Tim Ballard's attorney gives eyebrow-raising explanation for semen allegedly deposited on accuser's skirt



During a hearing earlier this month, Tim Ballard's attorney, Mark Eisenhut, offered a startling theory about semen found on the skirt of one of Ballard's accusers. Eisenhut indicated that Ballard may have masturbated onto the skirt in response to a meeting with a "high-end escort" named Juli.

Celeste Borys has accused Ballard of sexual misconduct while the two worked together at Operation Underground Railroad from October 2022 until September 2023. According to Borys and her attorney, Suzette Rasmussen, Ballard sexually assaulted Borys 30 times during that 11-month period, as Blaze News previously reported.

'So when he masturbated, your position is that it got on the skirt?'

One such alleged assault occurred on Jan. 8, 2023, when Borys and Ballard flew to Mexico for a supposed operation. Borys later stuffed a leather skirt she had been wearing that day into a drawer.

DNA from semen was later extracted from the skirt. A Utah County detective confirmed that "the DNA was a 100% match of Ballard’s DNA" and that Borys' husband had been excluded, Borys and her attorney asserted in court documents.

A Utah state crime lab has yet to confirm the results of the DNA test.

At an Oct. 3 hearing regarding a sexual violence protective order against Ballard, Eisenhut claimed to district Judge Kristine Johnson that while his team had yet to examine "the skirt, the semen, or the test results," his client did apparently ejaculate on Borys' skirt after returning with Juli to his Ritz Carlton hotel room in Mexico in the hopes of getting information from her.

"He actually gets the information out of her," Eisenhut said of Ballard and Juli, "but the problem is, she now wants to have sex."

Eisenhut then went on a tangent, discussing prostitutes in seedy areas who are often ready and willing to sell their services — and Ballard's determination to remain faithful to his wife and family.

After some time, Judge Johnson interjected and asked: "So when he masturbated, your position is that it got on the skirt?"

"He was in her room," Eisenhut replied, now referring to Ballard and Borys. "He used her skirt to do it, and that's the excuse he used with the prostitute." In other words, Eisenhut suggested Ballard may have masturbated as an "excuse" not to have sex with Juli.

Eisenhut reiterated that this alleged semen deposit "could have and probably did happen."

Kim Luhn, commissioner of the 3rd District Court in Salt Lake City, ultimately granted Borys the sexual violence protective order against Ballard, which compels him to remain at least 250 feet from her and avoid all contact with her. The order is set to expire in October 2027.

"We commend the court for its careful examination of the full context surrounding this case. By taking the time to understand the grooming, manipulation, and threats and dangers faced by the victim, the court has demonstrated a commitment to justice and safety," Rasmussen said in a statement to Blaze News. "This decision not only protects the victim, but also reinforces the importance of a judicial system that prioritizes safety and accountability."

In response to a request for comment, Ballard spokesperson Chad Kolton told Blaze News: "The commissioner's decision in the [Borys] PO matter is considered a recommendation. The judge will make a final ruling."

Neither Ballard nor Borys still work at Operation Underground Railroad. OUR did not respond to a request for comment from Blaze News.

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Blaze News investigates: Tim Ballard accused of sexual assault by multiple women, 1 of whom may have DNA evidence against him



Last fall, Blaze News reported on a group of women who leveled accusations of sexual misconduct against Tim Ballard, the founder of Operation Underground Railroad and whose professed work of rescuing victims of sex trafficking spurred the 2023 hit film "Sound of Freedom."

Now, nine months after that initial Blaze News report, DNA evidence may connect Ballard to an allegedly nonconsensual sexual encounter with yet another woman. At the very least, it seems to directly contradict Ballard’s claim in response to the previous accusations that he never touched any female OUR operatives in any sexual fashion whatsoever.

In light of this new evidence, Blaze News spoke with three women who agreed to go on the record and use their real names to tell about their interactions with Ballard: Celeste Borys, Kira Lynch, and Mary Hall. Of the three, Hall is the only woman who spoke with Blaze News in connection with our investigative piece last year. However, Borys and Lynch also made accusations against Ballard at that time without involving Blaze News.

All three women became involved with OUR sometime in the fall of 2021 and worked closely with Ballard for anywhere from a few months to a year.

Blaze News also spoke with the women’s attorney, Suzette Rasmussen, who provided us with further information about the challenges she has faced in bringing these women’s allegations to the attention of law enforcement and the courts.

Blaze News also offered to interview Ballard about the accusations, as we did for our previous piece, as long as that interview was on the record. Instead, a spokesperson for Ballard provided a written response to some of the accusations leveled by the women.

'Centeredaround being sexual': Ballard, OUR, and the couples ruse

As Blaze News reported last October, during his time at Operation Underground Railroad, Ballard worked with many female operators who would pose as his girlfriend on field operations to give him cover for not wanting to engage in sex with other women or children even as he pretended to be a predator. Ballard dubbed this tactic "the couples ruse."

Like the women who spoke with us last year, Borys, Lynch, and Hall insisted that the couples ruse itself was a ruse that Ballard used on female operatives to persuade them to engage in sexual contact with him for the sake of "rescuing children."

'There wasn't any talks about how to physically prepare for this,' she said. 'There wasn't any talks about really doing really concentrated self-defense stuff.'

Perhaps to enhance their determination, he allegedly told prospective operators that other female operators in the past had failed him.

Hall recalled one of her first conversations with Ballard, in which he encouraged her to consider becoming an operator: "He had said that he was looking for a new partner to go on these ops with. He had briefly touched on how his other partners … all fall in love with him."

Lynch added, "I just keep telling myself, 'You can do this. This is so important. You can do this.'"

The women also claimed Ballard wanted to "practice" the couples ruse frequently in the U.S. to establish chemistry that would then fool traffickers, convincing the women that their lives and the lives of the trafficked victims depended on a flawless performance of amorous attraction to Ballard.

"Traffickers can smell the pheromones!" he often said, according to court documents and multiple women who spoke with Blaze News.

During training, Ballard even gave female operators a hypersexual code phrase to say to him during an operation whenever they felt in danger: "I want you to f*** me!" Ballard apparently convinced the women that this public declaration of urgent lust would allow them to leave a situation involving traffickers without blowing their cover.

Hall, an actress by trade who had no prior field experience, told Blaze News she was shocked at how much emphasis Ballard placed on working on sexual chemistry with his female operators and how little he placed on tactical training.

"There wasn't any talks about how to physically prepare for this," she said. "There wasn't any talks about really doing really concentrated self-defense stuff. When he was talking to me about it, it was all sexual and intimate and physical and practicing."

"It was so centered around being sexual."

In a conversation with Blaze News last year, Ballard denied that he ever engaged in any physical contact with a couples ruse partner that went beyond "hand-holding, arms around shoulders, stuff like that."

He also alleged that some female operatives wanted to kiss him during a mission to put on a more convincing performance but that he always refused. "There's no reason to do it. It's not appropriate," he claimed he told them.

'Beyondinappropriate': Women who worked with Ballard speak out

Of the three women who spoke with Blaze News this month, Lynch made the most terrifying allegation against Ballard. To wit: In early January 2022, Ballard allegedly went to her home, pushed her onto the stairs, and forcibly raped her.

Borys had the longest professional partnership with Ballard, working as his executive assistant as well as an operator. During this time, she and Ballard had 30 sexual encounters that Borys and her attorney described to Blaze News as "assaults," ostensibly since the encounters allegedly occurred while Ballard was her direct supervisor and while Borys was under the belief that failure to convince traffickers of their sexual chemistry might threaten their lives or the lives of trafficking victims.

On one such instance, traces of Ballard's semen were apparently deposited on Borys' skirt. That incident will be discussed at greater length in this article.

