Lawyer: Hillsong founder to deny concealing abuse in court

His lawyer said that Houston would be pleading not guilty to the charge of concealing an indictable offense of another person, his late preacher father.

Founder of the Sydney-based global Hillsong Church, Brian Houston, leaves the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse hearings in Sydney, Oct. 7, 2014. Houston will plead not guilty to a charge that he illegally concealed his father's alleged child abuse his lawyer told a court on Tuesday, Oct. 5, 2021. (Mick Tsikas/AAP Image via AP)

SYDNEY (AP) — Hillsong Church founder Brian Houston will plead not guilty to illegally concealing alleged child abuse by his father, his lawyer told a court on Tuesday.

Houston did not appear at Sydney’s Downing Center Local Court when his charge was mentioned before a registrar for the first time. His lawyer told the court Houston would be pleading not guilty to the charge of concealing a serious indictable offense of another person, his late preacher father Frank Houston.

The case will next be before the court on Nov. 23.


Police will allege that Frank Houston indecently assaulted a young male in 1970.

Court documents allege that Brian Houston believed his father had committed the crime. Police will allege that the younger Houston failed to disclose information to police that could help secure the prosecution of his father.

Since being charged, Houston has stepped down from the board of Hillsong, the church he founded with wife Bobbie in Sydney in 1983. Now a global empire, the church says 150,000 people in 30 countries attend its services and 50 million people sing its songs each week.

Houston, 64, was in the United States in August when detectives served his Sydney lawyers with a notice for him to appear in court.

He said in a statement at the time he welcomed the “opportunity to set the record straight.”

Houston returned to Sydney last month and was released from 14 days’ hotel quarantine last week.

An Australian government inquiry into institutional responses to allegations of child sex abuse found in 2015 that Houston did not tell police that his father was a child sex abuser.

The inquiry found that Houston became aware of allegations against his father in 1999 and allowed him to retire quietly rather report him to police. His father confessed to the abuse before he died in 2004 at age 82.


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