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New Mexico takes 3 children from church compound because White Trash
Bastards
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Two girls, one boy were taken from the rural compound after an
investigation
http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/04/30/children.seized.ap/index.html
State official cites allegations of inappropriate contact between minors,
church leader
The leader, Wayne Bent, 66, denies molestation, says state abducted
children
No charges have been filed; state hasn't revealed source of allegations
ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico (AP) -- State police have removed three children
from an apocalyptic
church whose leader claims to be the Messiah and acknowledges having ***
with some of his
followers.
Wayne Bent is shown with a follower at the church's compound in
northeastern
New Mexico.
The two girls and one boy -- all younger than 18 -- were taken from the
northeastern New Mexico
compound after an April 22 investigation, said Romaine Serna, a
spokeswoman
for the state
Children, Youth and Families Department, on Wednesday.
She said a fourth child, a girl, agreed to be interviewed by the
department.
Serna said that girl
had been at the compound but now lives elsewhere with her parents.
The three children were taken into state custody because of allegations of
inappropriate contact
between minors and the adult leader of the Lord Our Righteousness Church,
Serna said.
"I understand that it was very calm, and [state police] did not meet with
any resistance," she
said. Serna said she wasn't aware of any other youths at the compound.
Serna declined to elaborate because of the ongoing investigation by state
police and the district
attorney's office. No charges had been filed, she said. The church has at
least 70 members, Serna
said.
Wayne Bent, 66, who is known in the church as Michael Travesser,
established
the church at a
rural site called Strong City, north of Clayton in extreme northeastern
New
Mexico. He said God
anointed him Messiah in July 2000.
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Dozens of sect children moved to foster care
"There was never any child molestation, or adult molestation by anyone,
including myself," Bent
wrote in a posting Wednesday on the church's Web site. "There has never
been
'*** with minors' or
anything remotely approaching that."
Bent, in an April 27 posting on the Web site, accused the state of
kidnapping the children. "My
children are kidnapped because some demon wrote a letter to people in
authority accusing me of
some crimes," he wrote.
"When the state came against our children (seed), the state came against
God, and this will NOT
ever be forgiven them," he wrote.
In a lengthy discussion dated September 11, 2007, Bent said that his work
is
finished and that he
doesn't expect to be "in the earthly sphere" much longer.
He acknowledged having *** with three women: the wives of two of his
followers and his
daughter-in-law. He said it was at the direction of God and the
instigation
of the women.
Jeff Bent, who Serna said is Wayne Bent's son, denied in an April 29
letter
to Gov. Bill
Richardson and posted on the Web site that any child had been abused or
neglected at Strong City.
The group educates its children "to avoid the slavery you seek to impose
on
them, and to
experience the freedom they have in God," Jeff Bent wrote.
"We have given everything to prepare them for an eternity with God. We
haven't oppressed them
with your atheistic globalist curriculum, socialist indoctrination, and
'alternative lifestyles'
dogma that comprise modern public education. We have taught them higher
values than the values of
your slave-state, and have sought to ****eld them from the abuse that is
institutionalized in your
system," he wrote.
Jeff Bent also wrote to Richardson, "Now that you have moved against us
because of our faith, the
cup of God's anger is full to the brim, and now He is free to move against
you."
Gilbert Gallegos, a spokesman for Richardson, declined to comment on the
letter.
Serna said that two of the children removed from the ranch were placed in
foster homes and one
accepted voluntary placement, which usually means with a friend or
relative.
Serna said her agency received information April 21 that warranted the
removal of the children.
She declined to reveal the information or its source.
The New Mexico removal came three weeks after Texas officials raided a
polygamist-sect ranch and
took custody of 463 children, saying that group's practice of underage and
polygamous spiritual
marriages endangered the children.
THE MORE YOU CAN GET CAUCASOIDS TO READ, THE SOONER THEY FIND OUT THAT
THEY
ARE JUST CONSPICUOUSLY EXPLOITED CAUCASOIDS WHICH ARE WHITE NIGGERS.
What Is a "White Nigger" ?
By Andrew D. Todd
http://hnn.us/articles/1220.html


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