Hall had just a brief professional relationship with Ballard. On at least one occasion, Ballard allegedly attempted to practice the couples ruse with her in a way that she described as "wrong" and "beyond inappropriate," especially since her training as an actress had already prepared her to pretend to be Ballard’s girlfriend whenever necessary.

In that "inappropriate" incident, Ballard made such ardent advances that he allegedly "pinned" Hall "up against the door" and stopped only when someone else unexpectedly entered the room, she indicated to Blaze News.

'Violentand forceful': The alleged rape of Kira Lynch

Kira Lynch met Ballard through her work as a hairstylist and spent only a few months training to be an OUR operator, she told Blaze News. During that time, she said, Ballard often acted like he was her "boyfriend."

"I love when you giggle at me," or "I love that I make you blush," he would supposedly say.

Lynch told Blaze News that she found Ballard's attentions embarrassing and tried to deflect them by asking him about his wife, Katherine Ballard. "I wanted to know so many details. I wanted to know what she knew, how she felt, how she was dealing with it. I wanted to know if she knew if I was his partner. I wanted to know everything because I didn't want to feel like I was doing something wrong," Lynch said of Katherine.

'These things are natural. And sometimes these things happen, and it's good.'

"He assured me multiple times she knew. He told me multiple times that she wanted me to be his partner and she felt good about it."

So Lynch continued to train as an operator. As part of that training, Ballard apparently planned for several OUR operatives, including Lynch and Hall, to spend an evening bouncing around various strip clubs in Salt Lake City.

When Ballard arrived to pick Lynch up at her home that night, he walked upstairs to her bedroom under the pretense of using the bathroom, she told Blaze News. When he exited the bathroom, Lynch said, he began lifting up her dress without consent and started "making out" with her "stomach." Lynch claimed she tried to distract Ballard by reminding him that their friends were waiting for them at the strip club but that Ballard kept asking her to "relax" and even tickled her at one point so she would stop being so "stiff."

Once at the strip clubs, Ballard's advances continued, making Lynch feel ever more uncomfortable and humiliated, she said. At one club, Ballard allegedly rented a private room where he invited Lynch to sit on his lap while a stripper performed for them. As they sat together, Ballard allegedly began grinding against Lynch.

"This is what I’m talking about," Ballard reportedly whispered in Lynch's ear as the striptease continued. "These things are natural. And sometimes these things happen, and it's good."

Then one of Ballard's sons — who was an adult at the time and had recently returned home from a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints — apparently arrived to join them at the strip club. The young man's presence infuriated Lynch, who told Blaze News she stormed out, unable to withstand any more, bringing the night to an immediate close.

He also told Lynch during the alleged assault that he 'had been wanting this' and claimed he knew that she 'wanted' it too, but Lynch told Blaze News that she 'asked him to stop multiple times.'

Despite her horror at the events both before and at the strip clubs, Lynch kept in regular contact with Ballard over the next several weeks. So she was not surprised when he called her in January 2022, asking for a haircut, she said.

According to Lynch, from the moment Ballard arrived at her house either late on January 7 or early on January 8, 2022, he was emotionally out of sorts, unable to "snap out of Brian Black," the alter ego Ballard assumed while on operations. "I couldn't even get him to look at me," she said. Lynch claimed that she repeatedly attempted to console Ballard but that he remained on edge.

Suddenly, she said, he turned "violent and forceful" and ultimately raped her.

"He finally had pushed me up against my stairs after I tried to back away and forced himself on me and held me down," she told Blaze News.

He also told Lynch during the alleged assault that he "had been wanting this" and claimed he knew that she "wanted" it too, but Lynch told Blaze News that she "asked him to stop multiple times."

A graphic statement in a court document submitted last fall closely resembles the story Lynch told Blaze News:

He starts grinding on me. I just remember squeezing my legs closed tight as I could. He starts telling me how beautiful I am. I'm starting to feel like I'm going to freeze up. I feel very trapped. I tried to get him to look me in the face. He wouldn't. He just kept almost talking to himself like he was talking himself into whatever mad state he was in. Finally, when he did look me in the face I said Tim you don't want to do this. "Please. Tim" he stood up, zipped his pants up … grabbed his shirt and walked out my front door.

Attorney Suzette Rasmussen noted that Lynch had undergone major surgery involving her upper torso and legs just a few weeks prior to the alleged attack and had very little physical strength to resist Ballard.

According to Lynch, Ballard forgot his belt at her house the night of the alleged rape and later messaged her asking for it back. She told Blaze News that she left it on her porch for him to pick up. A screenshot of text messages she exchanged with Ballard — whose undercover name was Brian Black — appears to corroborate that aspect of her story.

Screenshot of text message shared with Blaze News

Despite the violent nature of the alleged attack, Lynch did not report it to law enforcement for nearly two years. A deputy report from the Utah County Sheriff’s Office confirms that Lynch filed a claim of "sexual abuse — forcible" on October 16, 2023.

"Delayed allegations of sexual assault by an adult female against an adult male. Please see Investigative Report Supplement for additional details," read the entire offense description included on the document.

'I have nothing to hide.'

Between the time of the alleged rape and the time she reported it, Lynch had minimal contact with Ballard, repressing the memory in favor of attending to other emotional concerns, she said. Her father, who had been terminally ill for some time, passed away several weeks after the alleged rape. She was also still reeling from "a horrible divorce" a couple of years before.

Lynch admitted, however, that she did reach out to Ballard barely a week after the alleged attack, fearing that another female operative had compromised an OUR mission. "I found out that one of his operators had maybe been telling people that she was an operator and not a hairdresser," she told us.

So Lynch sent Ballard some text messages and eventually had a phone conversation with him, during which Lynch conveyed "what happened and what [she] had heard" about the other operator’s alleged misstep. Those text messages were the first messages they exchanged following the conversation about the belt.

Screenshot of text messages shared with Blaze News

When Blaze News pressed Lynch about reaching out to Ballard so soon after he allegedly raped her, she explained that while she felt relieved after she hung up the phone with him that day, she also felt she needed to inform him about the other operator's alleged misstep because she still believed that absolute secrecy regarding operations was necessary to save trafficking victims.

"I felt like, my gosh, children are not going to be rescued … people are going to be compromised, and I felt like I had to tell him this," she told Blaze News. "So then I did, and that was it."

While she acknowledges that some people will not be convinced by her story, Lynch told Blaze News that nothing can change what Ballard did to her. "I don't want to prove my innocence," she said. "I only have facts, and I only have the truth."

"I have nothing to hide."

Lynch also claimed she ran into Ballard at an event in May 2023 and was so traumatized by the unexpected encounter that she started trembling and eventually became physically ill. "I ran to the restroom and just started puking," she said.

Ballard was apparently likewise shaken by the meeting. Lynch told Blaze News that he quickly turned pale and looked like "a deer in headlights."

Blaze News reached out to Chad Kolton, Ballard's spokesperson, regarding the allegations of rape and the allegedly forgotten belt. Kolton did not directly respond to questions about the alleged rape but claimed that we had only "cherry-picked details" about Lynch's story overall.

'A 100%match': Borys' skirt and Ballard's DNA

In October 2022, Celeste Borys, who was already an OUR employee, began working as an operator. She also eventually became Ballard's executive assistant, and over the course of the next 11 months, Ballard allegedly convinced her to engage in various sex acts on 30 separate occasions for the sake of the couples ruse.

One such incident allegedly occurred on January 8, 2023, the day Borys and Ballard left for a supposed operation in Mexico. Ballard had asked Borys to pick him up from his office in Lindon, Utah, so that they could go to the airport together.

Though Borys continued to work with him, she slowly began to realize that every OUR operation that she had gone on was 'fake' since they had never managed to rescue any women or children, she told Blaze News

When Borys arrived at the Lindon office, Ballard had just gotten out of the shower and was apparently still in a state of undress, she said. Borys then offered to find the wig Ballard intended to wear as part of his undercover identity, and when she returned, they had an encounter that she and her attorney characterized to Blaze News as an "assault."

