š” LDS Church Attorney Tells Mormon Seminary Teacher: Donāt Report Child Abuse
Source: š” LDS Church Attorney Tells Mormon Seminary Teacher: Donāt Report Child Abuse Channel: MormonNewsRoundup Published: February 4, 2026 | Archived: April 4, 2026
Channel: MormonNewsRoundup
Duration: PT7M9S
š Description
In a disturbing Mormon Stories episode, former seminary teacher Riley Davis recalls calling the LDS Church abuse hotline after a student disclosed signs of aā¦
Description
In a disturbing Mormon Stories episode, former seminary teacher Riley Davis recalls calling the LDS Church abuse hotline after a student disclosed signs of aā¦
Transcript
I honestly canāt believe what I just watched. A Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints attorney told a seminary teacher to break the law and not report suspected CSA. Yes. In a recent episode of Mormon Stories, Riley Davis talks about his experience as a full-time LDS seminary teacher in Utah. During a high school class, a girl shared with the entire class some challenges that she was facing, situations that clearly sounded like abuse and neglect. Concerned, Riley did what any responsible LDS seminary teacher would do and called the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints abuse helpline. Shockingly, the attorney on the other end told him not to report it. And why? Because, according to the attorney, it didnāt sound like the Department of Child and Family Services would have enough evidence to act. Essentially, Riley was being told to ignore suspected abuse and break the law by keeping things confidential. Now, Riley, realizing this advice was illegal, consulted the public school counselor at his school, who reminded him that he was a mandatory reporter, which makes him legally obligated to report suspected abuse. Now, following the law, Riley reported the situation, doing the right thing despite the churchās attorneyās instruction. Okay, Corore, ceue up that clip. The most effective seminary teachers are the ones that can make students open up and be most vulnerable in class, which can be really problematic. you end up discussing a lot of things in a seminary class. And I remember, I donāt know what it was, but we were sharing hard things that Christ has helped us overcome. And a girl raised her hand and started sharing a situation with her parents that sent up all the red flags, like not okay. Something like this needs to be reported. And so, like usual, as everyoneās leaving the classroom, Iām outside. I pull her aside outside and Iām like, āHey, um, question. Thank you for sharing that. Right. Have you told anyone else about this? And she said, āWell, I told my aunt.ā Uh cuz what it sounded like was really intense neglect and abuse, right? I just let her know, āHey, I care about you. Thank you for sharing that. Iām glad your aunt knows. I am required by law to report anything like this.ā And the girl actually seemed pretty supportive. She was like, āI get it. You You can report this.ā Wait, are LDS seminary teachers in Utah, do they conceptualize themselves as being mandatory reporters? Um, that would surprise me. No, I donāt think they do on large scale. I did because thatās what I I was a public educator before. And they are school teachers. Absolutely. And actually, adults in Utah, adults period are mandatory reporters. And so itās not the Mormon church telling you that was a seminary teacher. That was not you were a mandatory reporter. Oh, in fact, in fact, I later went into my office and did what I was trained to do, which is to call the church helpline. So, um, she she actually seems pretty supportive. So, I just kicked into my educator role. Hey, Iāve got to report this. Thank you so much, and weāre here for you. And she seemed pretty supportive. Like, yeah, youāre fine. Thank you for caring about me and calling it in. The thing is, instead of calling DCFS, as all church leaders and employees are programmed to do, I immediately open my phone and itās my first time having to call the abuse hotline cuz weāre taught immediately if anyone says anything like that to call Curtain MCONI, right? Weāre not told that itās Curtain McConi. Itās just the abuse helpline. But I call them and I report it and the lawyer on the other side of the line is like, āWell, thank you so much for calling. doesnāt seem like weāll have like I donāt think DCFS would have a good enough case like to actually open an investigation on this. So, donāt call it in. And I kind of paused. I was like, āSo, wait, like I donāt have to call it in.ā Heās like, āOh, no. Donāt call it in.ā Iām like, āOkay.ā And I hang up and Iām just like dumbfounded. Iām like, āWhat do I do?ā Because literally from the get-go, from the time she raised her hand, I knew that I had to call this like the educator pre-seminary teacher in me is like, Iāve got to call this in. Itās my responsibility. And then I get told by the helpline, donāt. So then Iām frantically searching online, okay, whoās a mandatory reporter in Utah? And I find out, yes, I absolutely am. Anything the church wants with priest penitent privilege, this is not some penitent person confessing to me. this is a victim coming to me and so any argument for oh you donāt have to doesnāt apply here and Iām like Iām a flipping mandatory reporter and theyāre telling me not to report. Thanks for watching that. This is a textbook evidence of the LDS churchās absolute immorality. Asking or advising someone to ignore abuse is not just wrong, itās potentially criminal. When victims share their pain with an adult, they must be protected, not silenced. Now, Tim Cosenoff, a lawyer who built his career suing the Mormon church about its abuse scandals, was recently asked this very question on Mormonism Live. I mean, why doesnāt the church just take the path that minimizes bad PR and causes the least amount of trouble by reporting abuse to law enforcement? And Timās answer to this is chilling. The church has a systematic culture of refusing to be told what to do. At its heart, the church is a theocracy. So, the laws of men, they donāt really apply. And from what Iāve seen in my own experience, the church prioritizes protecting abusers, and it blames the victims. Iāve seen it happen repeatedly. Women report rape and are punished or dysfellowshipped, while priesthood holding rapists face no serious consequences. Weāve seen child rape covered up, domestic abuse ignored, and countless victims silenced. The church is not there to protect its members. Itās there to cover its own backside, collect your money, and laugh all the way to the bank. Now, Rileyās story here is not an isolated incident. Itās part of a pattern of systemic abuse and cover up that the church refuses to meaningfully address. And until it does, no victim is truly safe. And anyone in the church hierarchy who puts reputation over human life, theyāre complicit. See, at the end of the day, this isnāt just about one attorney giving a bad piece of advice. Itās about a pattern of systemic wrought that prioritizes institutional protection over human safety. When the church tells its employees to ignore mandatory reporting laws, itās not just bending the rules. Itās perpetrating cycles of abuse and betrayal. No amount of legal maneuvering, er spin, or polished general conference talks and erase the fact that real people, often children, are being sacrificed on the altar of reputation and control. Until the church chooses transparency and accountability over secrecy and self-preservation, every member should ask themselves, āWhose side is my church really on?ā Dysays his news roundup is becoming a significant problem. More and more are tuning in. Theyāre starting to question. We need a strategy to counter this. And quickly, I am inevitable. Brothers, the Mormon news roundup is becoming a significant problem. DVESās influence grows daily.
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