Brazilian authorities said Saturday they arrested a
self-professed minister put on a U.S. most-wanted list for allegedly
molesting two girls in a "Maidens Group" at his religious fellowship in
rural Minnesota.
A statement posted on the website of the Public
Security Secretariat for the Rio Grande do Norte state government
reported the arrest of Victor Arden Barnard, 53. The U.S. Marshals
Service also confirmed the arrest in a statement.
The
Brazilian statement said police captured him Friday night in an
apartment near a paradisiacal white-sand beach in northeastern Brazil.
He was being held in the city of Natal to await extradition.
Bernard, who faces 59 counts of criminal sexual conduct, was on the most-wanted list of the U.S. Marshals Service.
According
to a criminal complaint in the U.S., two women said they were among
about 10 girls and young women who lived apart from their families in a
camp that Barnard set up near Finlayson, Minnesota, about 90 miles north
of Minneapolis.
One woman alleged Barnard sexually abused her
beginning at age 13 and continuing until she was 22. The other said her
abuse occurred between ages 12 and 20.
Barnard allegedly kept the
girls isolated, and U.S. authorities have said he used religious
coercion and intimidation to maintain his control over them, calling it
cult-like behavior.
Investigators believe Barnard abused other
girls but have been unable to get others to come forward. Most of the
criminal counts against him carry maximum sentences of 30 years in
prison.
Cindi Currie, who said she had visited Barnard's River
Road Fellowship religious camp in Minnesota years ago and tried to
persuade a friend to leave the group, told the Minneapolis Star Tribune
newspaper that she can't wait to see Barnard behind bars.
"He has
ruined more lives. That man is the devil incarnate," she said. "I'm
just ready to cry. I'm so glad they found him. Not only will Victor
Barnard go to jail, but every adult who knew what was going on up there
can start to pay, and maybe these girls can start to heal."
Brazilian
authorities said Barnard had been living for at least six months at the
apartment where he was arrested near Praia da Pipa beach, about 1,300
miles (2,100 kilometers) from Rio de Janeiro.
Taken into custody
with him was a 33-year-old Brazilian woman. Police also confiscated
computers, cellphones, pen drives and other objects.
Police
inspector Paulo Henrique Oliveira told the news portal G1, the website
of Brazil's biggest TV network, that Barnard entered the country legally
in 2012.
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