Borys had been wearing a leather skirt that day. When she returned from the alleged mission to Mexico, she stuffed that skirt into the back of a drawer, she said.

A few months later, several former OUR operators had come forward to accuse Ballard of sexual misconduct, and Ballard and OUR parted ways sometime that summer.

Though Borys continued to work with him, she slowly began to realize that every OUR operation that she had gone on was "fake" since they had never managed to rescue any women or children, she told Blaze News.

At that point, she also had to come to terms with the fact that the couples ruse was never necessary and that all the sexual encounters she allegedly had with Ballard in the hopes of saving victims had all been for naught, she added. By September 2023, Borys had left OUR and soon afterward joined the growing group of women accusing Ballard of misconduct.

In an effort to find evidence that might substantiate her claims against Ballard, Borys remembered the skirt still sitting in the back of her drawer, having never been washed or dry-cleaned.

Borys brought that skirt to law enforcement in November 2023, and a Utah County detective later reportedly discovered a semen stain on it and sent the skirt off to a Utah state crime lab. The lab found that the DNA from the semen was "a 100% match of Ballard’s DNA," recent court documents said.

'The victims and the public are not being protected.'

In the state of Utah, sexual assault victims are entitled to the results of "a sexual assault kit or … other crime scene evidence," so long as sharing such evidence does not impede an investigation. Thus far, investigators seem to be relying on that stipulation in order to delay releasing the results officially.

Though a detective reportedly informed Borys in June 2024 that the DNA testing on the semen sample had excluded her husband and had instead matched Ballard's DNA profile, she has yet to receive a copy of these test results, attorney Rasmussen told us.

Screenshots of text messages apparently exchanged between Rasmussen and an unnamed "Sargeant" on June 21 were included in the recent court filing. In one apparent text message, Rasmussen asked for a "verification letter" confirming the DNA test results, but the sergeant demurred.

"I will need to check with my Lieutenant before I release anything and he is in training in Florida through next week," the sergeant seemingly replied before alluding to a possible "meeting" sometime in the following week

Screenshot of court documents

In the messages, Rasmussen also apparently expressed concern that any "delays" from law enforcement in submitting these results would undermine Borys' case in a court of law and in the court of public opinion. "The victims and the public are not being protected," Rasmussen insisted, according to court documents.

Screenshot of court documents

In response to questions regarding the reported DNA evidence, Chad Kolton, Ballard's spokesperson, gave Blaze News the following statement:

Tainting an ongoing investigation to desperately try to generate some PR is consistent with the other illegal and unethical behavior that has been a hallmark of the Borys case from the beginning – and a reason the whole case is now in jeopardy. We’ll wait for the court’s judgment on their actions and for law enforcement to complete its investigation, if that’s even possible now.

OUR also provided a statement about the possible DNA evidence implicating Ballard:

OUR Rescue will not comment on newly alleged evidence that is part of a pending civil matter and an ongoing investigation by law enforcement. In sharp contrast to our commitment to uphold the integrity of that process, counsel for the plaintiff publicly released private text messages with law enforcement during an ongoing investigation in attempt to control the media. Such conduct violates public trust and undermines the investigative process. OUR Rescue holds strong to its position that our organization has acted in accordance with the law and look forward to defending the integrity of our work.

'Allthis darkness': Court cases reach standstill

Though multiple civil suits have been filed and accusations of criminal wrongdoing reported to law enforcement, there has been little movement on any cases regarding Ballard and alleged sexual misconduct. In fact, it appears that none of them has progressed into the discovery phase, and several cases have even been dismissed.

Kira Lynch, Celeste Borys, and Mary Hall all indicated to Blaze News that they are frustrated by the slow process.

They also feel betrayed by Ballard, someone they once considered a friend, as well as OUR, an organization ostensibly founded to help victims of sexual abuse. Hall claimed that OUR had been far too "blasé" about the similar accusations made by so many women.

"It shows that this organization really does not maybe do or follow through with all the things they say they do," she said.

For Borys, the most dispiriting aspect of her time with Ballard is that it never led to the rescue of a single sex-trafficking victim. "There were so many times where I said, 'I'm going to quit' because it was sucking the life out of me," Borys said through tears. "But I just kept thinking, I just want one win. I need to see one kid because I have all this darkness."

"My soul was slowly dying."

Lynch told us that she is still coming to terms with the loss of her father and the alleged sexual assault by Ballard. "I'm still trying to figure this out in my mind," she said. "And the problem is that nothing will ever be okay. Nothing can justify my dad dying or Tim Ballard raping me."

"So what I can do now is try to get the truth and the facts out there so that he doesn't harm anyone else."

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Blaze News investigates: The psychic who guided Tim Ballard and some Operation Underground Railroad missions for years



Last month, Blaze News published a report that took a deep dive into allegations of sexual misconduct leveled at Tim Ballard, the former federal agent who founded Operation Underground Railroad a decade ago with the expressed goal of rescuing victims of human trafficking. Now, Blaze News has examined another former OUR employee who has played a significant role in Ballard's life and in many OUR operations: Janet Russon, a woman who purports to commune with spirits.

Based on the information Blaze News has received from eight former OUR associates, Russon has had undue influence on Ballard, and therefore on OUR operations, for many years, perhaps even a decade or more. These witnesses uniformly told us that Ballard speaks to Russon almost daily, sometimes even multiple times per day. One individual guessed that during some busy periods, Russon worked nearly 80 hours a week providing psychic intel to Ballard. Another joked that Ballard never uses the bathroom without consulting her first.

These former OUR associates have spoken to Blaze News about Russon on the condition of anonymity. In some cases, they fear violating a nondisclosure agreement. Others are concerned about their own safety or possible community or professional fallout from their ties with Ballard and/or his allies.

To establish the extent of Russon's impact on Ballard's life and OUR's work, Blaze News here attempts to lay out a rather complicated story, grounded in the tragic kidnapping of a young boy, that involves Russon's supposed paranormal sight, thousands of man-hours, millions of dollars in resources, and even alleged sexual grooming and spiritual manipulation. It is so full of intrigue that members of Ballard's inner circle have recently contacted Blaze Media management and even family members of key Blaze employees to try to shut this story down, efforts that ultimately were in vain.

A 'very sheltered-looking, soccer mom-ish woman from Utah': Who is Janet Russon?

By all accounts, Janet Russon, 60, appears to be an unassuming wife, mother, and faithful member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. One former OUR associate who went on an operation with Russon once described her as a "very sheltered-looking, soccer mom-ish woman from Utah," a description that matches those given by many sources who spoke with Blaze News.

Russon, a Connecticut native who has lived in Utah for some time, also appears to have a passion for helping orphaned children find adoptive homes. According to a biography of Russon posted on an old version of a website for an adoption-related nonprofit where Russon once served on the board of directors, Russon and her husband have nine children, seven of whom are adopted.

Screenshot of an old version of the nonprofit's website, via Wayback Machine

Russon's information was removed from that website sometime after June 10 of this year, though whether she still remains involved with the nonprofit is unclear. In response to a request for comment, the nonprofit — which Blaze News is not naming at its request — said: "Janet’s involvement as a board member was because of her personal experience as an adoptive mother of seven children. She is no longer a member of our board."

Russon assisted with adoption-related work at OUR for a couple of years as well. She left that organization shortly after Ballard did last summer.

'Either wrong or irrelevant': Russon and the work of 'remote viewing'

It is unclear exactly when Russon met Tim Ballard, though one person guessed to Blaze News that their introduction could have occurred as far back as 2007. What is clear is that, whenever they met, Ballard quickly became fascinated by Russon's purported ability to commune with spirits and began consulting her about early rescue missions by 2013. On the rare occasions on which Ballard discussed her ability with colleagues at OUR, he referred to it as "remote viewing," perhaps because of his background as a federal agent.

