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Its followers met in homes rather than churches. Its leadership structure was hard to discern, its finances opaque. Now a growing number of public allegations from around the world have prompted a broad investigation by the FBI and placed an uncomfortable spotlight on the long-quiet Christian sect.
Survivors say the group's leaders protected child-abusing ministers by pressuring victims to forgive, ignoring legal reporting requirements and by transferring abusers to new locations to live with unsuspecting families. Ministry leaders have publicly condemned the abuse but several declined to answer questions from The Associated Press.
A website , a hotline and social media pages established by victims have documented allegations against more than abusers, with survivors in more than 30 countries and cases continuing to emerge. While perpetrators have been sentenced to prison in isolated cases, the sect has largely avoided legal repercussions, protected by its decentralized structure, hidden finances and state laws that limit the timeline for criminal charges.
The only way to spread Christianity, he argued, was to do as Jesus instructed in the Book of Matthew: to send apostles out to live among those they sought to convert. Sect historians say there were up to a few million members just a few decades ago, but current estimates put the figure at 75, to 85, worldwide.
Workers are supposed to shun worldly possessions, relying on followers for food, shelter and transportation. But that also ensures abusive workers have access to potential victims. Webb was abused by a preacher who stayed with her family in Michigan when she was The man, Peter Mousseau, was convicted much later — after he expressed an interest in visiting her in and she decided to pursue charges. A regional overseer to whom she previously reported the abuse was later convicted for failing to report abuse allegations against another local worker.