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US Baptists In Haiti Charged With Child Kidnapping, Attorney Says

FRANK BAJAK   02/ 4/10 11:45 PM ET   AP

Haiti Adoption Arrests

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Ten U.S. Baptist missionaries were charged with kidnapping Thursday for trying to take 33 children out of Haiti to a hastily arranged refuge just as officials were trying to protect children from predators in the chaos of a great earthquake.

The Haitian lawyer who represents the 10 Americans portrayed nine of his clients as innocents caught up in a scheme they did not understand. But attorney Edwin Coq did not defend the actions of the group leader, Laura Silsby, though he continued to represent her.

"I'm going to do everything I can to get the nine out. They were naive. They had no idea what was going on and they did not know that they needed official papers to cross the border," Coq said. "But Silsby did."

Family members of the Americans released a statement late Thursday saying they were concerned about their relatives jailed in a foreign country.

"Obviously, we do not know details about what happened and didn't happen on this mission," the statement said. "However, we are absolutely convinced that those who were recruited to join this mission traveled to Haiti to help, not hurt, these children."

The Americans, most members of two Idaho churches, said they were rescuing abandoned children and orphans from a nation that UNICEF says had 380,000 even before the catastrophic Jan. 12 quake.

But at least two-thirds of the children, who range in age from 2 to 12, have parents who gave them away because they said the Americans promised the children a better life.

The investigating judge, who interviewed the missionaries Tuesday and Wednesday, found sufficient evidence to charge them for trying to take the children across the border into the Dominican Republic on Jan. 29 without documentation, Coq said.

Each was charged with one count of kidnapping, which carries a sentence of five to 15 years in prison, and one of criminal association, punishable by three to nine years. Coq said the case would be assigned a judge and a verdict could take three months.

The magistrate, Mazard Fortil, left without making a statement. Social Affairs Minister Jeanne Bernard Pierre, who has harshly criticized the missionaries, refused to comment. The government's communications minister, Marie-Laurence Jocelyn Lassegue, said only that the next court date had not been set.

U.S. Ambassador Kenneth Merten showed up after 5 p.m. outside judicial police headquarters, where the Americans are being held and where President Rene Preval and top ministers now have temporary offices because theirs were destroyed in the quake.

"The U.S. justice system cannot interfere in what's going on with these Americans right now," he told reporters. "The Haitian justice system will do what it has to do."

U.S. consular officials have been making regular visits to the missionaries.

On Wednesday, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called the Americans' behavior "unfortunate whatever the motivation."

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said the U.S. was open to discuss "other legal avenues" for the defendants, an apparent reference to the Haitian prime minister's earlier suggestion that Haiti could consider sending the Americans back to the United States for prosecution.

It's unlikely the Americans could be tried back home, according to Christopher J. Schmidt, an expert on international child kidnapping law in St. Louis, Mo. U.S. statutes may not even apply, he said, since the children never crossed an international border.

Silsby waved and smiled faintly to reporters but declined to answer questions as the Baptists were whisked away from the closed court hearing back to the holding cells where they have been held since Saturday. People rendered homeless by the quake sat idly under tarps in the parking lot, smoke rising from a cooking fire.

Earlier, Silsby expressed optimism about being released.

"We expect God's will will be done. And we will be released. And we're looking forward to what God is going to do," she told APTN before learning they would be charged.

Coq complained about conditions where the Americans were being held. He said they are sleeping on the floor without blankets and aren't being provided with adequate food. He said he had delivered pizza and sandwiches.

Silsby had begun planning last summer to create an orphanage for Haitian children in the Dominican Republic. When the earthquake struck she recruited other church members to help kick her plans into high gear. The 10 Americans rushed to Haiti and spent a week gathering children for their project.

Most of the children came from the quake-ravaged village of Callebas, where residents told The Associated Press that they handed over their children to the Americans because they were unable to feed or clothe them after the earthquake. They said the missionaries promised to educate the children and let relatives visit.

Their stories contradicted Silsby's account that the children came from collapsed orphanages or were handed over by distant relatives. She said the Americans believed they had all the paperwork needed – documents she said she obtained in the Dominican Republic – to take the children out of Haiti.