During the 1970s, the CIA and other agencies began exploring the possible benefits of remote viewing in federal investigations. The idea then fell out of favor before resurging in the 1990s, just a few years before Ballard became an agent. An official CIA study of remote viewing, published in 1995, ultimately concluded that its value for intelligence agencies "cannot be readily discerned" and likely introduced too many complications to make remote viewers' intel worthwhile.

"Normally, much of the data provided by the RV[s] is either wrong or irrelevant although one cannot always tell which is which without further investigation," the study said.

In response to Blaze News' request for answers regarding her work and her relationship with Ballard, Russon never denied being a psychic or communicating with spirits. In fact, her email sidestepped all questions regarding her supposed paranormal powers entirely, implying that answers to such questions would not "benefit" Blaze Media's "audience." She then offered an alternative list of "more important topics" for possible discussion without providing further comment on any of them. Her list of suggested topics has been included here in full:

-anti human trafficking of minors-the US border crisis-new legislation to improve border policy

-prevention of trafficking through adoption-the crisis of children who "age out" of the opportunity to be adopted both domestically and internationally

-the need to form and maintain alliances and cooperative relationships with other anti human trafficking organizations worldwide

-Foster Care in the US and other countries

Russon did not reply to Blaze News' follow-up email asking for further information about her psychic work.

'The search that inspired a movement': The kidnapping of Gardy Mardy

Ballard, who spent more than a decade as a Department of Homeland Security special agent after a brief stint in the CIA, appears to have trusted Russon's abilities implicitly. Whenever someone expressed skepticism about Russon, Ballard would insist that her abilities had helped solve a murder case for a California police department years earlier, multiple former OUR associates told Blaze News, though the details of that case are unclear. In fact, Ballard had such a high regard for Russon's paranormal insights that he began relying on her to guide some of his OUR missions, especially those in search of Gardy Mardy.

In December 2009, Gardy Mardy, a 3-year-old boy who was born in Utah, was tragically kidnapped from the LDS church in Haiti where his father, Guesno Mardy, served as bishop at the time. Though Guesno and others identified possible suspects in the case almost immediately, sadly, no evidence ever surfaced that suggested that Gardy was still alive or, if he was, where he might be found.

The story took yet another tragic turn a few weeks later, when a devastating earthquake struck Haiti, killing hundreds of thousands. Among the dead were Guesno Mardy's mother, Illienne Borgelin, and his sister, brother-in-law, and dear friend. The catastrophe also consumed the attention of Haitian law enforcement and overshadowed missing persons cases, such as the one involving Gardy.

Tim Ballard first learned about Guesno's desperate search for Gardy shortly after the earthquake, when Ballard was still a federal agent, an OUR blog post from 2020 said. Despite the low likelihood that Gardy could be found, even with significant resources and manpower, Ballard claimed he couldn't get Guesno's despondent face out of his mind and immediately determined to do whatever he could to find Gardy. Ballard's boss at the federal agency eventually asked him to drop the investigation, the blog post stated, but Ballard decided to leave the agency rather than abandon Gardy's case.

"If I stayed in my government position, my promise to Guesno was empty," Ballard said, according to the blog post. "In 2013, Operation Underground Railroad was born and we headed straight for Haiti."

Unfortunately, that first OUR mission designed to locate Gardy, Operation VooDoo Doll, failed in its initial objective — as has every Gardy-oriented mission since. OUR claimed that Operation VooDoo Doll successfully rescued 28 kids from trafficking — a number that multiple Blaze News sources seriously doubt — but Gardy was not found, and his whereabouts, if he is still alive, remain unknown.

Though Gardy's case appears bleak, Ballard has frequently used the story of Gardy — and Guesno's desperate desire to find him — to raise funds for OUR. Many videos and other promotions featuring Ballard describe Gardy's story as "the search that inspired the movement."

OUR's lavish fundraisers, where Ballard often recounted Gardy's story, eventually caught the attention of Davis County District Attorney Troy Rawlings. For three or four years, Rawlings investigated Ballard and OUR's business and fundraising practices, though he announced earlier this year that he had closed the investigation without filing charges. Some of the sealed documents from that investigation were given to Blaze News by a source affiliated with it.

According to these documents, Ballard and OUR raised nearly $200,000 at one notable OUR gala fundraiser that promoted Gardy's case, among other stories. During this gala, which occurred on an unknown date but which was summarized and documented by an investigator in November 2022, Ballard told attendees not only about the heartbreaking story of Gardy Mardy but about the apparent selflessness of Guesno Mardy, whom Ballard called the "godfather" of the OUR organization.

"If I have to give up my son so that these [other children] could be rescued," Ballard recalled Guesno once saying, "then that's the sacrifice I'm willing to make." Guesno "recognized," Ballard said, that if not for his lost son, OUR would not exist and the kids rescued by OUR would still be in bondage.

"We have looked for Gardy, we have not given up," Ballard continued, according to the documents.

"And we will never, ever give up."

'He's here buddy': Russon's readings and the endless search for Gardy Mardy

Strictly speaking, Ballard appears to have kept his promise to Guesno. Since its inception in 2013, OUR has conducted at least a dozen missions, likely more, in the hope of finding Gardy and spent perhaps tens of millions of dollars in those efforts, according to the estimates of a former OUR associate familiar with the case. And yet "100%" of OUR's intelligence about Gardy Mardy and his possible whereabouts has come from Janet Russon's psychic visions, multiple former OUR operatives with extensive military training told Blaze News.

Ballard relied so heavily on Russon's input that he brought her along on at least one of the early Gardy missions and followed her every instruction, even down to the direction he was to drive his vehicle. "This woman, Janet, starts telling Tim ... where to turn, where to go," a source who was in the truck with Russon and Ballard at the time recalled to Blaze News with bewilderment.

When another former OUR associate asked Ballard in 2018 for all the actionable intelligence OUR had regarding Gardy Mardy, all Ballard had to give him was a stack of Russon's "readings," the source said. Blaze News has received a copy of more than 15 readings from Russon that relate to the search for Gardy Mardy, likely written between 2014 and 2018. According to these readings, Russon believed that Gardy was being held hostage with other children in a location somewhere in a mountainous area of the Forêt des Pins along Haiti's southeastern border with the Dominican Republic.

These readings have a certain logic and organization to them. They attempt to describe, often in minute detail, Gardy's current location, his captors or other villains, and landmarks or other noteworthy objects that might signal to OUR team members that they are on the right track. The readings also make several references to the Bible and the Book of Mormon, likely to fortify the resolve of those looking for Gardy.

Many sections read like the transcript of a phone call, as Russon asks spirits questions, sometimes for clarification, other times for encouragement. "How do we find [Gardy]?" Russon asks in one reading.

"Follow the roads that lead from Marigot to Thiotte — north toward Malpasse[.] 'You'll find him in the camp.' You'll find him there. At his 'home' This is where he calls home," comes the apparent reply. It is unclear whether the entire response is a direct quote or just the words and phrases Russon puts in quotation marks.

Screenshot of reading shared with Blaze News

At other times, Russon seems to converse with the spirit of Gardy himself. "I heard him say: 'at 1 am I go pee'. Where will you be tomorrow at 6 am? Sleeping in my bed," reads one of their exchanges, according to "Gardy Reading #11 Clues."

Screenshot of reading shared with Blaze News

Another time, Russon writes in bold that she'd heard Gardy say, "Just go to the camp. See you at the camp. I'll be there." Whether ops team members ever reached a camp is unclear, but if they did, they did not find Gardy there.

