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  Children Interviewed after Raid on Ark. Compound

Associated Press
September 21, 2008

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5iM_k_Z5_nC3gb0btse0fgEAFl4RAD93BMOV00

FOUKE, Ark. (AP) — State and federal authorities are investigating the possible sexual abuse of minors at a 15-acre evangelical compound run by a convicted tax evader who critics describe as a cult leader.

The Tony Alamo Christian Ministries complex in southwestern Arkansas was raided Saturday by more than 100 federal and state police, and six children have been placed in temporary state custody and are being interviewed.

This undated photo made available by Tony Alamo Christian Ministries shows Tony Alamo and his wife Susan.

No one was arrested, but U.S. Attorney Bob Balfe said prior to the raid that he expects a warrant to be issued for Alamo, 74, who has a long history of tangling with law enforcement.

State police spokesman Bill Sadler said that if the children in state care need to be held long-term, the matter would have to go before a judge.

The raid, the culmination of a two-year investigation into child-abuse and pornography allegations, was moved up on the calendar after an e-mail about plans for an October raid was inadvertently sent to media late last week.

Anthony Justin Lane, right, is interviewed in Fouke, Ark., as his current wife Lynne looks on Sunday, Sept. 21, 2008. Lane is the father of three children who he said live with their mother and her husband under evangelist Tony Alamo's supervision.

Alamo told The Associated Press in an interview Saturday that no child pornography was generated at the ministry but that "consent is puberty" when it comes to sex. Alamo, who said he was in the Los Angeles area, said the government is trying to harass him.

Alamo was convicted of tax-related charges in 1994 after the IRS said he owed the government $7.9 million. He served four years in prison. Prosecutors in the tax case argued before sentencing that Alamo was a flight risk and a polygamist who preyed on married women and girls in his congregation.

In 1991, Alamo and his followers disappeared when U.S. marshals stormed his complex near Alma in western Arkansas — taking with them the remains of Alamo's late wife Susan, who had died in 1982 and from whom Alamo anticipated a resurrection. As a condition of his release from his four-year sentence from the tax convictions, Alamo had to turn over his wife's corpse to her family.

A man patrols in front of the Tony Alamo Christian Church in Fouke, Ark., early Sunday, Sept. 21, 2008. The 15-acre church compound was quiet Sunday following a raid by federal and state law enforcement officers as part of a child-abuse and pornography investigation. A prosecutor said an arrest warrant was likely.

A number of people who claimed to have past ties with the Alamo group appeared outside the compound as law officers searched the grounds.

Anthony Justin Lane, 34, said he'd been kicked out for asking too many questions and hoped he could get his three children back. He said they remained with the group and his former girlfriend after he was expelled.

"I see pictures of those kids and I feel robbed — robbed of being a father," Lane told reporters.

The Southern Poverty Law Center, which monitors the activities of extremist groups in the U.S., describes Alamo's ministry as a cult that opposes homosexuality, Roman Catholicism and the government.

A man patrols in front of the Tony Alamo Christian Church in Fouke, Ark., early Sunday, Sept. 21, 2008. The 15-acre church compound was quiet Sunday following a raid by federal and state law enforcement officers as part of a child-abuse and pornography investigation. A prosecutor said an arrest warrant was likely.

During the raid, Fouke Mayor Terry Purvis said he was concerned about the reputation of the town of 800 residents, saying he didn't want the community to be associated with Alamo. But he said four members of Alamo's organization are running for city council on the fall ballot.

On Sunday, services were held at the compound but outsiders weren't allowed to attend. A van ferried members from the Alamo compound to the church facility.

 
 

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