US missionary, Gregory Hayes Dow jailed for more than 15 years for sexually abusing four girls for years at his orphanag

An American man who sexually abused four girls for years at his orphanage in Kenya will spend nearly 16 years in federal prison and the rest of his life on supervision.

U.S. District Judge Edward Smith said Gregory Hayes Dow’s crimes were “as evil, as depraved, as any case that’s come before me” at Dow's sentencing on Thursday.

 

“You went to Africa as a missionary. It seems you were a missionary from hell,” Smith said before imposing the sentence. He also ordered Dow, 61, to pay $16,000 in restitution to cover the victims' mental health treatment.

 

Smith told Dow he was supposed to be a ' father figure and beacon of hope for poor children, but instead was evil disguised as hope. … And the idea that it was done in the name of religion is unfathomable.'

 

Back in June, Dow pleaded guilty to four counts of engaging in illicit sexual conduct in a foreign place. He acknowledged assaulting the girls multiple times between 2013 and 2017 while running Dow Family Children’s Home in Boito, Kenya.

 

When the abuse started, two girls were 11, one was 12 and one was 13. Dow groomed children by giving them valuables, such as cellphones, according to prosecutors.

 

Dow, a former East Hempfield Township man established the home in 2008 with his wife, Mary Rose Dow, who took girls at the orphanage to get birth control implanted without their consent. That meant Dow could assault them without fear of impregnating them, Assistant U.S. Attorney Timothy M. Stengel said.

 

US missionary, Gregory Hayes Dow jailed for more than 15 years for sexually abusing four girls for years at his orphanage in Kenya

 

While Gregory Dow fled Kenya in 2017 to avoid prosecution there, his wife was arrested there on charges of child abuse pertaining to the birth control implants. She spent time in jail and was fined.

 

She was in court for her husband's sentencing but didn’t testify.

 

Dow, who has a 1996 conviction in Iowa for assault with intent to commit sexual abuse on a child, said he was “very sorry for any pain and suffering that I have caused, not only for this episode, but in my entire life” and that he’s spent the last 19 months “trying to figure out how this could have happened.”

 

Two victims testified by video from Kenya that Dow’s abuse caused them physical and mental health problems. They said their dreams have been shattered with one victim saying she had wanted to be a chef, while the other a lawyer but couldn't cannot concentrate in school.

 

Both victims also testified that life at the orphanage was good at first, but changed. One said children went to bed hungry and that Dow would punish children by making them stand in a corner with soap in their mouths.

 

The ladies testified to having nightmares and said they have difficulties with relatives. One victim said her uncle threatened to kill her and bury her alongside her mother’s grave. The other said she is ridiculed at school because of what happened to her.

 

“Gregory Dow was supposed to be a father figure to them. Instead, he manipulated them for his own gratification” and he robbed them of their future, Stengel said.

 

The court also heard that Dow's orphanage received financial support from Lancaster County churches and nonprofits. 

 

In a sentencing memorandum filed with the court, the prosecution wrote that leaders at one of those churches, LifeGate, in Elizabethtown, supported Dow despite knowing of his previous conviction.

 

“That anyone, including the defendant, believed that he was suitable to operate an orphanage is unthinkable. Sadly, the abuse in this case could have — and should have — been prevented,” the prosecution wrote.

 

A tip-off from a Kenyan woman living in the US to the Lancaster County District Attorney’s Office in 2018 led to federal investigators getting involved. 

 

 

The woman, Margaret Ruto had just returned to the area near the orphanage to care for her mother during a visit back to Kenya. 

 

The Washington Post said Ms. Ruto found her family's village "in uproar" after two girls, aged 12 and 14, had escaped the orphanage and shared stories of sexual abuse.

 

She "turned detective" and took down the testimonies of the abused girls herself.

 

Acting on the information provided by Ms. Ruto, investigators traveled to Kenya and interviewed girls, leading to Dow being charged in July 2019. 


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