According to Russon's readings, while in captivity, Gardy experiences natural emotional swings. In one reading, he prays fervently for rescue. In another, he has tired of being held hostage and worries that people have given up on ever finding him. In yet another reading, Russon cautions that, upon being found, Gardy will likely manifest symptoms of Stockholm syndrome — a condition in which kidnapping victims develop a fierce attachment and loyalty to their kidnappers — and initially refuse to cooperate with his rescuers.

Screenshot of reading shared with Blaze News

In many readings, Russon also communes with the spirit of Gardy's deceased relatives, especially Illienne Borgelin, Gardy's paternal grandmother and the mother of Guesno. Illienne, spelled with one L in some readings, died in the deadly earthquake that hit Haiti in January 2010, just a few weeks after Gardy was kidnapped. During one reading, Russon, channeling Illienne's spirit, appears to experience for herself Illienne's supposed final moments:

Big piece of ruble that fell, crumbled, almost immediately. I felt tight stomach and sharp, quick pain in (my) left side of abdomen. Something poking in from outside/external pain, not internal injury. She didn't die from impact. She didn't pass away or cross over from the collapse. It wasn't instant/sudden death but she knew — at the moment of the earthquake — she knew (intuitively) that it was over for her. Her time.

Screenshot of reading shared with Blaze News

"She may have hovered but she never waivered [sic]," Russon wrote in another reading about Illienne. "It was ... her time to go. 'I was getting old' she says."

Yet another reading with Illienne features a detail that — when read with the knowledge that Gardy remains missing and that OUR has been raising sometimes hundreds of thousands of dollars at a time off of Gardy's story — is quite unsettling. At the prompting of Illienne's spirit, Russon advises Guesno Mardy to sell the jewelry that once belonged to his late mother to help fund "Gardy missions." "It is all 'for the children,'" Russon writes.

Throughout these readings, Russon remains unfailingly optimistic about finding Gardy safe and sound. In one reading, Russon claims to "hear" the following message: "''Either this (reading) will find the boy or lead to an area where there are people who know who he is or where or who has seen him or had him with them."

In the "Feelings" section of another reading, she states confidently: "It's going to work. It's going to happen now."

Screenshot of readings shared with Blaze News

And Ballard appears to have been assured by Russon's repeated senses of looming victory. During the same OUR mission in which Russon directed Ballard in the truck, Ballard promised Guesno Mardy, who had also joined the mission, that they were on the cusp of finding Gardy and bringing him home.

"Guesno, he's here buddy, we're gonna get him, we are gonna get him," Ballard said after a hopeful prediction from Russon, according to a transcript of a video taken during the mission. The transcript was included in Rawlings' sealed documents shared with Blaze News.

Screenshot of documents shared with Blaze News

At present, the search for Gardy, who would now be 16 or 17 years old, seems to have petered out almost entirely, though an OUR blog post from August still insisted that "O.U.R. refuses to give up on the search for Gardy." But as far back as December 2020, a source indicated to a Davis County investigator that "there is not a single person looking for Gardy any more. Tim just uses the storyline to keep things going and obtain funding from donors. ... Guesno knows OUR is using him and the story for donations," according to a summary of the interview.

Another former OUR operative still strongly supports OUR's overall mission and offered a countervailing view of the organization's work in Haiti. "The OUR team I worked with in Haiti was always very sincere and effective," the operative told Blaze News. "There wasn't a wasted day trying to help victims of trafficking or taking some action to help improve that country."

Screenshot of YouTube video (Pictured: Gardy Mardy)

'Mediums, astrologers, fortune tellers, and sorcerers are inspired by Satan': Controversy surrounding Russon's readings

Russon's readings have never led to the recovery of Gardy Mardy, and the former OUR associates who spoke with Blaze News expressed a wide range of opinions about the efficacy of Russon's psychic powers and about psychics in general.

Multiple former OUR associates who spoke with Blaze News indicated that Russon and her readings yielded some positive results for OUR. One source claimed to have met a victim rescued during a mission in which Russon was directly involved.

Another source who went on at least one mission to Haiti with Russon claimed that Russon provided several important insights for OUR team members as they ventured out into the field. For example, during that mission, operators found a water source deep within the Haitian forest, just as Russon had envisioned, even though this water source did not appear on any map or aerial surveillance. She also accurately predicted that operators would encounter a man in a purple shirt and a cowboy hat as well as a person of authority wearing a red shirt, the source told Blaze News. A few of the readings seen by Blaze News seem to make reference to some of those details.

Composite screenshot of readings shared with Blaze News

Others who spoke with Blaze News about Russon are less hopeful about her paranormal sight. Some in this group believe that Russon may be "sensitive" to those in another realm or dimension but worry that such a sensitivity might easily be misapplied or exploited. A couple of them expressed strong personal or religious objections to paranormal sight and psychic readings in general.

Even though many of her predictions have not come true, Russon has been promoting her supposed gift for years, and Blaze News has been deeply interested to learn how her psychic process works. According to the former OUR associates who either received a reading from Russon or witnessed her conducting one, Russon supposedly speaks to spirits in a way reminiscent of Whoopi Goldberg's character, Oda Mae Brown, in the 1990 hit movie "Ghost." She then shares her communications with those spirits in real time or writes them down quickly in a notebook. These handwritten readings are sometimes typed up neatly, as in the case of the Gardy readings. She also frequently records herself reading what she has written down, as many sources and the sealed documents from DA Rawlings' case all attested.

The spirits she contacts are often deceased loved ones, such as a parent or spouse, of a person seeking her services but can also include famous people, such as George Washington and Abraham Lincoln. One source even witnessed Russon review a reading she had done about Vladimir Putin at Ballard's behest and was so disturbed by the experience that the witness snapped a photo of it. Blaze News is not sharing details of when and where the photo was taken to protect the source from possible identification.

Photo shared with Blaze News (used with permission)

Some news articles, court documents — including the two sexual assault lawsuits recently filed against Ballard — and DA Rawlings' sealed documents have all stated that, in connection with her readings about Ballard's private life, Russon communes with a prophet named Nephi who, according to the Book of Mormon, lived around 600 B.C. However, those reports are incorrect. Multiple sources have informed Blaze News that the Nephi in question is actually Ballard's great-great-grandfather Nephi Anderson.

Some of these sources also suggested that Ballard has never publicly corrected the record regarding Nephi's true identity because doing so would confirm his work with Russon, work that seems to violate LDS teaching regarding the gift of prophecy and the occult.

"Satan wants to blind us to the truth and keep us from seeking the true gifts of the Spirit. Mediums, astrologers, fortune tellers, and sorcerers are inspired by Satan even if they claim to follow God. Their works are abominable to the Lord (see Isaiah 47:12–14; Deuteronomy 18:9–10)," says a Mormon text called "Gospel Principles."

For years, Ballard has publicly professed his membership in the LDS church, and on September 18, with reports swirling about possible sexual misconduct, Ballard issued a statement claiming himself to be "a faithful Member in good standing in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints." These professions of faith notwithstanding, reports now say that Ballard has been formally excommunicated, presumably because of accusations of marital infidelity and sexual misconduct. A spokesperson for the LDS church declined to comment on the validity of those reports.

There is no indication that an excommunication inquiry has been opened into Russon. However, multiple sources told Blaze News that her work as a medium could put her in danger of excommunication. The LDS spokesperson told Blaze News that the church discourages consulting mediums and indicated that under certain circumstances, a person known to have dabbled in psychic work might lose membership in the church. However, the spokesperson stressed that the church does not comment on individual membership, which is determined by local leaders.

Finally, Blaze News has learned that Russon is not the only self-proclaimed psychic whom Ballard has consulted. He has also sought psychic services from at least one other woman identified only as Lori. Whether Lori is a member of the LDS church and whether she or Russon remain in contact with Ballard to this day are unclear.

