Current:Home > ContactLawsuit alleges famous child-trafficking opponent sexually abused women who posed as his wife -OceanicInvest
Lawsuit alleges famous child-trafficking opponent sexually abused women who posed as his wife
View
Date:2025-04-16 07:59:36
Five women on Monday sued the founder of an anti-child-trafficking group that inspired a popular movie this year, alleging he sexually manipulated, abused and harassed them on overseas trips designed to lure and catch child sex traffickers.
Tim Ballard’s life story and work with Operation Underground Railroad inspired “Sound of Freedom,” a 2023 film popular with conservative moviegoers. He recently resigned from the group amid sexual abuse and harassment allegations he has denied.
Ballard’s prominence as an opponent of child sex trafficking got him invited to the White House under President Donald Trump. Previously a special adviser to Trump’s daughter, Ivanka Trump, Ballard was appointed to a White House anti-human-trafficking board in 2019.
The complaints against Ballard center on a “couple’s ruse” he allegedly engaged in with Operation Underground Railroad women who he persuaded to pose as his wife to fool child sex traffickers into thinking he was a legitimate client, according to the lawsuit filed in Utah state court.
Phone and email messages left with Operation Underground Railroad and Ballard’s representatives were not immediately returned Monday.
The ruse began with Ballard and women in the organization taking cross-country trips to “practice” their “sexual chemistry” with tantric yoga, couple’s massages with escorts and performing lap dances on Ballard, the lawsuit claims.
While promotional materials portrayed the group’s overseas missions as “paramilitary drop-ins to arrest traffickers and rescue children,” they mostly involved “going to strip clubs and massage parlors across the world, after flying first class to get there, and staying at five-star hotels, on boats, and at VRBOs (vacation rentals by owner) across the globe,” the lawsuit alleges.
Several women, meanwhile, were eventually subjected to “coerced sexual contact,” including “several sexual acts with the exception of actual penetration, in various states of undress,” the lawsuit alleges.
Even in private, the lawsuit alleges: “Ballard would claim that he and his female partner had to maintain the appearance of a romantic relationship at all times in case suspicious traffickers might be surveilling them at any moment.”
The women, who filed the lawsuit under pseudonyms, allege Ballard meanwhile used his membership in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and connection to church leaders to persuade them what he was doing was just for the good of children in need of help.
Ballard said church President M. Russell Ballard, no relation, gave him special permission to use couples ruse “as long as there was no sexual intercourse or kissing.” The church in a September statement condemned Tim Ballard for “unauthorized use” of the church president’s name for personal advantage and “activity regarded as morally unacceptable.”
Tim Ballard claimed a passage in the Book of Mormon justified performing “unconventional” tasks, the lawsuit alleges.
“Ballard would get ketamine treatments and have a scribe come in with him while he would talk to the dead prophet Nephi and issue forth prophecies about Ballard’s greatness and future as a United States senator, president of the United States and ultimately the Mormon prophet to usher in the second coming of Christ,” the lawsuit states.
Days before the church condemned Ballard, Mitt Romney announced he would not seek a second term representing Utah in the U.S. Senate. Ballard, who has said he was considering running for Senate, has blamed political opponents for the recent sexual allegations against him.
veryGood! (83519)
Related
- Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what’s next for those who oppose Trump
- Monument honoring slain civil rights activist Viola Liuzzo and friend is unveiled in Detroit park
- Did AI write this film? 'The Creator' offers a muddled plea for human-robot harmony
- Burkina Faso's junta announces thwarted military coup attempt
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Police looking for boy at center of pizza gift card scam to support his baseball team
- Bruce Springsteen postpones all 2023 concerts to treat peptic ulcer disease
- Man convicted of attempted murder escapes custody
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- 'Candelaria': Melissa Lozada-Oliva tackles cannibalism and yoga wellness cults in new novel
Ranking
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Retail theft, other shrink factors drained $112B from stores last year
- First congressional hearing on Maui wildfire to focus on island’s sole electric provider and grid
- Jimmy Carter's 99th birthday celebrations moved a day up amid talks of government shutdown
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- North Carolina’s governor vetoes bill that would take away his control over election boards
- Judge tosses Nebraska state lawmaker’s defamation suit against PAC that labeled her a sexual abuser
- Jenniffer González, Puerto Rico’s resident commissioner, to challenge island’s governor in primary
Recommendation
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
Gun control among new laws taking effect in Maryland
Spanish police raid soccer federation as part of probe into Barcelona’s payments to referee official
America’s Got Talent Season 18 Winner Revealed
Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
Maine community searching for Broadway, a pet cow who's been missing nearly a week
The Explosive Real Housewives of Potomac Season 8 Trailer Features Fights, Voodoo and More
Jesus Ayala, teen accused in Las Vegas cyclist hit-and-run, boasts he'll be 'out in 30 days'