A pastor who was "betrothed" to a child, then abused her, will finally go to prison
Sarah Carr courageously told the story about her abusive pastor. Now Robert Fenton will finally see consequences
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I’ve posted a version of this article before, but there’s an important update I wanted to share with you at the end of this piece. If you missed it earlier, I hope you’ll read it in full.
When Robert Fenton was 26 and a youth pastor at Abide In the Vine Fellowship in Owego, New York, he told a couple that attended the church that he was drawn to their daughter and “meant to be with her.”
She was 14 at the time.
The church didn’t allow them to get married because of the age difference. (New York, at the time, actually permitted 14-year-olds to marry under certain conditions.) Still, the girl’s parents approved a “courtship” with the support of church leaders. The two weren’t supposed to be alone or touch each other, but they could write letters back and forth until she was of legal age.
None of that stopped him from pursuing her. In fact, the girl later said she was “betrothed” to him, while her parents admitted Fenton would often “push the boundaries.” They had no idea how seriously he was doing that.
For example, at his request, they pulled her out of a public school and began homeschooling her. They were led to believe they were helping their daughter academically, but it also created an opportunity for Fenton to spend more private time with her outside of prying eyes. He started visiting their home a few times a week.
Then the sexual assaults began. First with his fingers. Later with her hands.
When she was officially engaged to him a couple of years later—but before they were married—he made her perform oral sex on him. It wasn’t just illegal since she was underage; it violated their own religious beliefs regarding abstinence before marriage.
According to another youth pastor at the church, this was a religious community that held very conservative, very puritanical, very misogynistic beliefs about the subject. The church believed “if a man lusted for a woman, it was the woman’s fault.” Even if the girl knew something was wrong, she likely believed she couldn’t tell church leaders what was happening because they would have blamed her.
The pastor of the church back then, Fred Hoover, had misgivings about the relationship when he first learned about it. But according to Hoover’s son, the families persuaded him to support the plan by citing the marriage of Joseph and Mary in the Bible. Mary was much, much younger than Joseph and “how could they be against God’s will”? It was Hoover who blessed the relationship… but only after both families agreed there would be no dating or kissing before the girl became a legal adult. (By this point, however, he had allegedly assaulted her many times over.)
A couple of weeks before the wedding was to take place, Fenton got sick with pancreatitis and went to the hospital. He soon called off the wedding and told the girl that marrying her would “ruin his ministry.” After his recovery, he moved to Australia.
That was in 1998.
He never left the country after that.
In 2019, more than two decades after all this happened, the survivor informed law enforcement about what had taken place when she was a child. She also gave investigators the names of other church members and leaders who could corroborate her testimony… which they did over the course of several months.
In April of 2022, Josh Shapiro, then the Attorney General of Pennsylvania, announced that Fenton had been charged with sexual assault.
“The defendant used his power and authority in his religious community to lie, manipulate and regularly abuse a young girl in his community. I promised we would hold anyone who was abusing children accountable – and Robert Fenton is no exception,” said Attorney General Shapiro. “Survivors experience a lifetime of anguish and trauma trying to overcome the impact of abuse. I want survivors to know – we believe you, and we will not let predators get away with the sexual assault of children.”
It wasn’t just a single charge of assault either:
Fenton has been charged with Indecent Assault of a Person under 16, Involuntary Deviate Sexual Intercourse with a Person Under 16, Aggravated Indecent Assault, Corruption of Minors, and Statutory Sexual Assault.
Shapiro, who’s now the state’s governor, said at the time that his office would work with the U.S. Justice and State departments to get Fenton extradited from Australia, where he resided in Queensland, so that he could be arrested and tried over here. But unless and until that happened, it looked like Fenton had found a way to escape legal consequences for his alleged assaults.
Fred Hoover, the pastor who blessed the “relationship,” was still working at the church as a senior pastor and president of their “School of Ministry” until he died in late 2021. He never explained why he ever thought a fellow staffer could just call dibs on a child in the congregation. Nor did his church ever explain why Hoover had any business educating future religious leaders. (Incidentally, Hoover’s son Paul was, and still is, married to the sister of the survivor.)