'I get chills thinking about that moment': Janet Russon joins OUR

Among those who worked closely with Tim Ballard, Russon's psychic readings seemed to be an open secret. Most of these readings related to Ballard personally, with those relating to OUR missions representing just a tiny fraction of Russon's psychic work for Ballard. However, these OUR-related readings significantly impacted OUR business operations, especially since Russon received payment for her psychic services, even as donors were kept in the dark about the nature of her work.

OUR has ignored repeated requests from Blaze News for answers regarding Russon, so we have had a difficult time piecing together exactly how and how much Russon was paid for performing psychic services. It appears that in the beginning of their relationship, Russon charged Ballard a few hundred dollars for each reading she gave, and since she gave him a reading nearly every day, the cost of Russon's psychic services would have added up quickly.

An investigator wrote in a report given to DA Rawlings his own understanding of Russon's pay structure. "I learned through the investigation that Janet was being paid as a consultant," the investigator wrote.

"Janet was being paid a monthly consultant fee of approximately $5,000 with an hourly/operational readings contract of approximately $1,560."

Screenshot of documents shared with Blaze News

Blaze News cannot independently verify these findings, but one source did indicate to us that, in the early years, Russon likely made at most between $4,500 and $5,000 in months with a particularly high number of readings.

The sheer volume of psychic readings that Russon has issued over the years is staggering. An email from DA Rawlings included with the sealed documents stated that investigators had collected "somewhere around 10,000 pages of Janet Russon 'Readings' as part of the investigator case file."

At some point, OUR hired Russon and gave her a job that suggested she performed non-psychic work for the organization. Exactly when she was hired and the initial job title she was assigned remain unclear. There are even reports that for a brief time, she was actually paid by Slave Stealers, a for-profit LLC founded by Ballard that, while still technically active, seems to have faded into the background.

According to a statement from OUR included at the end of this section, in 2021, Russon was named the executive director of Children Need Families, then an OUR subgroup co-founded by Ballard's wife, Katherine Ballard, that focused on providing prospective adoptive families with financial assistance. It is unclear what experience Russon may have had that would have qualified her to act as executive director of a nonprofit organization.

But even as she performed legitimate work for Children Need Families, Russon continued to provide Tim Ballard, and therefore OUR, with psychic readings — but now that she had been onboarded as a full-time employee and had begun receiving a salary, Ballard no longer needed to pay her by the reading. One source told Blaze News that Ballard took advantage of this shift in the financial arrangements and demanded ever more readings from Russon, even as her CNF salary remained relatively stable, based on the OUR statement.

But Ballard seems to have been very circumspect about revealing Russon's true role with OUR. Ballard referred to Russon as OUR's most "guarded" secret, one source said, and regularly threatened to sue any employee or consultant who discussed her psychic work publicly.

Russon had no office at OUR facilities and only rarely made an appearance at them, sources told us. Many of the office staff recognized Russon whenever she did stop by but had little understanding of what she actually did. Since its founding in 2013, none of OUR's publicly available IRS 990 tax forms has ever listed Russon among its "Officers, Directors, Trustees, Key Employees, Highest Compensated Employees, and Independent Contractors."

And Russon's psychic work, which always seems to have portended good fortune for Ballard, apparently emboldened Ballard to indulge even his most sordid ideas and whims. According to several reports, Russon helped identify women who ought to play the part of Ballard's fake girlfriend on international OUR operations, a controversial tactic that Ballard dubbed the "couples ruse." Two separate lawsuits filed against Ballard (linked here and here) allege that Ballard engaged in sexual misconduct in connection with OUR couples ruses, and both of those lawsuits named Russon as a co-defendant.

Russon's interference in the couples ruse allegedly didn't end there. According to the lawsuits, she also learned through her psychic powers that Ballard had been married to some of his couples ruse partners in previous lives. Armed with this supposed knowledge from Russon, Ballard would then suggest to these women that, because they had been married in a previous life, sexual contact between them would be "appropriate" and not extramarital, the lawsuits stated.

The estranged husband of one of Ballard's accusers, identified in the second lawsuit only as FT, referred to Russon as "Tim's enabler." FT also recalled in the lawsuit that when Russon was first introduced to his wife, identified in the lawsuit as AA, Russon hinted that Ballard would likely select AA for future couples ruses: "After some brief conversation, [Russon] looked AA up and down and said, 'I have a feeling I'll be working with you a lot in the future.'"

"Now looking back, I get chills thinking about that moment," FT added.

Screenshot of lawsuit filed against Ballard, Russon, OUR, and others

Ballard left OUR last June after an investigation into the allegations of sexual misconduct in connection with the couples ruse. Russon left OUR shortly thereafter. After her departure, OUR issued the following statement:

Janet Russon worked as a full-time executive director for the Children Need Families program for the last two years with a starting salary of $122,000 per year and a final salary of $125,000 per year. She left O.U.R. shortly after Mr. Ballard’s departure. None of her work with CNF had any association with her self-proclaimed psychic abilities. For any question about her alleged psychic abilities, services rendered to Mr. Ballard, or payments for those services, please ask Ms. Russon or Mr. Ballard.

'Donors are not made aware': What did OUR leaders know, and when did they know it?

At least some members of OUR leadership, especially those on the board, likely knew about Russon's psychic work for Ballard from the beginning, sources indicated to Blaze Media. There is even evidence that a reading from Russon affected the makeup of OUR's executive team.

Blaze News has received a recording, just over eight minutes long, of one of Russon's readings in Russon's voice. It is believed that this reading was recorded in May 2020. At that point in time, Ballard was no longer CEO of OUR, a title he held from 2015 to 2017. During this reading, Russon asks Nephi, ostensibly Ballard's great-great-grandfather, whether Ballard is destined to become CEO once again.

"Becoming CEO at this point was always the plan," Russon says, apparently on behalf of Nephi and other spirits, "and because you followed the plan almost perfectly, perfectly enough, you are able to step in without tripping. It is right because we say it is. You were always meant to be at the helm of OUR."

"Your name and your oversight at the top of the pyramid will, at this time and going forward, not only restore an off-kilter organizational chart," Russon's voice continues a few minutes later, "but will be the ... additional critical component to upgrade and power up OUR for Phase 2."

At one point, Russon even makes reference to "a coup," though the details of that "coup" and OUR's "Phase 2" remain unclear. Toward the end of the reading, Russon receives instruction about how OUR leadership ought to be structured and mentions a flowchart she has drawn to illustrate it, though Blaze News has never seen a copy of this flowchart.

Elsewhere in the reading, Russon claims that Ballard is "always accompanied by angels" and advises him to consider consulting "a seer stone," which she then defines as "a personal revelatory device."

Blaze News has reason to believe that DA Rawlings has a copy of this recording or a recording on the same topic. In a February 2023 email included in the sealed documents, Rawlings called the OUR executive structure laid out in the recording "fascinating," perhaps because Ballard had become CEO once again by 2022.

Others, such as "Jerry" and "Tevya" — believed to be Jerry Gowen and Tevya Ware — who Russon predicts in the reading will soon endure "a loving course correct," also appear to have undergone a job change as well. Gowen went from CEO in 2019 to another kind of CEO, chief experience officer, a year later, though his salary continued to increase.

Ware, Ballard's sister-in-law, was vice president of OUR finances from 2015 to 2017 and CFO from 2018 to 2020. By 2021, she likely left the company, as she no longer appeared on OUR tax forms at that point. Whether she did so of her own accord is unclear.

It is also not clear whether these changes were made because of pressure from Ballard, but it is clear that Ballard wanted assurance from Russon and the spirits that he would regain stature at OUR. Several sources told Blaze News that Ballard used Russon as a kind of crystal ball so that he could have a sense of certainty about his future, including at OUR.