"They are very precious kids that have lost their homes and families and are so deeply in need of, most of all, God's love and his compassion," she told the AP in a jailhouse interview Saturday.

The Dominican consul in Haiti, Carlos Castillo, told the AP on Thursday that the day the Americans departed for the border, Silsby visited him and said he had a document from Dominican migration officials authorizing her to extract the children from Haiti.

Castillo said he warned Silsby that if she lacked adoption papers signed by the appropriate Haitian officials her mission would be considered child trafficking. "We were very specific," he said.

Back home in Idaho, Silsby faces questions about her business practices. As many as nine unpaid wage claims by employees of PersonalShopper.com, the online shopping business she founded and for which she is listed as CEO. One of those claims alleges the company owes the employee more than $22,000.

A Roman Catholic official in the Dominican Republic, meanwhile, told the AP that Silsby had agreed to rent 45 rooms at a former hotel owned by the Church in Cabarete, a northern beach resort.

Silsby agreed to rent the rooms for $7,000 a month and solicited a list of required repairs, said Jose Hidalgo, the real estate agent who brokered the deal.

The assistant pastor of Silsby's church in Meridian, Idaho, Drew Ham, has defended the missionaries, saying they were putting the children's' interests first at a time of chaos.

The Central Valley Baptist Church was locked on Thursday afternoon but lights were on. Signs on the church's front door said "No Entrance. Thank you for your understanding."

The children are being cared for at the Austrian-run SOS Children's Village in Port-au-Prince. An official there, Patricia Vargas, said none of the children who are old enough to talk have said they were orphans.

___

Associated Press writers Matthew Lee in Washington, Abel Guzman in Santo Domingo, Todd Dvorak and Rebecca Boone in Boise, Idaho, and Paisley Dodds in Port-Au-Prince contributed to this report.

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PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Ten U.S. Baptist missionaries were charged with kidnapping Thursday for trying to take 33 children out of Haiti to a hastily arranged refuge just as officials were trying...
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Ten U.S. Baptist missionaries were charged with kidnapping Thursday for trying to take 33 children out of Haiti to a hastily arranged refuge just as officials were trying...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
charmante
01:57 PM on 02/07/2010
These 10 Americans were caught.

Who else is involved?

Has any orphanages in Haiti smuggled children out the country in the aftermath of the earthquake?

Why no one is investigating House of Blessings in Callabasse, Haiti whose co-founder Phillip Murphy of Lake Wales, FL recommended Silsby to the villagers?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
charmante
01:20 PM on 02/07/2010
According to the NY times, Laura Silsby came to the village of Callebasse at the recommendation of a pastor named Philip Murphy who run an orphanage in the area

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/03/world/americas/03orphans.html?src=tp, the villagers

" trusted the Americans, they said, because they arrived with the recommendation of a Baptist minister, Philippe Murphy, who runs an orphanage in the area."

As I mentioned on a previous post, Murphy, is far from being a Haitian last name. A search on the web reveal a Pastor Philip Murphy co-founder of an orphanage in Callebasse, Haiti called House of blessings:

http://haitihouseofblessings.org/

So why has no one in the press made an effort to locate this American Pastor? According to the website he and his wife live in Lake Wales, Florida.
His church and his organization needs to be investigated. The International community need to provide financial assistance to Haitian authorities to legally pursued all involved in this case and others.
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PoliticalRockChick
Hatred for bible & hypocrites
04:26 AM on 02/07/2010
People, if you want to help my people, the Haitian people, you don't need to take our children out of the country. It's not a quick fix. You can sign up to Haitian organizations that are helping with education, medical supplies, and getting clothes and food to those who need them. Oprah built a school in South Africa, she didn't take all those kids to America with her. She's helping to build future bright young women, who will continue to build South Africa. You can do the same. We have have water systems already in place but nobody is continue to build all around the rural areas of Haiti. We have schools, hospitals that are run down. We need help to repair them and fix them up. Another thing, the reason Haiti has been this way since the Duvalier years is because too many people are involve. A great analogy I can give you is, the World Trade Center. It's going to be almost 9 years and there's still no building. There's not rebuilding. Too many people are involve with the project. Think of rebuilding Haiti, like the Trade Center. The more people involve, the slower the process. Keep that in mind. And also, I'm sick and tired of churches in every block. It's like starbucks in every corner. My people doesn't need to be converted. Okay. Thanks.
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ebanks84
Grandma knows best!
12:49 PM on 02/06/2010
As big as this story will be, I am shocked HP shoved it in a hole somewhere where you could "barely" find it. Those Americans should be blasted on TV every single day for what they did which was totally despicable. Children have been exploited in this fashion for too many years without enough MEDIA attention to thwart it.