In April of 2023, when the survivor asked the state for any updates to her case, she was simply told “there is nothing new to report” and that the office “has requested assistance from the FBI to apprehend the Defendant.” When I inquired about the case, I was also told by a spokesperson for the PA attorney general that their “office is currently seeking extradition.”
But it appeared that the case had stalled.
That’s why the survivor in this case, Sarah Carr, decided to go public with her story.
Sarah wasn’t sure she wanted to attach her actual name to this story, considering the charging documents only listed her initials. But she also knew none of this was anonymous to the people in her religious circles. Her parents and sister were named in the paperwork and “anyone who knew about the relationship knew it was me.” The news spread in her small town like wildfire, with the documents passed around person to person, so it wasn’t like she could escape it.
In her first public interview since those charging documents were made public, Sarah told me she was “bothered by a version of the story being out there without my own voice, my own insights, my own commentary as the one who embodied the experience.”
That’s why she wanted to come forward. She wanted to take control of this story and help create change so that it never happens again.
Part of her frustration was that many adults in that religious community still didn’t really have a problem with child marriage. While they might have condemned Fenton for what he did, she said they still didn’t see him as a “predator.” (If anything, they were more inclined to blame her for supposedly causing his lust.)
And yet “predator” was an accurate description of the man. In fact, before Fenton went after Sarah, he went after another child in their religious circle (who was also named in the charging documents). It was only after that girl’s family moved away—and Sarah’s moved in—that he turned his attention to her.
The people in their community didn’t balk at either incident. They always found justification for his behavior, whether it was pointing to “prophetic” dreams or blaming the girls for leading him on.
Sarah said she wanted people to understand that what happened to her wasn’t just the fault of one bad apple. She (rightly) blamed the system that allowed Purity Culture to thrive, that revoked autonomy from girls while urging them to be submissive and obedient, and that blamed children for the abuse adults inflicted upon them. She wanted people to ask themselves, “Can a teenage girl raised in a church where women submit to authority say no?”
Her younger sister Rebekah echoed many of those same points in a phone call with me in 2023, saying the whole situation made her second guess her relationship with God. Or at least what kind of relationship that was.
"I still have faith,” she said. “I still believe the Lord talks to people." But it took some work to reconcile that belief with the fact that God supposedly told Fenton to pursue this relationship with her sister. She now believed that if God spoke to you about someone else, it needed to resonate with what the Lord told the other person. If there were mixed signals, someone wasn’t getting the right message.
Rebekah also wished that her church had been more open to discussions about sex, women’s bodies, and dealing with emotions. She felt that if religious leaders had done that with her peers, there wouldn’t have been so much to hide. Their desire to shut down those conversations contributed to the problem.
Sarah’s childhood friend Faith was even more blunt. While Faith wasn’t a member of Sarah’s church, their youth groups often came together for meetings, so they heard the same (useless) messages growing up.
“We were never taught women have a right to say no," Faith told me. She was taught to submit to men. Her own mother told her that, upon marriage, she should never resist her husband when it came to sex, effectively denying the existence of marital rape.
"It's a culture that sets women up for abuse," Faith said. And for a while, she was part of that culture. She remembered that a lot of her friends in youth group thought the relationship between Sarah and Fenton was “gross,” but they didn’t dare speak out about it because they “didn't want to hurt Sarah's feelings." Faith just assumed that’s how Sarah’s church operated. Therefore, she had no right to criticize it.
“As girls, we didn't have a voice anyway.”
Sarah’s parents, who initially supported the relationship with Fenton, have since come around to her side. Her mother said that allowing Fenton to abuse Sarah was her “biggest regret,” while her father, who was still an elder in the same church until very recently, insisted he was only sticking around in order to create positive change.
Indeed, shortly after Fenton was charged with his crimes, there was another abuse allegation in the very same church. The victim in that situation came forward (having been inspired by Sarah), and Sarah’s father wanted to make sure that case was handled properly. But because charges weren’t filed with law enforcement, and the case was only handled internally, the details were never made public. The case was only “resolved,” Sarah explained, in the sense that the elder accused of abuse was pushed out by other church leaders.
Unfortunately, not everyone close to Sarah was on her side.
