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 Texe Marrs |
Louis Lamonica walked into the sheriff's department in tiny Livingston, La.,
a few weeks ago and asked to speak with a detective. According to police, for
almost the next two hours the middle-aged preacher, dressed casually in a green
polo shirt and green slacks, proceeded to tell a story so sickening they could
scarcely believe what they were hearing. He explained that he was the former
pastor of Hosanna Church, a now defunct house of worship in nearby Ponchatoula.
Matter-of-factly and without remorse, Lamonica said that he and other church
members had molested children, and taught them to have sex with each other, as
well as with a dog. He told the detectives that he drank cat blood, and poured
it on the bodies of his young victims, according to Ponchatoula Police Chief
David Vitter.
When he had finished talking, Lamonica was arrested by the stunned
detectives, who charged him with two counts of aggravated rape of a child under
13 and a charge of crime against nature. After Lamonica's confession,
authorities arrested eight other members of the Hosanna Church congregation,
including Lamonica's wife, Robbin, and a Tangipahoa Parish sheriff's deputy.
Police say that church members abused as many as two dozen children, one only a
year old, beginning in 1999, in rituals that they say may be tied to devil
worship. All but one suspect remained in jail last week
| Pastor
Louis Lamonica and Hosanna Church. |

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Press accounts have said the investigation began on a tip from Nicole
Bernard, a former congregant who called Louisiana police from Ohio about six
weeks ago to report that a child had been sexually abused by Hosanna Church
members. But local authorities had already opened a probe after Lamonica's
eldest son, then 18, told his school counselor that his father had sexually
abused him.
The Hosanna Church was built by Lamonica's father, Louis Lamonica Sr., a
well-respected preacher who drew more than 1,000 worshipers. After his death,
his son Louis Jr. took over in the early '90s.
Neighbors of the church said that at night they sometimes heard strange
noises coming from the building. They never imagined the horror Lamonica
described could have been taking place inside. (Reprinted from Newsweek,
June 6, 2005)
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