People need to read about Silsby's past and the financial difficulties she is in right up to this minutes for NOT paying her bills and employees. This is the reason why she was so intent on grabbing these children, I'm sure, to make some quick money to pay her bills.

This woman is in some serious trouble. I only hope the others who did NOT know the master plan and were not following it will be able to come home without being charged.
10:02 PM on 02/05/2010
Water board them but don't torture em.
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PoliticalRockChick
Hatred for bible & hypocrites
04:35 AM on 02/07/2010
No keep them in jail.
04:57 AM on 02/07/2010
I think it is absolutely hysterical that their lawyer is complaining about them sleeping on the floor and not getting food.

What do they think the Haitian people are doing? Why do they deserve special treatment?

Leave them in there on the floor. It's 100 degrees there, why do they need blankets. As for the food - let them eat mud cookies.
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07:18 AM on 02/07/2010
... and throw away the key
08:03 PM on 02/05/2010
It's a little ironic how Laura Silsby justifies her overt kidnapping by claiming these kids were "deeply in need of, most of all, God's love and his compassion." Wonder how God would respond to her claim? Read his answer in a mock news story on The Green Scare: http://thegreenscare.com/?p=140
04:37 PM on 02/05/2010
Glad to see that the Left wing anti-Religion sentiment is alive and seathing. What happened to due Process ? Did any of you read that some of the kids parents handed them over willingly? Oh no they are a Christian Group so let's assume the worst.

The truth is that none of US know what their intentions were. If they were trying to get children out of harms way in the short term then we should all applaud them. There was no governement officials to get to sign anything. They were all scrambling while the children were in danger. If they were involved in Child Trafficking then let the Courts lock them away and throw away the key.

I wonder if the commenters on this issue would be willing to treat Muslim Terrorist as harshly and without due process as these Christian Ministries ? I am guessing the answer is no you would not !
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
crowmeris
Rad-fem from way back when
08:05 PM on 02/05/2010
The truth is that their intentions are irrelevant but their actions are not. Yes, some desperate parents handed their children over, but preying on people who are desperate is not an action to be applauded.

Instead of spending a small fortune for airfare and for renting out space in a decaying hotel, this group could have donated these funds to an existing qualified Christian organization already on the ground in Haiti. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/02/04/us-baptists-charged-with-_n_449750.html#
08:02 PM on 02/10/2010
Crow, You may remember that people from all over the world tried to get to NYC to help with the tower rescues after 9/11/01. Every State, Canada, France, Britians etc.. Private citizens coming to help. In one of history's darkest moments, Humanity shined. Did you think they should stay home and donate ?

In this case, these parents were not "Preyed Upon" they were begging someone anyone to save their children PERIOD. You like a lot of folks judged these Baptist as guilty. Today the parents testified at how greatful they were that there children were taken to safety. The investigatnig judge decalred no criminal intent.
09:35 PM on 02/05/2010
Interesting. Thanks for the guessing and the due process!
03:07 PM on 02/05/2010
Their motives are irrelevant: they committed criminal acts, kidnapping and child trafficking. They need to be treated like any similar criminal to the full extent of Haitian law. Their god delusions should have nothing to do with their outcome in the justice system. Personally, I would lock them up and throw away the key.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
conscioushope
"There is no darkness but ignorance." Shakespeare
03:49 PM on 02/05/2010
pb~

Yes!