One aunt still clung to that conservative narrative; she believed Fenton had honest intentions and that it was only his inability to find a wife his own age that led him to target younger women. (As if that’s a perfectly normal thing to do.)
The church, despite her father’s efforts, hasn’t changed much either. Sarah told me no one in leadership ever reached out to her to apologize or hear her story. That’s still the case as of today. Apparently, when the charging documents were released, Fred Hoover’s wife (who now leads the church) believed this would “just blow over.”
It’s no wonder that Sarah no longer considered herself a Christian. While Abide In the Vine Fellowship was a non-denominational church, Sarah told me she now called herself “spiritual.”
“One of the most hurtful aspects for me to reckon with,” she explained, “was that because of how Fenton positioned himself as a prophet speaking on behalf of God, I truly believed that God was saying I was unworthy when he ended the relationship.”
That attitude, combined with the harmful Purity Culture mentality, led Sarah to believe she “was unworthy of love and belonging.”
But that alone wasn’t what pushed her away from traditional Christian faith. A family tragedy that occurred several years later tipped the scales, followed by a more general conservative Christian opposition to LGBTQ rights.
That shift had its benefits, though. It was only after Sarah deconstructed that she understood what she had endured was abuse and that she wasn’t personally responsible for it. That’s what motivated her to finally go to law enforcement and tell them what Fenton did to her.
She spoke to me in the hopes that others would come to the same conclusions.
If nothing else, she hoped people wouldn’t give religious leaders unearned trust. She hoped they would realize the harm caused by treating girls as the property of men, both as children and as wives. She also hoped they would disavow the concepts of “courting” and “betrothal,” both of which were on full display in the Shiny Happy People: Duggar Family Secrets docuseries. Those aren’t good Christian ways of merging two souls into one; it’s grooming, plain and simple.
Sarah has also spent time trying to help other people in her situation. It was listening to another survivor’s story that allowed her to recognize what happened to her, so if someone else can benefit from her telling her story, then she feels like she’s helping them while also healing herself.
Sarah now works as a financial planner and is officially a certified financial therapist. She wrote on her website that, when she was younger, she “didn’t feel [she] had much, if any, choice in creating a plan of [her] own.” It’s why she’s working to bring stability to other people’s lives after spending so many years unable to achieve that stability in her own. Now working in that field, she finds it extremely satisfying: “We hold beliefs about money that were framed through culture, childhood, and early experiences; within financial therapy, we get to explore those beliefs, re-examine them, and reframe them, letting go of beliefs that no longer serve our financial well-being. The process of deconstructing religious beliefs is nearly an identical process, so my experience lends well to the work.”
In addition to her career, Sarah also chairs the Reclamation Collective, a non-profit group that creates space for those “harmed within religious and spiritual spaces.”
In that spirit, on her website, without directly mentioning her own past, she urged readers to practice self-care when they’re going through difficulties:
The trauma I came out of twenty years ago resurfaced in 2019 leaving me no other option but to address my mental health needs.
…
Looking back, I wish I had more permission to do what I needed to do to take care of myself. Thankfully I had a few friends and life coaches that reminded me that there would be a time again where I could run hard but for now take the time to heal. (And they still remind me of this when I have a hard day or series of hard days.) Perhaps you need some permission to take care of yourself, to slow down, to pause for a moment, to do whatever you may need in order to prioritize your own well-being, I hereby grant it.
It’s truly incredible how many people blessed a relationship that never should have been permitted.
Just about everyone in Sarah’s circles, including family members and church leaders, were all fine with them being together when they believed sex would only come after the wedding. The idea of an underage girl “betrothed” to a youth pastor nearly twice her age didn’t seriously bother them because they thought God approved.
"I was convinced it was God's will," said Sean Eberly, a member of Sarah’s youth group and a worship leader at the church. Even after the wedding was called off, "I hadn't come to terms with what had happened." It took him several years after leaving the church to recognize what happened and think seriously about what he could’ve done differently.
"I wish I had spoken up and said something,” he told me. The regret haunted him for years. Today, he had a much more straightforward take on churches like theirs: "High-demand religions are extremely toxic." It’s no wonder the former youth worship leader now considers himself an atheist.
