Disgraced megachurch founder Robert Morris walks free after just six months for sexually abusing a child

 April 1, 2026

Robert Preston Morris, the 64-year-old founder of one of the largest megachurches in Texas, walked out of Osage County Jail just after midnight on Tuesday. He had served six months. His crime: a four-year pattern of lewd and indecent acts against a 12-year-old girl.

Morris pleaded guilty to five counts of lewd or indecent acts with a child and received a 10-year suspended sentence, with only the first six months served behind bars, the Post reported. He must now register as a sex offender, will be supervised by Texas authorities, and was ordered to pay the costs of his incarceration, including medical expenses and restitution.

Six months. Five counts. A child.

The Crime and the Decades of Silence

According to Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond, whose office prosecuted the case, the abuse began in 1982, when Morris was a traveling evangelist, and Cindy Clemishire was just 12 years old. The abuse continued in a four-year pattern. Clemishire, now in her 50s, has carried the weight of what happened to her for more than four decades.

Morris, meanwhile, built an empire. He founded Gateway Church in 2000 and grew it into a sprawling megachurch operation before resigning as its senior pastor in June 2024, after the allegations became public. He was indicted last year by an Oklahoma grand jury.

When Clemishire spoke about the case before Morris's sentencing, her words were plain. "Justice has finally been served, and the man who manipulated, groomed and abused me as a 12-year-old innocent girl is finally going to be behind bars," she said.

She believed bars meant something. What the system delivered was six months.

An Apology That Arrived on Schedule

On Tuesday, one of Morris's attorneys, Bill Mateja, released a statement in which Morris offered his contrition. Morris said:

"What I did to Cindy decades ago was wrong. There is no other word for it, and there is no excuse for it. I am deeply sorry."

He also pointed to a private reconciliation that he said took place years ago:

"Many years ago, I sought their forgiveness privately, and as Cindy's father recently noted, he extended that grace to me — a grace I did not deserve and have never taken for granted."

Grace is real. Forgiveness is a cornerstone of the Christian faith. But grace extended by a victim's family does not substitute for justice administered by a court. And six months in a county jail for the sustained sexual abuse of a child is not justice by any recognizable standard.

There is a difference between a sinner who repents and a predator who evades consequences for decades, builds a career on moral authority, and then offers remorse only after a grand jury leaves him no other option. The Christian tradition that Morris spent his career invoking draws that distinction clearly. Scripture calls for repentance, yes. It also calls for accountability.

The People Who Looked Away

Jeff Leach, the Dallas-based attorney representing Clemishire, made clear that his client's pursuit of accountability is far from over. He noted that Morris still faces nearly ten years of probation and a lifetime on the sex offender registry. But Leach also pointed somewhere else:

"She rightfully seeks full accountability not only for Robert and the crimes he committed against her as a young child, but also for the other individuals who harbored him, covered for him, lied for him and even in some cases attacked Cindy on his behalf."

That sentence should stop every reader cold. Harbored. Covered. Lied. Attacked the victim. Leach is describing a network of enablers, people who chose the institution over the child and then chose silence over truth for decades.

This is a pattern that conservatives, particularly those who care about protecting children and holding institutions to account, should refuse to tolerate, regardless of which institution is involved. The same instinct that rightly drives outrage at public school systems shielding abusive teachers, at bureaucracies burying complaints, at Hollywood elites protecting their own, must apply with equal force when the institution wears a cross on the building.

Clemishire plans to continue seeking justice through civil courts. Good.

What Real Accountability Looks Like

Conservatives rightly argue that a functioning society depends on the rule of law, on the principle that crimes carry consequences proportional to their severity. The sexual abuse of a child over a period of years is among the gravest offenses a person can commit. When the perpetrator is someone who held spiritual authority, someone trusted by families to guide their children, the betrayal compounds the crime.

A suspended sentence with six months served does not communicate that gravity. It communicates that status, connections, and the passage of time can soften what should never be softened.

Morris has been politically active and formerly served on President Trump's evangelical advisory board. None of that history changes what he did to a 12-year-old girl in 1982, and none of it should shield him from the full weight of public judgment now.

The church Morris built will survive, or it won't. That is between its congregation and God. But the broader evangelical movement faces a straightforward test: will it treat child sexual abuse with the seriousness it demands, even when the abuser built something large and influential? Or will it reach for "grace" as a euphemism for looking away?

Cindy Clemishire waited more than 40 years. The system gave her six months of someone else's discomfort.

She deserved better. Any child does.

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