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New Orleans pastor sentenced to 80 years for sexually molesting two boys
The 24th judicial district court in Gretna, Louisiana, a suburb of New Orleans. Photograph: Google Maps View image in fullscreen The 24th judicial district court in Gretna, Louisiana, a suburb of New Orleans. Photograph: Google Maps New Orleans pastor sentenced to 80 years for sexually molesting two boys Terry Reed, found guilty of rape and molestation of a juvenile, called ‘utter failure of a man’ by victim’s mother A suburban New Orleans religious pastor has been sentenced to 80 years’ imprisonment after being convicted of sexually molesting two boys – the third time in which he was found guilty of abusing minors. While Terry Reed received his punishment at a state court hearing on Thursday, the mother of one of his survivors read a victim-impact statement on behalf of her son which called him “an utter failure and a sorry excuse for a man”. Jurors found Reed guilty on 6 May of two counts of third-degree rape and two counts of molestation of a juvenile, as Jefferson parish, Louisiana, district attorney Paul Connick’s office said in a statement. New Orleans’ Jesuit high school agrees to pay seven figures to settle child molestation claim Read more He molested both survivors after gaining their guardians’ trust, taking them into his home in the Jefferson community of Terrytown. Prosecutors established that Reed, under the guise of acting as their pastor, cited biblical scripture to manipulate the youths into believing his sexually abusive behavior with them was normal. The verdict against Reed in May came after two prior convictions for similar crimes. He had pleaded guilty in 1997 to indecent behavior with a juvenile. And in 2017, he pleaded guilty to indecent behavior with a juvenile and molestation of a juvenile. Reed faced up to 40 years in prison on each of the juvenile molestation convictions from May when he was brought before Judge Ray Steib for sentencing. Steib imposed that maximum after hearing from the mother of one of the survivors at the center of the case, who detailed how she trusted Reed because she had known him since she was a young girl. She said Reed knew she had been sexually molested as a child herself. She recounted that she was a single mother living outside Louisiana when she asked Reed for help for her troubled son before he took the minor in. “I gave Terry the opportunity to be the grandfather figure that he long wanted to be,” she said during the hearing in front of Steib. Reed’s subsequent abuse “triggered the deepest wound of my childhood. I felt profoundly betrayed,” she added. Beside calling him “an utter failure and a sorry excuse for a man”, the statement that the victim’s mother read on behalf of her son said: “It is done. It is over. And I couldn’t be more glad.” “You disgust me,” the statement added, referring to Reed. Another dark chapter in Reed’s past which did not come up in Steib’s court involved the deaths of two boys – ages 12 and 13 – in a hot tub at his home in 2002. Investigators later determined th