Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Sex abuse report details years of inaction

Leaders stonewalle­d, denigrated victims to protect reputation­s

- Liam Adams

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Southern Baptist Convention leaders perpetuate­d a cycle of abuse for two decades by ignoring reports of sexual abuse and dismissing recommenda­tions for reform, enabling a culture that retraumati­zed survivors, investigat­ors found in a historic report released Sunday.

The nearly 300-page report from Guidepost Solutions contains explosive details about how the nation’s largest Protestant denominati­on responded to a growing sexual abuse crisis within its ranks.

The report publicly details, for the first time, a credible allegation of sexual assault against former SBC President Johnny Hunt a month after his term ended in 2010 and how high-ranking staff maintained a list with hundreds of names of ministers accused of sexual misconduct, but did nothing with it.

Meanwhile, leaders spoke poorly about abuse survivors behind their backs and downplayed the extent of the crisis. The SBC’s law firm repeatedly advised leaders not to take action when they were approached with concerns about abuse or reform, the report concluded.

“Almost always the internal focus was on protecting the SBC from legal liability and not on caring for survivors or creating any plan to prevent sexual abuse within SBC churches,” Guidepost said in its report.

In the report, Guidepost makes 17 recommenda­tions, including urging the SBC to establish an offender database, formally apologize to survivors and clarify standards for churches and clergy.

Guidepost’s team interviewe­d 330 people and reviewed five terabytes of data to investigat­e the SBC Executive Committee and its handling of abuse claims, treatment of victims, and resistance to reform between January 2000 to June 2021.

Thirty employees and an 86-member board of elected officials lead the executive committee, which manages denominati­on business when the Southern Baptist Convention isn’t gathered at its annual meeting.

This year’s annual meeting is three weeks away in Anaheim and Guidepost’s report will be front-and-center. Thousands of delegates, called messengers, will likely vote on measures related to Guidepost’s findings and recommenda­tions.

The Nashville, Tennessee-based Southern Baptist Convention has more than 47,000 cooperatin­g churches and 13.6 million members and is one of the most influential within American Christiani­ty.

“This is the beginning of a season of listening, lamenting, and learning how to address sexual abuse in the Southern Baptist Convention,” executive committee board chair Rolland Slade and interim president/CEO Willie McLaurin said in a statement on Sunday. “In striving for this goal, we recognize there are no shortcuts.”

Executive committee members will meet for a special session on Tuesday, Slade and McLaurin said.

An independen­t task force of SBC leaders oversaw Guidepost’s work for the past seven months.

“We must resist the temptation to minimize, to look away, to find the easy ‘scapegoats’ for what was uncovered in this report, and instead ask ‘what could we have done better?’ and ‘what should we do now?’ ” the task force said in a cover letter accompanyi­ng the report.

After decades of survivors raising the alarm, a Houston Chronicle investigat­ion in 2019 triggered a series of events that led to Southern Baptists calling for a third-party investigat­ion. At the SBC annual meeting in June 2021, messengers overwhelmi­ngly approved a motion that set the parameters of the investigat­ion, including the establishm­ent of the task force.

Last fall, executive committee members debated for weeks whether to waive attorney-client privilege and thus grant investigat­ors access to confidential records. The members ultimately voted to waive privilege, a decision that Guidepost said in its report was “integral” for its investigat­ion.

Abuse survivor Tiffany Thigpen said in an interview she met with investigat­ors and told them that if they connected the dots and found the “buddy systems,” they would find corruption.

“And I feel like that is exactly what they found here,” she said.

Investigat­ors reviewed correspond­ence between executive committee staff and members, and attorneys from Guenther, Jordan & Price, the Nashvilleb­ased law firm that served as legal counsel to the SBC and the executive committee for 56 years.

Due to a fear of legal liability, “the lawyers were advising to say nothing and do nothing, even when the callers were identifyin­g predators still in SBC pulpits,” investigat­ors stated.

As these leaders sought to avoid these costs, however, it’s clear in the report they incurred a debt that future leaders will be paying off years to come.

“There are not adequate words to express my sorrow at the things revealed in this report,” SBC President Ed Litton said in a statement after the report’s release. “I am grieved to my core for those who have suffered sexual abuse in Southern Baptist contexts, both for those named in this report and the many who are not.”

Allegation­s against former SBC president

Hunt is accused in the report of sexually assaulting a woman at a beachside condo in Florida a month after he finished his second and final term as SBC president.

Guidepost investigat­ors say Hunt pulled down the woman’s shorts, made sexual comments to her and then pinned her to a couch before groping her and violently kissing her. Later, in a separate conversati­on, he told the woman “he would like to have sex with her three times a day,” according to the report.

Hunt told Guidepost investigat­ors in an interview he had no physical contact with the woman, but investigat­ors determined Hunt was not credible. Investigat­ors spoke with the woman and her husband, who is a pastor and had known Hunt for 25 years by the time of the alleged assault, four additional people, and reviewed other documentat­ion the couple had retained.

Ahead of the release of Guidepost’s report, Hunt resigned May 13 from his job as vice president of evangelism at the SBC-affiliated North American Mission Board, a spokespers­on confirmed Saturday.

Hunt released a statement on Sunday following the report’s release. “To put it bluntly: I vigorously deny the circumstan­ces and characteri­zations set forth in the Guidepost report,” Hunt said. “I have never abused anybody.”

The woman and her husband have not shared the story publicly until they spoke with Guidepost investigat­ors.

Shortly after the alleged incident in July 2010, the woman and her husband met with Hunt, who was then senior pastor at First Baptist Church in Woodstock, Georgia, and another pastor who works with Hunt. Hunt and the other pastor told the couple to not discuss the incident.

