Social worker accused of hiding religious sect abuse resigns
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/religion/social-worker-accused-of-hiding-religious-sect-abuse-resigns/2017/03/17/24e34f38-0b4f-11e7-bd19-fd3afa0f7e2a_story.html?utm_term=.d4c2544dc33a
CHARLOTTE, N.C. A veteran social worker accused of coaching congregants and their children on what to say during a 2015 child abuse investigation of her secretive religious sect has resigned, an attorney for a child welfare agency said Friday.
Andrea Leslie-Fite said Lori Cornelius left her position at the Cleveland County Department of Social Services. The development came less than two weeks after The Associated Press published a report that quoted former members of the Word of Faith Fellowship sect saying that Cornelius and two assistant district attorneys all members of the church had helped undermine abuse investigations. The prosecutors resigned their posts and are under investigation by the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation.
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In its ongoing investigation, the AP has reported that the 2015 social services investigation included complaints that students at the church-run K-12 school were encouraged to beat classmates to cast out devils. Former members also said Cornelius coached children on what to tell investigators with the help of assistant prosecutors Frank Webster and Chris Back. Back is the son-in-law of sect leader Jane Whaley.
That DSS probe ended with no charges.
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Late last month, the AP revealed decades of physical and emotional abuse inside Word of Faith, which has 750 members in Spindale, and nearly 2,000 members in churches based in Brazil and Ghana. Former members described being punched, choked and thrown through walls as part of a violent form of deliverance meant to purify sinners.
Victims of the violence included pre-teens and toddlers even crying babies who were vigorously shaken, screamed at and sometimes smacked to banish demons, according to on-the-record interviews with 43 former members. Those interviewed said congregants also were subjected to a practice called blasting an ear-piercing verbal onslaught often conducted in hours-long sessions meant to cast out devils.