TEXARKANA, Ark. — Tony Alamo, a one-time street preacher who built a multimillion-dollar ministry and became an outfitter of the stars, was convicted Friday of taking girls as young as 9 across state lines for sex.
Alamo stood silently as the verdict was read, a contrast to his occasional mutterings during testimony. His five victims sat looking forward in the gallery. One, a woman he “married” at age 8, wiped away a tear.
“I’m just another one of the prophets that went to jail for the Gospel,” Alamo called to reporters afterward as he was escorted to a waiting U.S. marshal’s vehicle.
The jury of nine men and three women took about 11 hours to consider the charges against Alamo. The 10-count federal indictment accused him of taking his underage “wives” across state lines as early as 1994.
Jury foreman Frank Oller of Texarkana, Ark., said jurors deliberated more than a day only to ensure they considered everything. The testimony convinced them the 74-year-old evangelist kept the girls as sexual partners, not office workers as his attorneys claimed.
“That was the evidence. That was proven,” Oller said. “We came up with a full decision that we are quite satisfied with.”
Defense attorney Don Ervin called the evidence against Alamo “insufficient” and said the preacher would appeal. He also said Alamo’s criminal history — he served four years in prison on tax charges in the 1990s — “will hurt him” at sentencing in six to eight weeks.
Prosecutors said Alamo could face a total of 175 years in prison for violating the nearly century-old Mann Act, a morality law once aimed at stopping women from being sold into prostitution.



