Correction: Sexual Assault Allegation-Kentucky story


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FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — In a Dec. 14 story about former Kentucky lawmaker Dan Johnson, the Associated Press incorrectly reported that the Kentucky Center for Investigative Reporting wrote that Maranda Richmond went to police two years ago about being sexually assaulted in 2012 and that it found no evidence that Johnson was in New York on Sept. 11, 2001.

The center said Richmond reported the alleged assault in 2013 and that it found no evidence that Johnson played the role he claimed to have played on September 11.

A corrected version of the story is below:

A Kentucky lawmaker's biography reads like an award-winning memoir: He was a peacekeeper at the Rodney King riots in Los Angeles, a White House chaplain to three presidents, a 9/11 first responder who gave last rites to hundreds of people at Ground Zero.

But Republican Dan Johnson's carefully crafted history crumbled this week following an extensively reported story from the Kentucky Center for Investigative Reporting that tore down his claims and portrayed him as a con man whose deceptions propped up his ministry of a church of outcasts in Louisville and hid a sinister secret: a sexual assault allegation from a 17-year-old girl.

Johnson denied it all, declaring his innocence from the pulpit of the church where he was the self-appointed "pope." But by Wednesday night, he was dead, his body found on the side of a road in a secluded area with a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head.

His death jolted Republican leaders, who were already struggling with a sexual harassment scandal that toppled the state's first GOP House speaker in nearly 100 years plus three other Republican committee chairmen. Most in the party had already turned their back on Johnson, calling for his resignation following the sexual assault allegation and his history of posting racist photos on Facebook that depicted President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama as monkeys.

By Thursday, many were offering messages of sympathy while acknowledging Johnson's complex life.

"He was passionate about others, I saw it often yet he needed help himself," GOP state Rep. Jim DuPlessis, who sat beside Johnson on the House floor, posted on Twitter.

Johnson's wife, Rebecca Johnson, said her husband was the victim of a "high-tech lynching" and announced she would run to replace him in the Legislature.

Elected in 2016, he was part of a wave of Republican victories that gave the GOP a majority in the Kentucky House for the first time in nearly 100 years. But before that, he was the pastor of Heart of Fire Church in Louisville, which prided itself on welcoming "real people."

"It was a biker church, so there was lots of leather jackets, lots of long hair and people that if you ran into them on the street, you might have a different first impression," said David Adams, a political operative who worked with Johnson on his campaign.

On the church's website, Johnson claimed to have healed sick people during a visit to South America in 1991, including the incredible story of raising a woman from the dead. The miracles are detailed in a letter from David Fischer, pastor of a church in California. Fischer told the Kentucky Center for Investigative Reporting he did not witness those events and could not point the agency to anyone who had.

On his financial disclosure forms, he lists his only source of income as workers compensation from the state of New York. He says this is from injuries he sustained while working as a chaplain immediately following the 9/11 terrorist attack in New York City. But the investigative reporting center, following seven months of detailed reporting, could find no evidence that Johnson played the role he claimed to have played that day.

In a Facebook message posted hours before his death, Johnson hinted that he suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder relating to what he witnessed in New York, details that he shared with his friends through the years, including Republican state Sen. Dan Seum.

"He struggled with that. I know he did. The fact it was so horrific that he was involved in praying over these people," Seum said. "I believed him. I had no reason not to."

The sexual assault allegation came from Maranda Richmond, a former member of Johnson's church. Richmond told the reporting center she was spending the night at Johnson's house on New Year's Eve 2012 when she awoke several hours after midnight to find Johnson standing over her. She said he stuck his tongue in her mouth and put his hands down her pants and into her vagina. She said she begged him to stop and eventually he did.

The Associated Press does not generally identify victims who report sexual assault, but is doing so because Richmond has gone public with her story.

Richmond's public comments match what she told police in 2013, according to police documents obtained by the reporting center. The police then investigated the matter, including a secretly recorded phone call between Johnson and Richmond's father. But a detective later closed the case, saying Richmond refused to cooperate. Richmond denied that.

As a result of the center's reporting, the Louisville Metro Police Department re-opened its investigation.

Johnson held a news conference Tuesday at his church, forcefully denying the allegations with his wife by his side. He said he would not resign, calling the accusations part of a strategy to attack conservative Republicans nationwide. He saved his criticism for the media, saying he did not "want to blast this girl. I have compassion for her. I'm very sorrowful she is in this dark place in her life."

At the end of the news conference, a reporter asked if he had ever raised anyone from the dead. Johnson stopped, turned to face the reporter and said: "God has," before walking out of the pulpit for the final time.

Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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