The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 12, 2025
Today: April 12, 2025

Hundreds of police raid a religious compound in search of Filipino preacher wanted for child abuse

Philippines Fugitive Preacher
August 24, 2024
JIM GOMEZ - AP

MANILA, Philippines (AP) โ€” Hundreds of police officers backed by riot squads raided a vast religious compound in a southern Philippine city Saturday in search of a local preacher accused of sexual abuse and human trafficking, police officials said.

A supporter of the group, called Kingdom of Jesus Christ, reportedly died due to a heart attack during the massive police raid that started at dawn in the groupโ€™s compound in Davao city, livestreamed online by a local TV network owned by the group, police said, adding that the death was not related to the police operations.

Officers brought equipment that could detect people behind cement walls. But by mid-afternoon, they found no sign of Apollo Quiboloy in the compound โ€” some 30 hectares (75 acres) that includes a cathedral, a school, a living area, a hangar and a taxiway leading to Davao International Airport.

Quiboloy and his lawyer have denied the criminal allegations against him and his religious group, saying these were fabricated by critics and former members, who were removed from the religious group after committing irregularities.

Quiboloyโ€™s followers, many filming the police raid with their cellphones, yelled at the police, questioning the legality of the raid and pronouncing the innocence of Quiboloy, who was a close supporter and spiritual adviser of former President Rodrigo Duterte.

Duterte had criticized previous attempts by large numbers of police to arrest Quiboloy as overkill.

Quiboloy claims to be the appointed son of God. In 2019, he claimed he stopped a major earthquake from hitting the southern Philippines.

Police Brig. Gen. Nicolas Torre III, who led the raid, said officers wanted to serve warrants for the arrest of Quiboloy for various criminal cases, including child abuse and human trafficking. He justified the large deployment, saying there were more than 40 buildings and structures to be searched in the religious compound, where large numbers of Quiboloyโ€™s followers heckled and opposed the raid noisily.

โ€œWe wonโ€™t leave here until we get him,โ€ Torre told reporters as sirens blared in the background. โ€œWe have no-bail warrants for Quiboloy and four others for very grave crimes, including human trafficking, child abuse and other cases.โ€

In 2021, United States federal prosecutors announced the indictment of Quiboloy for allegedly having sex with women and underage girls who faced threats of abuse and โ€œeternal damnationโ€ unless they catered to the self-proclaimed โ€œson of God."

Quiboloy and two of his top administrators were among nine people named in a superseding indictment returned by a federal grand jury and unsealed in November 2021.

The superseding indictment contained a raft of charges, including conspiracy, sex trafficking of children, sex trafficking by force, fraud and coercion, marriage fraud, money laundering, cash smuggling and visa fraud.

Quiboloyโ€™s group said then that he was ready to face the charges in court, but he went into hiding after a Philippine court ordered his arrest and several others for child and sexual abuse. The Philippine Senate has separately ordered Quiboloyโ€™s arrest for refusing to appear in committee hearings that was looking into criminal allegations against him.

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has urged Quiboloy to surrender and assured him of fair treatment by authorities.

When he was mayor of Davao city and later as president, Duterte appeared in Quiboloyโ€™s news program to promote his police-enforced drug crackdowns, which left thousands of mostly poor suspects dead. Duterte and his police officials have denied authorizing extrajudicial killings of drug suspects, but he openly threatened drug dealers with death when he was in office.

The International Criminal Court has been investigating the widespread killings under Duterteโ€™s campaign against illegal drugs as a possible crime against humanity.

Related

Asia|Business|Economy|Finance|Stock Markets

Taiwan extends short-selling curbs after U.S. tariffs bring market turmoil

Asia|Political|US|World

Chinese nationals fighting for Russia in Ukraine are mercenaries-US officials

Asia|Business|Economy|Finance|Stock Markets|US

Wall St ends whipsaw week sharply higher as Fed comments soothe market

Asia|Business|Economy|Political|World

Taiwan holds first tariff talks with United States

Local

News|Local

Southern California Edison announces plan to underground power lines

News|Local

Disney to leave historic Fox Studio Lot, ending legacy

News|Local

Palisades Recreation Center to be rebuilt

Arts|Celebrity|Entertainment|Local|News|WrittenByLAPost

Weezer bassist to play Coachella despite wifeโ€™s arrest

Share This

Popular

Asia|Business|Economy|Finance|Stock Markets

Taiwan extends short-selling curbs after U.S. tariffs bring market turmoil

Taiwan extends short-selling curbs after U.S. tariffs bring market turmoil
Asia|Political|US|World

Chinese nationals fighting for Russia in Ukraine are mercenaries-US officials

Chinese nationals fighting for Russia in Ukraine are mercenaries-US officials
Asia|Business|Economy|Finance|Stock Markets|US

Wall St ends whipsaw week sharply higher as Fed comments soothe market

Wall St ends whipsaw week sharply higher as Fed comments soothe market
Asia|Business|Economy|Political|World

Taiwan holds first tariff talks with United States

Taiwan holds first tariff talks with United States

Crime

Crime|Political|US

Judge rebukes Trump administration, demands to know status of illegally deported man

Judge rebukes Trump administration, demands to know status of illegally deported man
Crime|Entertainment|Political|US

LA judge allows resentencing hearing for Menendez brothers to go ahead

LA judge allows resentencing hearing for Menendez brothers to go ahead
Americas|Crime|Entertainment|World

Dominican Republic issues official report on collapse that killed 221

Dominican Republic issues official report on collapse that killed 221
Business|Crime|Political|US

Mangione lawyers ask judge to prevent US prosecutors from seeking death penalty

Mangione lawyers ask judge to prevent US prosecutors from seeking death penalty

Access this article for free.

Already have an account? Sign In