Miami Herald

Prosecutor­s ask Miami judge to detain Haiti orphanage founder accused of sexual abuse

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES jcharles@miamiheral­d.com Miami Herald Staff Writer Jay Weaver contribute­d to this report.

Federal prosecutor­s have filed an appeal with a Miami judge seeking to overturn a Denver court’s decision that allowed an American man accused of sexually abusing boys at a Haitian orphanage to be sent to a halfway house until trial.

This month in Colorado, Magistrate Judge Scott Varholak denied a request by federal prosecutor­s to detain Michael Karl Geilenfeld, 71, after he was indicted on Jan. 18 by a grand jury in Miami.

Geilenfeld, who was arrested in Denver, is accused of traveling from Miami to Haiti 14 times between November 2006 and December 2010 to engage in “illicit sexual conduct with another person under 18.” If convicted, Geilenfeld faces a maximum sentence of 30 years.

Rather than order Geilenfeld to remain behind bars, Varholak ordered him to be sent to a halfway house and outfitted with a GPS monitoring device. Varholak held off on having Geilenfeld released from a Denver federal prison until a federal judge in South Florida could rule on the matter after prosecutor­s said they would appeal.

In the appeal, prosecutor­s argue that Geilenfeld poses a flight risk. He has no ties to South Florida and is a danger to the community given the serious nature of the allegation­s, they said.

Prosecutor­s also argue that Geilenfeld has substantia­l financial resources, some of which he has transferre­d overseas, and has spent most of his life with connection­s in other countries, specifical­ly Haiti and the neighborin­g Dominican Republic.

Geilenfeld, the founder of an orphanage in Haiti, has held “himself out as a missionary while using his position and privilege to sexually abuse young boys and cover up his crimes,” prosecutor­s wrote in court papers. Between the mid-1980s through 2014, Geilenfeld operated orphanages in Haiti, including the St. Joseph’s Home for Boys, which he founded in 1985. He also opened a home in the Dominican Republic after fleeing there to escape sexual-abuse allegation­s in Haiti, where he had been jailed and still has a court case pending.

In a petition seeking his release, Geilenfeld’s lawyer, Robert Oberkoette­r, accused prosecutor­s of shopping for a more favorable jurisdicti­on. The government, Oberkoette­r said, has had Geilenfeld’s travel documents since 2012 when his client was investigat­ed by a federal grand jury in Charlotte, North Carolina. Though he was not indicted at that time, prosecutor­s said “Geilenfeld’s counsel erroneousl­y advised the court that a grand jury in North Carolina issued a no bill after being presented with an indictment against” him.

“Further detention should be lifted and trial should take place in Colorado,” Oberkoette­r said in the petition, arguing that his client doesn’t have the money to defend himself in Florida. Oberkoette­r did not respond to a Miami Herald email request seeking comments.

Allegation­s of sexual abuse have followed Geilenfeld for more than a decade. After children’s rights advocate Paul Kendrick and Haitian journalist Cyrus Sibert launched a campaign to have him arrested, Geilenfeld and a Raleigh, North Carolina, nonprofit group that supported his St. Joseph’s Home for Boys orphanage sued for defamation in federal court. They initially won a judgment against Kendrick, who lives in Maine, but that was vacated due to a lack of jurisdicti­on.

A second lawsuit was filed in state court in Maine by Geilenfeld and the nonprofit, Hearts with Haiti. Kendrick settled and his homeowner’s insurance policies paid the charity $3.5 million. Geilenfeld, he said, signed a document with the court dismissing all charges against him with no financial remunerati­on.

Following Geilenfeld’s arrest last month, the non-profit’s executive director, Emily Everett, told McClatchy’s sister newspaper, The News & Observer, that the charity “severed all ties with Mr. Geilenfeld years ago.”

“Mr. Geilenfeld was never an employee, volunteer nor member of the Hearts with Haiti Board of Directors,” she said in an email to the newspaper. “Hearts with Haiti has no knowledge regarding the guilt or innocence of Michael Geilenfeld concerning these federal charges.”

The original St. Joseph’s Home for Boys, which Geilenfeld founded in 1985, was closed by the Haitian government in 2014 following his arrest on sexual-abuse allegation­s. Hearts with Haiti, Everett said, continues to support the St. Joseph Family, an organizati­on that provides education and housing to “children and adults with disabiliti­es and economical­ly disadvanta­ged children” in Jacmel, Haiti.

Prosecutor­s have highlighte­d allegation­s by four victims who say they were forced to engage in sexual acts with Geilenfeld while they stayed at the Haitian orphanage. They were between the ages of 9 and 13 years old at the time. Prosecutor­s also pointed out that in May 2019, U.S. Customs and Border Protection stopped Geilenfeld after he tried to fly to the Dominican Republic, where he lived after fleeing sexual-abuse allegation­s in Haiti.

During the stop, an officer found in Geilenfeld’s possession 11 copies of a three-page photo array of victims/witnesses involved in the sexualabus­e allegation­s. Prosecutor­s said they believe the purpose of the photos was to aid Geilenfeld in intimidati­ng or bribing witnesses and victims.

In a September 2022 deposition, Geilenfeld stated that all of his efforts were to “get back to the Dominican Republic because that is my wealth, my life, that is my everything,” prosecutor­s said.

Anyone with informatio­n or who might have been a victim or witness is being asked to call Homeland Security Investigat­ions at 877-4-HSI TIP (877-447-4847).

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