Posted on 05/24/2025 12:34:06 PM PDT by dynachrome
ping
Just dump him in the middle of the street in Port Au Prince, he won’t last five minutes.
Beat me to it.
Good gosh....đłđđ¨
,,, at 73 years of age the 210 year sentence is unrealistic. It should be commuted to a 100 year sentence and multiple amputations. Leave him with one hand with a thumb on it.
Sad that one evil idiot gets to successfully tarnish all good works done by others, missionaries.
Are all teachers pedophiles? Certainly not over 10%, and their evil poisons by association the great good done by the rest.
Evil sucks.
Journalism today:
Here’s a story about a U.S. citizen in Haiti:
“Colorado man sentenced to 210 years in prison for sexually abusing boys at his orphanage in Haiti”
https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/4318907/posts
Here’s a story about a Mexican national in the U.S.:
“Newport Beach man accused of entering US illegally and embezzling $7 million from employer”
https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/4318848/posts
“Haitian Revolution 1985-1986
In 1985 large, unchecked demonstrations, coupled with American and French pressure, destabilized the government of dictator Jean Claude Duvalier (November-December).
In 1986, as demonstrations grew and American and French pressure intensified, the government of dictator Jean Claude Duvalier fell; he fled Haiti (February 7), and a period of instability followed.
References
Timelines of War, 511, 513.”
Prison general population can rehabilitate him.
,,, at 73 years of age the 210 year sentence is unrealistic.
+++++++++
Agree. How about a shotgun blast to the junk, from about 5 feet away?
I donât trust men who want to run an organization for young boys. Thatâs an odd calling.
I wonder where his wife was during all this?
I wonder if Mr. Kendrick will get his money back? Reported August 6, 2015 in the Richmond Times-Dispatch:
Richmond-area charity members celebrate win in defamation suit Director had been accused of abuse at Haiti boysâ home
BY LAURA KEBEDE
Richmond Times-Dispatch
Richmond-area board members of a North Carolina-based nonprofit that does work in Haiti celebrated a recent verdict which they said symbolically exonerated executive director Michael Geilenfeld from accusations of child molestation.
Paul Kendrick, a Maine activist for sexual abuse victims, was ordered to pay $14.5 million to Geilenfeld and the charity after leading a four-year email campaign to hundreds of donors perpetuating false accusations, The Associated Press reported.
The trial in Maine included testimony of Willie Dell, a former Richmond councilwoman and longtime friend of the nonprofit, on the executive directorâs behalf, as well as seven Haitian men who claimed Geilenfeld sexually abused them while at St. Josephâs Home for Boys in Port-au-Prince.
Three of the 11 board members for Hearts with Haiti live in the Richmond area, and several churches in the area frequently send volunteers to the organizationâs Wings of Hope home for children with disabilities, St. Josephâs Home for Boys and Trinity House for program graduatesâ business startups.
âT saw Michael as a very caring person ... who was about saving the children, as many as he could,â said Dell, who first visited the home in 1986 and then up to twice per year since.
âHe determined they were going to be a family and live as a family.â
Three of the accusers never lived at the home and the others never exhibited signs of abuse, Dell said. Board member Brenda Halbrooks, pastor at Three Chopt Presbyterian Church, said the verdict affirmed the integrity of the organization and ministry.
âWe’re just thrilled with the verdict,â Halbrooks said. âThe lawsuit was never about vengeance but about the damage to the organization.â
The accusations first came in the 1980s, Dell said, but each time they resurfaced, investigations by Haitian and U.S. officials and a private investigator hired by the nonprofitâs board found the claims to be unsubstantiated.
The jury awarded $7.5 million to Hearts with Haiti, which included $5 million in what the organization deemed to be a decrease in donations since Kendrick started his sometimes-daily email blast that personally attacked Geilenfeld and the board members for continuing to support him and accused Dell of selling drugs and participating in sexual acts with the boys. Geilenfeld was awarded $7 million.
Atleast a portion of the damages will be paid for by Kendrickâs homeowners insurance, according to The Associated Press, but the full amount is not guaranteed to the organization.
Alan Stone, board vice president and a Richmond businessman, described Kendrick as a âtortured individual.â The board filed the defamation suit in 2013 to halt the disruption.
âItâs virtually been our sole focus,â Stone said, adding that the drop in donations meant a cutback in services for the children. âIt was very worrisome. ... These are people who canât take care of themselves at all.â
St. Josephâs Home for Boys, which takes in former child slaves and street kids, was shut down following Geilenfeldâs detainment in Haiti in September and reopened for those 18 and older in mid-May following his release. The organization still is working with the countryâs social services department to allow younger boys to re-enter care at the home, Stone said.
During the trial, Geilenfeld contended he was falsely accused because he was a gay man in a nation he described as homophobic, The Associated Press reported.
Board member Laura Wright was first at the home during the 2010 earthquake that ravaged the capital. When young men from the home visited Richmond for a dance tour after the accusations resurfaced, Wright said the Haitian men made a point to share their experiences while living at St. Josephâs Home for Boys and denounced the accusations against Geilenfeld.
âItâs not an orphanage.
Itâs a home. They are brothers,â Wright said. âNone of us would have allowed this to go on if it were true.â
Following Geilenfeldâs experience in the Haitian prison without charges being filed against him, the organization plans to launch a prison ministry.
âWe all prayed daily for Michael and Paul Kendtick. ... Thereâs just so many ways that good things have come out of what was meant for evil,â said Halbrooks, Three Chopt Presbyterianâs pastor. The verdict âis a symbol of justice and innocence and gives us the opportunity to move forward.â
Twisted minds do twisted things and the children suffer physical and emotional hell bad memories neve fade.
Lucky he ainât in the old general penitentiary in port au prince from Papa Doc era
Medieval
If he is put in general population he won’t live to be 74.
,,, even better. It would cancel out the annual holding costs in a prison.
Also,
Leave just one tooth, with his sliced tongue, in his rancid mouth.
Evil Bastard needs to be PUNISHED.
,,, even better. It would cancel out the annual holding costs in a prison.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++
OK, 15 feet then.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.