Robert Fenton used the Bible to abuse everyone’s trust. His victim carried those memories—and that trauma—for decades. Sarah was taking a different kind of risk, stepping out from behind the cloak of anonymity. But in 2023, Fenton remained at large, overseas, possibly protected by a new church and the luxury of distance.
But last year, there was finally a welcome update to this story.
Last April, Fenton was attempting to fly from Brisbane, Australia to the Philippines. Upon landing, however, the country’s Bureau of Immigration stopped him from leaving the airport. His name “prompted a positive hit” in the International Criminal Police Organization (INTERPOL) system because of his alleged crimes, according to the Philippine News Agency.
Fenton was soon boarding a different flight… to Los Angeles. He was later transferred to Pennsylvania to be arraigned. He’s been held in a jail cell ever since because a judge denied him supervised bail. (He had escaped the country before; she figured there was a chance he’d try that ploy again.)
When I spoke with Sarah about this development, she was shocked at first (that Fenton had been found and extradited) but hopeful that justice might finally be served. “It was relief on an entirely different level,” she told me, adding that “a weight I didn't even realize I had been carrying had lifted.”
But that also meant she might have to confront him face-to-face, see him in court, and testify against him. Even worse, there was a chance she would have to do all this in front of a jury, knowing there was a possibility that baring her soul could completely backfire.
Late last week, however, the case ended in a very different way because the 55-year-old Fenton accepted a plea deal:
Robert David Fenton pleaded guilty to aggravated indecent assault of a person less than 16 years old and statutory sexual assault, both second-degree felonies, during a plea hearing inside the Bradford County Courthouse.
The “deal” is that the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s Office agreed to drop some of the charges against him as long as he pleaded guilty to the others. The ones he pleaded guilty to will result in a sentence totaling anywhere from 6 to 12 years behind bars followed by eight years of probation.
He will also be a registered sex offender for the rest of his life.
Pennsylvania Attorney General Michelle Henry announced the deal on Friday:
“This trusted mentor figure used religion to get close to, and exploit, this child for his own sexual gratification,” Attorney General Henry said. “Investigators went to great lengths — literally — to bring this defendant to justice for deviate crimes he committed decades ago.”
When this all occurred, Sarah was in the courtroom to watch it happen. She sent me this message late last week:
There were nearly 20 of us present at the hearing: friends of mine, family, previous church members of that church, former youth group members, and advocates. I don't know that the court had seen that many people in attendance for a plea hearing. I was asked twice if I knew this was only a plea hearing and not sentencing; they didn't want anyone to be disappointed. I said, "Yes, everyone here wants to hear him actually say he pleads guilty." From the response after, it was especially meaningful for those in attendence to hear it, even though it was uncomfortable to hear the case summary and description of the offense.
Since sharing the news of the plea deal, there's been a spectrum of responses to the jail time. I myself have gone through the spectrum of emotions, "it's enough, it's not enough, etc." And while sentencing will occur later if it stands as proposed, I agree with the prosecutor who shared that she favors longer probationary periods over jail time, so the eight-year probation was a big factor, as is the lifetime registration under Megan's Law. I set out on this journey to help protect the community from him harming anyone else, and I'd say we've achieved that as best as possible.
I cannot even imagine the strength that must have taken, but it’s a testament to Sarah that she wanted to watch this story come full circle. She also relayed one other detail that didn’t escape her attention: The judge, the attorneys for both sides, and the advocates were all women.
“That's a power shift that wasn't there decades ago!” she told me.
Here’s hoping she finds comfort after the eventual sentencing, too.
Another sexual predator who got away with it for far too long by hiding behind his Bible and/or clerical collar. You can only wonder how may egregious sexual predators never got caught because civil and religious authorities all lined up to protect the preachers. She had to wait far too long for justice, but if there is an upside here it is that victims like her are now being listened to and not persecuted for threatening a preacher's good name.
Where was the biblical god when Sarah Carr was dragged through hell for years by one of his spokesman? Assuming he exsts, did he want this to happen?
Yet Christians will tell you that religion, whatever its shortcomings, at least instills morality. I give that lie a hearty guffaw before spitting in the face of anyone uttering it.