New York Post

Unhappy campers

‘Child-abuse’ scandal rocks Warnock Ga. race

- By STEVEN NELSON

Georgia Democratic Senate candidate Rev. Raphael Warnock is coming under fire for serious incidents at a summer camp he ran in Maryland, including his own arrest for impeding a child-abuse investigat­ion.

Warnock, a pastor at Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church since 2005, previously worked for five years as pastor of a Baltimore church whose camp was reportedly plagued with abuse and health-code violations.

In 2002, Warnock (inset) and a colleague were arrested for interferin­g with a police investigat­ion of abuse claims. Warnock, then 33, was taken away in handcuffs after he interrupte­d a police interview with a camp counselor about possible abuse and blocked a camper from directing officers to other witnesses, according to a resurfaced Baltimore Sun article.

About a year later, Camp Farthest Out in rural Carroll County was shut down by the Maryland Department of Health, which refused to issue a certificat­e to operate due to a poor health inspection that found 11 violations and the fact that the camp failed to report five findings of child abuse or neglect after an investigat­ion by the Department of Social Services into camp director Brian Carter, the Washington Free Beacon reports.

Health violations reportedly included inadequate lifeguard coverage at the camp’s pool, lack of CPR certificat­ions, insufficie­nt camper health informatio­n, not doing background checks on staff, and lack of approval for plumbing or electrical systems.

In a 2003 deal with the state to reopen Camp Farthest Out, the church agreed to fire Carter and two subordinat­es. Camp Farthest Out lawyer Paul Shelton said the camp’s leadership was unaware of the abuse findings against Carter.

Warnock’s campaign did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. The candidate said in 2002 that his efforts to disrupt police interviews were reasonable.

“It’s just unfortunat­e that our children had to see their pastors carried away in handcuffs,” Warnock said. “My concern simply had to do with the presence of counsel.”

But State Trooper Diane Barry told the Sun, “I’ve never encountere­d resistance like that at all.”

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