La Luz del Mundo church in a case where prosecutor­s say the leader used his base to groom underage victims for his sexual pleasure.

Citing insufficie­nt evidence, Judge Stephen A. Marcus on Wednesday ruled to dismiss four counts of extortion against Naason Joaquin Garcia. He argued that the state attorney general’s office had failed to show that Garcia had threatened to disgrace his alleged victims if they didn’t perform sexual acts.

The judge also dismissed enhancemen­ts against Garcia for great bodily injury on counts of forcible rape of a minor and unlawful sexual intercours­e with a minor, saying that there lacked evidence that an injury had resulted from the sexual act.

But Marcus otherwise denied a motion by Garcia’s defense attorneys at Wednesday’s hearing in downtown L. A. to dismiss before trial the case against Garcia, a man known among his followers as the “apostle” of Jesus Christ. Garcia is being held on $ 90- million bail and has pleaded not guilty to counts that include human traffickin­g, forcible rape of a minor, and possession of child pornograph­y since his arrest in June 2019.

Garcia’s attorneys argued in their motion that prosecutor­s have shown “virtually no evidence” that Garcia’s alleged victims had participat­ed in sexual acts under pressure from the defendants, claiming that they’ve only pointed to an “unspoken and internaliz­ed fear.”

“What the government has consistent­ly done from the beginning of this case,” said Alan Jackson, Garcia’s attorney, “was focus almost entirely on the belief system, the belief structure of LLDM [ church], making relatively broad brushstrok­e allegation­s about the church.”

The judge held otherwise. Marcus said that Garcia, along with two co- defendants whom prosecutor­s claim helped prepare minors for the apostle’s pleasure, had exploited and manipulate­d his alleged victims “using religion as invisible handcuffs.”

“They used the fact that these girls were members of the church their entire life, and their families were members of the church,” he said. “They believed Garcia was the apostle of God, and they had to obey his wishes… Why else would these girls engage in sexual activities with Garcia?”

Jackson said he didn’t wish to comment on the ruling. The complaint against Garcia, 51, and co- defendants Alondra Ocampo, 37, and Susana Medina Oaxaca, 25, details crimes that allegedly occurred between June 2015 and June 2019. Prosecutor­s have claimed that the alleged victims were told that if they went against Garcia’s desires as “the apostle” they were going against God.

The attorney general’s off ice refiled charges in late July after a previous case against the defendants was dismissed for violation of a right to a timely preliminar­y hearing.

Ocampo, who is being held without bail, pleaded guilty to four counts this month, according to prosecutor­s. These include three counts of contact with a minor for a sexual offense, involving three Jane Does, and one count of forcible sexual penetratio­n, involving a fourth Jane Doe. The attorney general’s office said it could not immediatel­y share more informatio­n on a possible plea deal.

Prosecutor­s have described Ocampo as someone who groomed girls who were later allegedly sexually assaulted by Garcia and coerced minors into pornograph­ic photo shoots in hotel rooms in Whittier and El Monte.

In court papers, they allege that Garcia was served by an exclusive group of young girls within a larger group of congregant­s that assisted with household chores at his East L. A. home. Ocampo, they said, carried substantia­l inf luence at the Luz del Mundo church nearby and was in charge of the exclusive group typically composed of teenagers about 15 years old.

 ?? NAASON JOAQUIN I rfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? Garcia, known among followers as an “apostle” of Christ, at an August hearing.
NAASON JOAQUIN I rfan Khan Los Angeles Times Garcia, known among followers as an “apostle” of Christ, at an August hearing.

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