Ex-Boarding School Principal Charged With Sex Crimes

Lighthouse Christian Academy closed in March amid abuse allegations
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Mar 4, 2024 7:15 PM CST
Updated Oct 31, 2024 2:03 PM CDT
Owners of Boarding School Charged With Felonies
This photo provided by David Clohessy shows the entrance of ABM Ministries, a Christian boarding school in Piedmont, Missouri.   (David Clohessy via AP)
UPDATE Oct 31, 2024 2:03 PM CDT

A former principal at a Christian boarding school in Missouri that closed in March amid abuse allegations has been charged with sex crimes involving a former student. Craig Wesley Smith Jr. has been charged with forcible sodomy and attempted forcible rape, court records show. He is accused of forcing a teen girl to perform sex acts in the late 2000s when she was a student at Lighthouse Christian Academy. A probable cause statement alleged that Smith told the girl he would kill her and "make it look like she committed suicide" if she told anyone, the AP reports. The school's husband-and-wife owners, Larry and Carmen Musgrave, were charged with first-degree kidnapping for allegedly locking a student in a room, but a judge dismissed the charges on Oct. 15.

Mar 4, 2024 7:15 PM CST

The husband and wife owners of a Missouri boarding school for boys have been jailed and charged with felony crimes after a lengthy investigation by a county sheriff. Wayne County Sheriff Dean Finch said in a news release that Larry Musgraves Jr., 57, was arrested Friday evening on the ABM Ministries campus in Piedmont, a small town 130 miles south of St. Louis. Carmen Musgraves, 64, was arrested around 3am Saturday when she came to the jail to check on her husband, Finch said. Both have been charged with first-degree kidnapping and jailed without bond, the AP reports.

ABM Ministries' website says its facility, operated as Lighthouse Christian Academy, is a private Christian boarding school for boys ages 10-13, situated on 250 acres that include a spring-fed pond and a pasture with animals. Finch said that since early January, his office has received reports of five runaways from the school. In one instance, two boys were picked up by a neighboring resident and taken home. The boys asked her to call 911. But Finch said his investigation began several months ago after he was contacted by a former student living in Alabama. He followed up by interviewing other former students and eventually the current students.

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The sheriff's department "anticipates more charges as the investigation continues, with more alleged victims coming forward," the news release stated. The school was coed in 2009 when a federal lawsuit accused a former principal of sex acts with a female student and alleged that the Musgraveses failed to take action to protect the girl. Court records show that ABM Ministries and the Musgraveses agreed to pay $750,000 in a settlement, and the principal agreed to pay $100,000. Former students say justice was long overdue. Juliana Davis, now 34, says she was abused at the school in 2006 and 2007. "I'm glad that he took us seriously," Davis says of Finch. "There's a whole group of us that have been trying for decades, speaking out about what happened to us and what we saw."

(More Missouri stories.)

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