Ronald Rasband, a general authority of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, speaks on Oct. 18, 2019, to The Arizona Republic Editorial Board. (Photo: Brady Klain/The Republic) |
A top leader in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints denounced Paul Petersen's adoption scheme as "sickening."
Ronald
Rasband, a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, said Petersen's
membership in the church does not exonerate his conduct nor excuse any
wrongdoing.
“We’re just as disgusted with it as
anybody," Rasband told The Arizona Republic in a recent interview. “The
details of this case are sickening.”
The Quorum is
the second-highest governing body in the church, after the president,
and helps set worldwide policy for its 17 million members.
Rasband's
comments mark the first time the church has taken a public position on
the case, which is reverberating with political, cultural and legal
implications.
He acknowledged the church will review Petersen's membership.
Petersen
is the elected Maricopa County assessor. He was indicted on human
trafficking charges last month in Arizona, Utah and Arkansas related to
his private adoption practice in Mesa.
Authorities
say Petersen illegally transported pregnant women from the Marshall
Islands to the U.S., fraudulently enrolled them for Medicaid and
orchestrated adoptions of their children to American families for up to
$40,000 each.
Neither Petersen nor his attorney would comment on Rasband's remarks.
Petersen has pleaded not guilty to charges in Arizona and Arkansas and is scheduled to appear Friday in a Utah court.
A church mission to the Marshall Islands
Latter-day
Saints officials acknowledged Petersen's practice was rooted in his
1998 church mission to the Marshall Islands, where he said he learned
the language and began facilitating adoptions.
They
said a recent inquiry found that individuals within the church
community previously had expressed concern about Petersen "and sought to
distance" themselves from him years before his arrest.
Rasband
said Petersen's alleged conduct was not sanctioned by the church and
said no overlap was found between Petersen's adoption practice and the
church’s Family Services arm.
“The fact that he’s a Latter-day Saint does not exonerate him,” Rasband said.
He questioned if Petersen's religious ties would undergo rigorous scrutiny if he was not a church member.
Church
Elder Paul Pieper said missionaries can develop strong ties with
members of the communities they serve. An unscrupulous person might take
advantage of those ties, he said.
Text messages and
interviews obtained by The Arizona Republic show Petersen frequently
placed children with Latter-day Saints families.
WHAT WE KNOW: How Paul Petersen's Marshall Islands adoptions worked
Adoptive parents said Petersen was regarded
as a family man and a trusted source for adoptions, particularly among
the Latter-day Saint community in Arizona, Utah and Arkansas.