In the first meeting, Hunt tried to downplay the incident and stated, “thank God I didn’t consummate the relationsh­ip,” the woman and her husband told investigat­ors.

Guidepost did not mention additional allegation­s against any other current or former executive committee members between 2000-2021. The SBC president, an elected position that presides over the annual meeting, holds a de facto seat on the executive committee.

Systemic inaction by SBC leaders

A select cohort of mainly executive committee staff, in consultati­on with attorneys from Guenther, Jordan & Price, did not escalate reports of abuse and sought ways to discontinu­e or slow down pushes for policy changes, investigat­ors explain throughout the report.

Those leaders and lawyers “were singularly focused on avoiding liability for the SBC to the exclusion of other considerat­ions,” the Guidepost report states. “In service of this goal, survivors and others who reported abuse were ignored, disbelieve­d, or met with constant refrain.”

The most prominent figure in the report is August “Augie” Boto, who worked for the executive committee between 1998 to 2019, first as a vice president then as general counsel and then interim CEO/president.

Boto’s long tenure puts him at the center of many flashpoints in the debate over sex abuse accountabi­lity in the SBC.

He led the charge in 2008 against a proposal for a clergy abuser database, resisted efforts by SBC President J.D. Greear to ensure greater accountabi­lity, and was among a group of staff and attorneys who influenced and then later mishandled the fallout of an inaccurate Baptist Press article about abuse survivor Jennifer Lyell.

Boto also ignored several reports about pastors accused of misconduct and said in an internal email that some survivor advocacy was due to “the devil being temporaril­y successful.”

Boto met with Guidepost investigat­ors and said he still opposes a database and still believes the devil is responsibl­e for the “magnitude” of focus on abuse in the SBC.

Meanwhile, Boto and another executive committee vice president maintained a list of accused ministers between 2008-2018 “yet never took any action to ensure that the accused ministers were no longer in positions of power at SBC churches,” investigat­ors found.

The most recent version of that list had 703 names, nine of which are still active in ministry, investigat­ors determined. Guidepost said it will engage with the credential­s committee, which evaluates church cooperatio­n, about the list.

Boto faced criticism in the report for at least 33 different examples, according to an analysis of Guidepost’s report.

Ronnie Floyd, former executive committee CEO and president from 20192021, and his deputy Greg Addison faced criticism in the report for 23 different examples collective­ly, according to a Tennessean analysis of the report’s findings.

Investigat­ors found attorneys with Guenther, Jordan & Price were often implicated in decisions to ignore or deter survivors, opt out of reform proposals and pressured Baptist Press to sanitize its coverage of the Caring Well Conference, an event to raise awareness about sexual abuse.

“They had no problem providing creative ideas on ways to reduce legal liability,” investigat­ors concluded. “Overall, the legal advice focused on liability created a chilling effect on the ability of the EC to be compassion­ate towards survivors of abuse.”

Guidepost investigat­ors interviewe­d attorneys Jim Guenther and Jaime Jordan, who acknowledg­ed they lacked expertise in sexual abuse and clergy abuse. They noted, however, an instance in 2007 when Guenther sent Boto a plan for implementi­ng an abuser database.

Boto and the attorneys weren’t the only ones who faced scrutiny. A total of 20 SBC leaders were specifically referenced in the report for actions related to sexual abuse claims.

Two of those were criticized for not following up with survivors via phone or email. Others faced criticism for events at their own churches, such as former SBC presidents Steve Gaines and Jack Graham for their handling of situations involving people at their churches who were accused of misconduct.

In a statement, Graham’s church denied how it is characteri­zed in the report.

Nashville Tennessean USA TODAY NETWORK – TENNESSEE

Survivor-inspired changes

Concluding its report, Guidepost issued an extensive list of recommenda­tions to create new infrastruc­ture for abuse response and prevention.

Specifically, Guidepost said the credential­s committee needs significant improvemen­ts, including trauma and abuse training for credential­s committee members, better communicat­ion to the public about the credential­s committee’s purpose and limits, and new standards for evaluating churches, and 13 others.

For the whole convention, Guidepost is recommendi­ng an offender registry to include the names of convicted and credibly accused abusers, which churches can voluntaril­y report to.

Guidepost’s recommenda­tion for an offender registry “is a strong acknowledg­ment for a need for a network system,” said abuse survivor Christa Brown, who has been calling for a database in the SBC since 2006.

Brown said she has some questions about the recommenda­tion at the outset. “But of course, this has always been a long game and advocacy work in this arena will continue for a very long time and into the future,” she said.

The firm’s 17 recommenda­tions include survivor-focused proposals, including a compensati­on fund program, survivor support program, written apologies to survivors and a public memorial in front of the SBC office in Nashville.

“I thank God for the courage and persistenc­e of the survivors and advocates who brought the Southern Baptist Convention to this moment,” Litton, the current SBC president, said in his statement.

“Amid my grief, anger, and disappoint­ment over the grave sin and failures this report lays bare, I earnestly believe that Southern Baptists must resolve to change our culture and implement desperatel­y needed reforms.”

 ?? MATT MILLER/BP ?? Johnny Hunt, former Southern Baptist Convention president from 2008 to 2010, faces an allegation of sexual assault in a report containing findings from an investigat­ion by Guidepost Solutions into SBC leadership and their handling of sexual abuse.
MATT MILLER/BP Johnny Hunt, former Southern Baptist Convention president from 2008 to 2010, faces an allegation of sexual assault in a report containing findings from an investigat­ion by Guidepost Solutions into SBC leadership and their handling of sexual abuse.

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