Most OUR leaders, especially those on the board, likely knew about Russon's psychic contributions to its business practices, multiple sources told Blaze News, but if any of them had misgivings about Russon or her paranormal intel, they kept their thoughts to themselves. Ballard would have gotten them fired if they hadn't, the sources said.

They also never shared this information publicly, according to Davis County District Attorney Rawlings. "Donors are not made aware that Nephi, via [Ms.] Russon, is the key piece of O.U.R. Operational intelligence," Rawlings wrote in an email included in the sealed documents shared with Blaze News.

Most individual donors may not have known about Russon's influence at OUR, but at least one major corporate donor got wind of it — and immediately voiced its disapproval. Essential oils developer doTerra, based in Pleasant Grove, Utah, was once a "major donor" to OUR, one source told Blaze News, but became concerned about OUR after hearing several disturbing reports about the organization, including the reports about psychic influence.

Ballard attempted to quell doTerra's concerns by explaining that even federal agencies have utilized remote viewers, a report in the sealed documents said, but doTerra eventually elected to withdraw its financial support from OUR anyway.

In response to a request for comment, doTerra sent Blaze News the following statement: "dōTERRA® and the dōTERRA Healing Hands Foundation® do not partner with OUR or support any active project with Tim Ballard or his affiliated organizations. Instead, dōTERRA Healing Hands launched the HOPE Action Plan in 2020 to fight human trafficking and victimization through prevention, responsible rescue, and trauma-informed restorative care."

OUR did not respond to Blaze News' repeated requests for comment.

'A special priesthood blessing': Tim Ballard allegedly exploits his relationship with Elder Ballard

Many readers might wonder why those at OUR, many of whom are Mormon, allowed Ballard to incorporate so much of Russon's psychic work into OUR operations and why some of the women involved in couples ruses accepted his seemingly wild tales about reincarnation and previous marriages. The short answer is that they likely would not have tolerated any of it but for Ballard's penchant for dropping the name of his late former friend, M. Russell Ballard, otherwise known as Elder Ballard.

Until last week, Elder Ballard, who was not related to Tim but who once considered him a friend, was the acting president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles in the LDS church. As the authority of members of the quorum stands second only to the authority of the church president, Elder Ballard's name carried significant weight with members of the LDS community until his death last Sunday at the age of 95.

Before Elder Ballard's death, Tim Ballard repeatedly indicated to others that Elder Ballard had approved the couples ruse, so long as no kissing on the lips or sexual intercourse was involved, and had even given Tim "a special priesthood blessing" for it, both aforementioned lawsuits regarding alleged sexual misconduct claimed. Three plaintiffs in one lawsuit likewise mentioned in their personal statements that Tim Ballard had told them that Elder Ballard had "sanctioned" the couples ruse.

Tim Ballard insisted that Elder Ballard had sanctioned Russon's readings as well, multiple sources told Blaze News, though none had ever heard Elder Ballard himself confirm his blessing on psychics or the couples ruse. All that information was filtered through Tim Ballard, they said.

One woman who spoke with Blaze News indicated that the use of Elder Ballard's name in connection with unsavory practices like the couples ruse and the use of psychics is a strategic component of Tim Ballard's methods of persuasion. "He knows most church members wouldn't believe or agree with him about using a psychic, so he uses Elder Ballard or apostles in general as validation for his claims," she said.

In September, just as reports about the couples ruse were beginning to circulate, Elder Ballard issued the following statement about Tim Ballard and their past friendship (emphasis added):

President Ballard and Tim Ballard (no relation) established a friendship a number of years ago. That friendship was built on a shared interest in looking after God’s children wherever they are and without regard to their circumstance. However, that relationship is in the past. For many months, President Ballard has had no contact with the founder of Operation Underground Railroad (OUR). The nature of that relationship was always in support of vulnerable children being abused, trafficked, and otherwise neglected. Once it became clear Tim Ballard had betrayed their friendship, through the unauthorized use of President Ballard’s name for Tim Ballard’s personal advantage and activity regarded as morally unacceptable, President Ballard withdrew his association. President Ballard never authorized his name, or the name of the Church, to be used for Tim’s personal or financial interests.

In addition, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints never endorsed, supported or represented OUR, Tim Ballard or any projects associated with them.

President Ballard loves children, all over the world. It has been his mission and life’s work to look after them, care for them, and point them to their Savior.

A spokesperson for the LDS church who knew Elder Ballard well claimed that there is no evidence that Elder Ballard had any knowledge that Tim Ballard had sought psychic readings or engaged in the couples ruse until recent investigations brought those reports to light.

Tim Ballard had a substantive discussion with Blaze News regarding the accusations of sexual misconduct several weeks ago. However, he and his representatives disregarded several attempts for a follow-up conversation with us regarding psychics and remote viewing.

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The Left Attacks ‘Sound Of Freedom’ Because It Exposes An Uncomfortable Truth About Moral Boundaries

Our culture wants complete sexual freedom but ignores the negative fallout that happens when those freedoms are abused.

Bloomberg hit-piece targeting anti-child-trafficking film 'Sound of Freedom' was penned by LGBT activist who opposed stigmatizing pedophiles



The author of Bloomberg's Saturday smear of the massively successful anti-child-trafficking film "Sound of Freedom" was penned by a radical LGBT activist who has argued in favor of destigmatizing pedophilia.

Noah Berlatsky's apparent eagerness to brand the film's popularity as "ominous" has prompted others online to both consider his possible motivations and review his past writ on the subject of pedophilia.

The critique

In his July 15 Bloomberg article, entitled "QAnon and 'Sound of Freedom' Both Rely on Tired Hollywood Tropes," which has since been republished by the Washington Post, Berlatsky suggested that the film "has been embraced by the far right and Christians" in part because the "far right is motivated by myths of corrupted innocence and corruption avenged."

Berlatsky rehashed claims advanced in a similar hit-piece by a senior writer at Rolling Stone, intimating that the film's presentation of trafficking is "misleading."

As if to reassure, Berlatsky claimed that the majority of children sexually trafficked are actually between the ages of 15 and 17, adding that "in 41% of the cases, a family member was involved. Behind those numbers are often stories of addiction, disowned LGBTQ+ people and trading sex on the street to survive."

"That's why experts worry that Sound of Freedom's stranger danger narrative, and the way it centers on victims who are as innocent and as sympathetic as possible, may make it more difficult to organize help for less perfect victims when they are targeted by those close to them," he continued.

Just as the depiction of victims as innocent or sympathetic are allegedly problematic, so too are the Hollywood depictions of good and bad — where the "bad guys are unremittingly evil, and the good guys are sensitive and unfailingly virtuous."

"Is Sound of Freedom a QAnon dog whistle, or is it just another thriller? The answer is that — whatever the filmmaker's intentions — it functions as both," wrote Berlatsky. "These narratives do little to help victims. But they can create coalitions of feeling, disgust and righteous rage that connect conservative conspiracy theorists with the mainstream. That's why Trump's screening it. And that's why its popularity is ominous."

The critic

Noah Berlatsky of the "Everything Is Horrible" Substack is a prolific writer of LGBT agitprop and leftist screeds, often finding "fascism" lurking behind opinions he doesn't like.

TheBlaze previously reported that Berlatsky made a fuss earlier this year about his "queer family" after his wife came out as "bisexual and nonbinary" and his son determined that he was a lesbian transgender.

In addition to writing "Wonder Woman: Bondage and Feminism," advocating for pandemic school shutdowns, and smearing then-student Nick Sandmann in 2019, Berlatsky has written a number of articles for the Protasia Foundation.

The Protasia Foundation touts itself as a "child protection organization" that allegedly seeks novel ways of curbing child sexual abuse, while admittedly working with pedophiles. It also differentiates on its website between "pedophile" and "minor-attracted person," claiming that "not everyone who experiences attractions to minors is a pedophile."

