'Ex-Gay' Christian Sex Cult Leader Accused of Arranging Wife's Murder
LatestOn October 30, the body of Bethany Deaton, the young wife of charismatic evangelical Christian prayer group leader Tyler Deaton, was found in the back of a van near her Grandview, Missouri home. The scene looked like a suicide — Bethany had a bag over her head, and a suicide note was found close by. But in the days after her death, a member of her close-knit religious community broke and told police that Bethany hadn’t killed herself at all. In fact, her murder had been ordered by her husband, who feared she’d go to the police and reveal what the cult had been really up to — months of ritual rape of the 27-year old woman. All in the name of Jesus. The only bright spot of this story is that if you were playing Horrible Shit I Read About Bingo today, you probably just got to fill in a bunch of squares.
The twisted, heartbreaking, so-awful-you-will-catch-yourself-making-horrified-faces-at-your-computer-screen story began at Southwestern University in Texas, where Tyler Deaton led a close knit prayer group so fervent and out-there that the school eventually stopped letting them use the chapel, according to the Kansas City Star. According to acquaintances, Deaton had “struggled” with homosexuality before successfully praying the gay away. When his Christian college proved too namby-pamby for his religious beliefs, Deaton, his future wife Bethany, and a handful of other students left Texas for Kansas City’s International House of Prayer, an unfortunate name because it conjures images of pancakes before walloping you in the stomach with some seriously scary stuff.
At IHOP, Deaton attended church, but held independent events for a small prayer group at his house. Days after Bethany Deaton’s body was found, one of the members of that prayer group, 23-year-old Micah Moore, told authorities that the young woman hadn’t committed suicide, that he had killed her on orders from Tyler. According to Moore, in the months leading up to her death, male members of Tyler’s prayer group routinely raped Bethany and engaged in homosexual acts with each other, under Tyler’s direction. Fearing Bethany was about to tell her therapist what was happening to her, Tyler decided it was best Bethany was killed. Several members of the group who lived with the Deatons and described Tyler as the “spiritual leader” of their “community” corroborated Moore’s charges that Bethany was the victim of near constant sexual assault, and witnesses claimed that some of the assaults were recorded on computers kept at the group’s shared home. Also allegedly at the group’s home? Poems members of the cult wrote about raping Bethany.