"During the counseling session, the session turned physical," said
Chief Michael Inserra of the police in New Hartford, outside Utica.
Over the course of several hours, the brothers were ordered to “confess
to prior sins and ask for forgiveness,” the chief said.
"We have not
determined what this punishment was for. We know there were fists and feet involved in the punishment."
The victim’s parents, Bruce Leonard, 65, and Deborah
Leonard,59, and sister, Sarah Ferguson, 33, were arrested and charged
with first-degree manslaughter. Christopher Leonard remains hospitalized
and in serious
condition, the chief said.\
Also arrested and charged with second-degree assault were three other
church members. Inserra said more members of the church, described by neighbors
as a cult, are under investigation. Meanwhile, seven children — four of
them Ferguson’s, have been removed
from the church by state child welfare workers.
The investigation was launched after Leonard’s parents showed up at a
local hospital Monday with their badly beaten son. Lucas died at the hospital and an autopsy revealed he had died of
blunt-force trauma, the chief said. Within hours, a police SWAT team
descended on the Leonards’ home in Clayville and the church, where they
found his brother on the second floor after several hours of searching.
"He wasn’t in hiding," said Inserra. "But family members weren’t making him available."
Bruce Leonard and his wife, Deborah, both pleaded not
guilty during their arraignment Monday and were dispatched to the Oneida
County jail after they were unable to raise $100,000 bail.
The four other suspects, Ferguson, Joseph Irwin, 26, of Chadwicks,
David Morey, 26, of Utica and Linda Morey, 54, also of Utica were each
ordered held on $50,000 bail.
The Leonards’ neighbors said the couple homeschooled their kids and
made them read the Bible for two hours every day. They said the children
weren’t allowed to have sleepovers and were barred from Halloween
trick-or-treating.
Inserra declined to comment on reports that the church is a cult. But
residents who live nearby told the Syracuse Post-Standard that members
would rarely venture out in the daylight hours and those
who did often were men wearing what they described as “long, black
trench coats.” They said they would hear strange chanting coming from
the building as late as 3 a.m.
A Post-Standard reporter who ventured inside the building Tuesday found police tape
across two bathrooms, one labeled “Adam” and the other “Eve.”
The reporter also said there was a framed message hanging on one wall
that read, in part,
"We have been commissioned through the written word
of God to reach out to those who have not experienced the love of Jesus
Christ in their lives. Through the systematic training up of saints."
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