Their "god delusions" make them even more dangerous and looney!
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06:41 AM on 02/07/2010
Oh, good grief! There was an earthquake, in case you hadn't heard. And just what "Haitian law" was there in the chaos following the the earthquake to make sure that all the administrative procedures were dutifully followed while children were dying? The Baptists went in to rescue a few children it was within their limited means to save, and for their admirable efforts they are now vilified by people who project their own cynical view of the world onto others. It may come as a surprise to you, but there really are people in this world, millions of them in fact, who possess a sense of altruism rooted in their religion, and who are willing to go out of their way to help others (ever hear of the Red Cross, or Salvation Army?), as is clearly the case here. For them to be treated as being equivalent to terrorists or as part of some international ring of child kidnappers is outrageous and sick. These people are heroes, in my opinion, and should be congratulated for their efforts. That they are being persecuted instead can only be attributed to anti-Christian bigotry.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SaquaroSue
05:44 PM on 02/08/2010
If they were really all that altruistic, why didn't they assist the entire families, so they could stay together, rather than making a run for the border with their children?

I don't see anything outrageous about how they are being treated. They are being treated in accordance with the laws of the country they were in. If you don't want to sit in a foreign jail for a few years, here's an idea....obey the laws of the country you are in. The Haitians have every right to expect their laws be respected, and to enforce them when they are broken.
01:29 PM on 02/05/2010
We Americans should being saying to the Haitian government-" LET MY PEOPLE GO!!!
None of the gathered AID MONEY should be released to the Haitian organizations.
01:43 PM on 02/05/2010
Whoooat?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
conscioushope
"There is no darkness but ignorance." Shakespeare
03:50 PM on 02/05/2010
salh~

I'm sure you know what you mean, but your post does not really make sense.
12:13 PM on 02/05/2010
What about all the others who are taking kids out of the country? They are no better just because they have papers. These kids belong in their country and if people want to help then give money to keep them at home and life a decent life there. Adoption is not the answer. It sounds so benign and sweet and good intentioned, but really it's a business or the fulfillment of an ego need. Those kids should be supported in their own country with or without family. It can be done and it is the humane thing to do.
01:35 PM on 02/05/2010
I agree. Where is Focus on the Family when families need them? FOTF should be demanding Congress pass a law making it illegal to bring children into the country as adoptees or to be adopted, but no, they are focusing on the unborn and have to compassion for the living!
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02:30 PM on 02/05/2010
"What about all the others who are taking kids out of the country?"

This isn't about anyone else ... it's about the ones who broke the law and got caught.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LittleOldLadyWho
Lifelong Liberal Democrat
11:20 AM on 02/05/2010
They went in as "liberators" and wound up being shown the door--the one to a jail cell!
10:47 AM on 02/05/2010
Good intentions or not, what would the consequences have been if these people had done the same thing here in The States? I seriously want to know.
I worry that these people will be tried in The States because the Haitian government has other more pressing issues to worry about, and the Idaho 10 will be given a slap on their hands as punishment.
If that happens, what message is the U.S. sending abroad with American missionaries willing to disrespect the laws in other countries they would otherwise follow in their own?
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02:27 PM on 02/05/2010
"I worry that these people will be tried in The States ..."

I share your worry.
These people committed a serious crime and should be tried in and by the country where they committed it.
10:43 AM on 02/05/2010
Child traffickers deserve the death penalty!

DO NOT BE SOFT ON CRIME!
10:42 AM on 02/05/2010
KiII all child abductors!
10:37 AM on 02/05/2010
I expect that God's Will will be done and these folks will have their butts thrown in jail for a long, long, time. The audacity of people who everytime they have a thought going through their head and assume that it is God talking to them!! Add to that the audacity of thinking they know what a better life is?! And who doesn't know that you need a passporte to move from country to country... these people are too ignorant to know what is better for these kids... Only God knows what their real motivation was and what REALLY awaited those children in the hands of these kidnappers!!
10:41 AM on 02/05/2010
These child abductors should be kiIIed