It's Missouri's biggest clergy sex-abuse case to date, Leslie said, according to the Associate... Little Talk on Missouri'

Submitted by admin on Sun, 2007-01-21 23:00.

It's Missouri's biggest clergy sex-abuse case to date, Leslie said, according to the Associated Baptist Press, but accounts of a youth minister's sexual misconduct were low-key for years until he was convicted last week of 25 counts of abuse.

Shawn Davies, 33, was hired at First Baptist Church of Greenwood in 2003, serving as the music and youth minister. He had attended Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Ky., with the senior pastor, Mike Roy.

Prior to working at First Baptist, Davies had worked at several other churches. And those past employers did not give Davies favorable job references, noting Davies' addiction to pornography and that he "didn't work well with children." Still, Davies was easily hired by churches.

The Missouri Baptist Convention helps churches run background checks on employees, equipping churches with the tools and the questions. Each individual church, however, is accountable for its hiring policies, said David Clippard, executive director of the Missouri Baptist Convention, according to the Associated Baptist Press.

In July 2005, police in Missouri began investigating Davies after a boy from the Greenwood church came forward with charges of sexual molestation. From First Baptist alone, seven boys said they were abused. The detective found that at least 13 victims from Missouri, Kentucky and Michigan have come forward with allegations.

"This man is a predator," Leslie told ABP. "He is going to be a cancer to society unless he is locked up. I'm sure there are still other victims of Shawn's out there."

In his latest sentence, Davies was convicted on Jan. 12, 2007, of 25 counts of abuse dating from 2003. Charges included statutory sodomy, furnishing pornographic material to minors, supplying liquor to minors, sexual misconduct with a child under the age of 14, use of a child in sexual performance and endangering the welfare of a child, according to ABP.

"It was mishandled," Orth said of Roy's decision not to talk, ABP reported. "Mike felt bad because it happened on his watch. He felt bad about that."

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