The organization's values include "sex positivity" and "kink awareness."

In a Dec. 13, 2021, article for Protasia, Berlatsky argued that "treating pedophiles as monsters who are chiefly responsible for abuse actually makes it more difficult to recognize and combat [child sexual abuse]."

"Stigmatizing pedophiles or MAPs makes it harder for pedophiles to seek help, which puts children at risk. And it distracts our attention from the most prevalent forms of child abuse and child sexual abuse, which also puts children at risk," wrote Berlatsky. "As long as we are focused on stigmatizing pedophiles, we will fail to sufficiently recognize and condemn the actions which harm children."

In an April 4, 2021, article, Berlatsky compares the historic curtailment of women's voting rights to prohibitions now on children's ability to do certain things, claiming, "If we refuse to let young people advocate for themselves, or refuse to grant them bodily autonomy, it is not because there is something wrong with their decision-making capacity. It’s because there is something wrong with ours."

Writing for the blog LiberalCurrents in 2021, Berlatsky denounced the "tyranny of parents" and suggested ways the state can help "liberate children" from parental care.

In a July 2021 interview, he discussed one feminist's exposure to pornography at the age of eight and characterized it as a "positive experience."

Andy Ngô, senior editor at the Post Millennial, noted that in 2017, Berlatsky wrote, "Pedophiles are essentially a stigmatized group. Certain people get designated as deviants, people hate them."

"Sound of Freedom," the popularity of which Berlatsky characterized as "ominous," has demonstrated that Americans still don't mind the "stigmatization" of pedophiles. After all, the film has sold over 7 million tickets, exceeding 300% of Angel Studios' stated goal. It has a 100% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes with well over 10,000 verified ratings.

Sound of Freedom | Theatrical Trailer for July 4 | Angel Studiosyoutu.be

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Trump to host screening of anti-child-trafficking film 'Sound of Freedom' at his resort



Former President Donald Trump plans to host a screening of the massively successful anti-child-trafficking film "Sound of Freedom" at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, next week.

The film's producer, Eduardo Verástegui, will join Trump at the July 19 screening along with star Jim Caviezel and Tim Ballard, the former Department of Homeland Security agent whose dogged pursuit of child traffickers is the subject of the film.

Trump campaign adviser Jason Miller announced the screening on Steve Bannon's show "War Room," noting that "evangelical allies," Bedminster members, and people from all around the country will be joining the former president to watch the film.

Trump's team emphasized in a corresponding statement that the former president takes the matters raised in the film deadly seriously, having "signed an executive order directing federal law enforcement to prioritize demolishing the criminal organizations behind forced labor, sex trafficking, and child exploitation[,] ... signed nine pieces of bipartisan legislation to combat human trafficking, both domestically and internationally, approved the largest DOJ grant package in history to combat human trafficking, and doubled the amount of DOJ funding to combat human trafficking."

Miller highlighted how both Verástegui and Ballard had previously crossed paths with the former president.

Verástegui was appointed a member of Trump's Advisory Commission on Hispanic Prosperity. Ballard was a member of the Trump administration's Public-Private Partnership Advisory Council to End Human Trafficking and met with the president to discuss the critical importance of a border wall in curbing child trafficking.

— (@)

According to Jeffrey Harmon, co-founder of Angel Studios — the company responsible for distributing the film, which has reportedly grossed nearly $54 million and has an 8.4/10 rating on IMDB — "'Sound of Freedom’ is a riveting film that shares the story of one man’s heroic efforts to rescue children from human trafficking. ...Through this powerful cinematic experience, we aim to amplify the growing movement to expose this heinous violation of human rights and inspire people to take action, helping their communities put an end to this modern-day slavery once and for all."

The film specifically tells the story of Ballard's transition from DHS agent to a private actor, saving missing children in Honduras and building his independent team.

Ballard founded Operation Underground Railroad in 2013. His outfit has conducted numerous sting operations at home and abroad and provided law enforcement agencies with resources to combat sex trafficking, which is a $150 billion industry worldwide. The group reportedly had a hand in the arrests of over 4,000 predators and the rescues of over 6,000 survivors and played a supporting role in over 1,000 operations.

TheBlaze previously reported that Ballard has been a fierce critic of Trump's 2024 opponent, President Joe Biden, noting that he and his border policies have helped to feed an "economy of pedophilia."

After all, an estimated 85,000 children who have entered into the nation illegally have reportedly gone missing in recent years, and "$14 million a day are landing in the pocket of smugglers and traffickers, thanks to the Biden-Harris border policy," according to Ballard.

While Trump was in office, only a fraction of the number of unaccompanied minors coming in now were crossing the border. Whereas in 2020, 33,239 unaccompanied minors entered the U.S. illegally, in 2022, under Biden, that number ballooned to well over 150,000. So far this fiscal year, over 91,000 minors have already entered the country.

Many of these children end up working illegally in brutal conditions, in sex slavery, or executing the will of other types of criminal sponsors.

Despite the seriousness of the problem and the film's attempt to raise awareness, the liberal media remains antipathetic to the project.

Rolling Stone, for instance, seized upon the news of the screening to once more smear Jim Caviezel as a "conspiracy theorist" and downplay the heroic work Ballard has done in the way of fighting human trafficking.

The leftist publication, which has paid out millions in the past for false reporting and was recently caught smearing Michael Knowles of the Daily Wire and peddling false claims about a Florida school, also advanced the suggestion that the film "creates harm."

In its coverage, CNBC referred to the film as "divisive," regurgitated the claim that Caviezel has promoted "right-wing QAnon conspiracy theories," and insinuated the story told in the film may not be true.

NBC News similarly characterized the film as "controversial," again platforming the suggestion that "the movie overstates the realities of child trafficking."

The Trump team stated, "Liberal media outlets like the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, and The Hollywood Reporter have refused to review the film, while publications like Rolling Stone, Washington Post, CNN, and The Guardian have trashed the film and mocked the millions of movie-goers who purchased tickets to screenings."

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By bashing 'Sound of Freedom,' the media is 'hurting REAL children who want their stories told'



The new box office hit “Sound of Freedom” stars Jim Caviezel and shines a light on the horrors of the global trafficking industry.

However, rather than applaud the film for shining a light on the horrid practice, the media has taken the opportunity to smear it as a part of a QAnon conspiracy theory.

Tim Ballard, whose story the film is based on, joins Allie Beth Stuckey to set the record straight.

Ballard is anti-sex-trafficking advocate and former special agent for the Department of Homeland Security. He has conducted multiple rescues of children who have been kidnapped and sold.

While Ballard was working cases in Colombia and Haiti in 2012, he made the tough decision to continue working on these cases rather than keep his job with the U.S. government.

These cases are what “Sound of Freedom” is based on, and according to Ballard, ended up being “the largest rescue operations” that we know of in Columbia.

In the film, Ballard says “all the good guys are real, all the bad guys are real, all the kids are real.”

“These are all true stories, with liberties taken, of course — but what happens to these kids is actually what happened to them — or worse, frankly.”

Stuckey asks Ballard what he thinks of all the media backlash from left-leaning outlets.

“It’s the most bizarre reaction by the left,” Ballard says, “this was never supposed to be political. These are real children, and they’re having a hard time.”

Ballard notes that while the media continues calling it “QAnon,” it never actually goes into what parts are “QAnon.”

“Where’s the part where Tom Hanks and Hillary Clinton are drinking the blood of babies or there’s underground cities?” he jokes.

Despite the never-ending backlash, Ballard stands behind his message for the critics.

“You are not hurting me or Jim Caviezel, if that’s what you think you’re doing. By disparaging this film you are hurting real children who want their stories told,” Ballard says, continuing, “you’re further abusing them by pretending that their story is somehow a conspiracy theory.”

“It’s grotesque,” he adds.


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