Severed leg leads US police to cult 'chief apostle'

Rudy Hannon and Sorek Minery allegedly dismembered Paul Sweetman in 2004, police say. Almost 14 years later, the police found a lead. Picture: Supplied

Rudy Hannon and Sorek Minery allegedly dismembered Paul Sweetman in 2004, police say. Almost 14 years later, the police found a lead. Picture: Supplied

Published Aug 2, 2018

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Connecticut - The historic Shuttle Meadow Country Club in Kensington, Connecticut, sprawls over nearly 400 acres of land. Surrounded by dense forests and rolling hills, the club's picturesque 18-hole course is a golfer's dream.

About 14 years ago, New Britain police made a grim discovery there. Responding to a report of human remains on August 27, 2004, police arrived to find part of a leg, severed so cleanly that they could only come to one conclusion: someone had been killed.

The source of the leg would remain a mystery until 2016, according to a recently released arrest warrant. In April that year, New Britain police learned from the National Mission and Unidentified Person System that the Southington Police Department had an open missing persons case for a man named Paul Sweetman. Police also learned that the FBI was investigating a claim that Sweetman had been murdered, dismembered and his body parts buried around New Britain, the arrest warrant said.

Sweetman, who had gained local fame as the self-described "chief apostle" of a religious cult known as "The Work," was reported missing by his wife Joanne Sweetman on July 24, 2004, according to the warrant. He was 70 years old.

Using DNA from Sweetman's son, authorities confirmed that the leg was a parental match.

Connecting Sweetman to the leg was one of the first major developments in an investigation that culminated this week with the arrests of 72-year-old Rudy Hannon and 42-year-old Sorek Minery. The men face charges of murder and felony murder, according to court records.

Hannon and Minery were also members of The Work, which was based in central Connecticut. In its heyday, the cult's following was several hundred people strong and was led by Julius Schacknow, who believed he was Jesus Christ reincarnated. Plagued by run-ins with the law and claims from former members of sexual and financial exploitation, the group began dismantling in the early 1990s, the Hartford Courant reported at the time. Schacknow died in 1996.

Police say the men allegedly murdered Sweetman based on the wishes of Joanne Sweetman, also an influential member of the cult who was described by its members as "the holy spirit." Joanne Sweetman died in 2011, the Hartford Courant reported.

The mystery surrounding Sweetman's disappearance began unravelling about 12 years ago. According to the warrant, Hannon was interviewed in February 2006 by the FBI under a proffer agreement, meaning he was cooperating. During the interview, Hannon accused Minery of killing Sweetman.

Hannon told the FBI that he took Sweetman to Minery's construction workshop, where he then waited in his car. He said he thought Minery only planned to "work [Sweetman] over," not kill him. Hannon claimed Minery beat Sweetman to death, adding that he saw Sweetman lying on the ground with "a large amount of blood" on his face and shirt, the warrant said.

Hannon said he did help Minery put Sweetman's body into a freezer and told the FBI where to find the body parts. Sweetman's torso, he said, could be found at a residence owned by Minery underneath a shed encased in cement.

The warrant does not explain why this information was not given to New Britain police.

In October 2016, local authorities went to the address Sweetman gave the FBI. Behind the white clapboard house on a tree-lined street, they unearthed the remains of a headless human torso wrapped in three layers of garbage bags and buried under a large slab of concrete. A DNA test confirmed that it was Sweetman. Also found with the body was a gold watch and two gold rings. One of the rings had "Joanne" inscribed on it, police said.

Two days later, Minery was brought in.

While he allegedly told police he did dismember Sweetman and dispose of the body parts, he pointed the finger at Hannon for the killing.

According to Minery, in the months leading up to the murder, Hannon tried to convince him that Sweetman "needed to be killed because he was hurting his wife" and that "God would have wanted them to kill Sweetman," the warrant said.

Minery said because he "respected Joanne Sweetman and looked up to her as a high religious figure . . . he began believing Hannon and believed Paul Sweetman needed to die," according to police.

In Minery's version of what happened, he walked in on Hannon standing over Sweetman's body, the warrant said. Then, it was Hannon who asked for help to put Sweetman into the freezer, Minery said.

After a few days had gone by, Minery told police that he returned and dismembered the body. He allegedly took Sweetman's legs and head to a wooded area near the New Britain Reservoir and buried them in a shallow grave. He hid the arms and torso at his house, the warrant said.

In addition to blaming the murder on Hannon, Minery also alleged that Hannon repeatedly threatened to tell police about the crime unless he wired him money.

In June 2017, police travelled to the Southern Desert Correctional Center in Nevada where Hannon was jailed at the time for violating parole. According to the New Briton Herald, court officials said Tuesday that Hannon has a lengthy criminal record and served time in federal prison.

After allegedly failing a polygraph exam, Hannon admitted that he was not waiting outside the workshop when Sweetman was killed, but said Minery was the one who did the beating.

According to the warrant, Hannon said "he watched Minery severely beat the victim, striking him in the head and ribs before placing him in a rear chokehold."

Then, Hannon disclosed new information: Sweetman may not have been dead after being beaten up.

He told police that while Sweetman was lying on the ground, he "suddenly sat up at the waist, vomiting a large bloody mass," before falling back down. Hannon said he saw Sweetman "hold his arms across his own body, slightly elevated above his torso."

After both men put Sweetman into the freezer, Hannon allegedly put his finger under Sweetman's nose and told police it felt warm. He then said Minery "placed a large bag or box of heavy tools across the freezer lid."

"A reasonable person would believe that this action was done to prevent the escape of Paul Sweetman from inside the freezer," the warrant said. "Furthermore, a reasonable person would believe that a person who had been violently assaulted and purposely placed into a freezer would succumb to death if they did not receive medical treatment."

According to court records, Hannon was extradited to Connecticut on Tuesday and is being held on $2 million bond. His attorney J. Patten Brown III told reporters Wednesday that his client, who is recovering from medical treatments including bypass surgery, "seems to be in as good spirits as one can be." Brown could not be reached for comment.

Minery was also arraigned Wednesday and his bond was also set at $2 million, according to court records. No attorney was listed.

Minery is scheduled to appear in New Britain Superior Court on August 7. Hannon's next court date is August 27. Neither men have filed pleas.

The Washington Post

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