Who is Philip Brumley?
http://www.jehovahs-witness.com/6/123909/1.ashx JWD thread
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The Watchtower's Attorney
Phillip Brumley Danny sez: AKA "Charlie Manson without the look"
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"I would say in most cases they do a good job,"
he said. "But in this case not only did they do a bad job, but
they themselves caused harm to the children. They left the
children exposed to future harm." Brumley, the Watchtower Society lawyer, said that the elders aren't to blame for acts committed by another person. He says McKenzie wasn't even an official congregation member, though he may have attended some meetings. "To our knowledge, he was never a baptized Witness," Brumley said. Kimberlee Norris, one of the Texas lawyers filing cases against Jehovah's Witnesses, contends that church policies create an opportunity for abuse to occur. One policy, she says, tells church members to report problems involving other believers to church leaders instead of police. Another requires two eyewitnesses to an incident before the accused person can be punished. |
"The Seven Thunders have Uttered."
Read a news story on this from: http://lambsroar.com/db/index.php?showtopic=509:
Abuse lawsuit brings forth new allegations
By Jennifer Rouse
Mid-Valley Sunday
On the heels of a lawsuit filed against mid-valley Jehovah's Witnesses
congregations in September, another man has come forward claiming his
child was sexually abused by the same person.
In a lawsuit filed in September, Tyler C. Davidow, 24, asked for $3
million in damages in the suit, filed in Benton County Circuit Court.
The suit is one of a series of mass filings against the Jehovah's
Witnesses that a Texas law firm is planning.
Davidow claims a man named Troy Christian McKenzie, now 34, abused him
in 1984. According to the suit, Davidow, McKenzie, and both boys'
mothers were all Jehovah's Witnesses.
The Davidow suit claims that when Cathy Davidow learned of her son's
abuse in 1985, she went to the elders of her church and they told her
not to make a report to the police so they could deal with it
internally. Elders never addressed the matter, the suit claims. Tyler
and Cathy Davidow both declined to be interviewed.
A lawyer for the Watchtower Society said elders at the Albany and
Corvallis Jehovah's Witnesses congregations had no idea children in
their flock were being abused.
"The elders did not know about this and were not responsible for this,"
said Philip Brumley, general counsel for the Watchtower Society, which
is the Jehovah's Witnesses headquarters in New York.
After Davidow's lawsuit was filed, John Muir, a former member of the
Corvallis congregation, came forward, claiming that McKenzie also abused
his son, Eli.
When Cathy Davidow reported her son's abuse to the elders, other parents
were not informed of the allegations against McKenzie, Muir said. But
Muir heard about the allegations from another church member. He also
heard that Davidow was not the only boy who had been abused -- and that
Muir's son was one of the victims.
Shocked, Muir went to the elders and asked them to tell him what they
knew.
"When I asked for information I was told I didn't need to know. It would
serve no purpose," he said.
Muir and his wife then began years of wondering how to deal with the
situation.
"You tell me, how do you ask a 4-year-old what was done to him?" Muir
said. "Does he even remember? Maybe he has buried it so far in his mind
that he doesn't remember anything."
After living with the uncertainty for years, Muir finally talked about
it with his son. Eli told his father that he had been abused but did not
remember the incident very clearly.
Muir has contacted the Texas law firm handling the case against the
Jehovah's Witnesses church, but at this point has not filed a suit of
his own.
Eli is now 25, and Oregon law says that civil lawsuits for childhood
abuse must be filed before the victim's 25th birthday. But John and Eli
Muir decided to speak out anyway, to encourage others who may have been
abused. Even if there is no legal action taken in their case, Muir
thinks that what was done was wrong.
"That boy was allowed to continue to roam about the congregation," he
said. "Other families had no knowledge that they had a child molester in
their midst."
Muir is no longer a Jehovah's Witness. He said he was "disfellowshipped"
from the church several years after the abuse incident, for an unrelated
matter.
He knows the elders did not intend for children to be abused. But he
thinks church policy failed miserably when it came to dealing with
abuse.
"I would say in most cases they do a good job," he said. "But in this
case not only did they do a bad job, but they themselves caused harm to
the children. They left the children exposed to future harm."
Brumley, the Watchtower Society lawyer, said that the elders aren't to
blame for acts committed by another person. He says McKenzie wasn't even
an official congregation member, though he may have attended some
meetings.
"To our knowledge, he was never a baptized Witness," Brumley said.
Kimberlee Norris, one of the Texas lawyers filing cases against
Jehovah's Witnesses, contends that church policies create an opportunity
for abuse to occur. One policy, she says, tells church members to report
problems involving other believers to church leaders instead of police.
Another requires two eyewitnesses to an incident before the accused
person can be punished.
She claims that McKenzie abused Davidow while he was a teenager living
in Oregon, didn't face any consequences for it, and went on to abuse
again.
Norris provided court records showing McKenzie served time in Alaska for
sexual abuse.
McKenzie was convicted of sexually abusing a young boy in Alaska in
1994. He was sentenced to three years in prison, but two and a half
years of that was suspended. He was considered a good candidate for sex
offender treatment, and was allowed to move to Oregon with the condition
that he remain on probation and attend a sex offender treatment program.
In 1995 and in 1996, the Oregon Department of Corrections recommended
that his probation be revoked. His sex offender treatment provider wrote
a letter saying McKenzie "is a fixed predatory pedophile who is
extremely dangerous in the community."
McKenzie admitted that he had attended Jehovah's Witnesses meetings,
where he was in contact with many young males, without receiving
permission from his probation officer or obtaining an approved chaperon
for the meetings.
"This is especially significant in that McKenzie's admitted history is
that he met victims in the past through Jehovah's Witnesses gatherings,"
a probation officer wrote.
McKenzie is currently serving probation in Anchorage and could not be
located for comment.
No court dates have been set in the case.
In October, documents were seized from a storage unit in Philomath and
placed in a sealed envelope at the Benton County Circuit Court.
According to court records, the envelope contains journals and documents
belonging to McKenzie that may contain evidence of sexual abuse.
Brumley said his clients will continue to dispute the allegations.
"While our hearts go out to Tyler for the suffering he may have endured,
we are confident that neither Watchtower nor any of the local
congregation elders are responsible for what he alleges happened,"
Brumley said.