The Covenant · Part 4 of 5
Interview
Youth interviews: age 12 and up — annually, before temple visits, before missions — KUER, June 2018 Common questions prior to 2018: masturbation, pornography, sexual conduct — Salt Lake Tribune, Dec. 2017; KUER June 2018 Bishops are untrained lay volunteers — no clinical, therapeutic, or child protection training required Pre-2018: no adult required in room or adjacent — First Presidency policy update March 26, 2018 Sam Young, founder Protect LDS Children: 4 of his 6 daughters were questioned with sexually explicit questions as children — protecteverychild.com Petition gathered over 22,000 signatures — Young delivered 3,000 personal accounts to church HQ — Deseret News, 2018 Sam Young excommunicated September 2018 for opposing the practice — First Presidency upheld excommunication on appeal Church response to excommunication: “The issue is not that you have concerns… it is your persistent, aggressive effort to persuade others” — Disciplinary council letter, 2018 Youth interviews: age 12 and up — annually, before temple visits, before missions — KUER, June 2018 Common questions prior to 2018: masturbation, pornography, sexual conduct — Salt Lake Tribune, Dec. 2017; KUER June 2018 Bishops are untrained lay volunteers — no clinical, therapeutic, or child protection training required Pre-2018: no adult required in room or adjacent — First Presidency policy update March 26, 2018 Sam Young, founder Protect LDS Children: 4 of his 6 daughters were questioned with sexually explicit questions as children — protecteverychild.com Petition gathered over 22,000 signatures — Young delivered 3,000 personal accounts to church HQ — Deseret News, 2018 Sam Young excommunicated September 2018 for opposing the practice — First Presidency upheld excommunication on appeal Church response to excommunication: “The issue is not that you have concerns… it is your persistent, aggressive effort to persuade others” — Disciplinary council letter, 2018
The Covenant · Part 4 of 5 · Primary Record Only
Salt Lake Tribune Investigation · Protect LDS Children Campaign · First Presidency Policy Letters · Excommunication Record

The Interview Room:
A Closed Door.
A Child. An Untrained Adult.

Every year, starting at age twelve, members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints are called alone into their bishop’s office. The bishop is a volunteer with no clinical training. The door is closed. The questions can concern masturbation, pornography, and sexual conduct. More than 22,000 people signed a petition demanding it stop. The man who organized the petition was excommunicated.

By R. Connell · Red String Investigation Age 12 minimum interview age 22,000+ petition signatures 800+ marched to HQ; 3,000 accounts delivered

The Room

The bishop’s office is a small room. In most LDS meetinghouses it contains a desk, a chair for the bishop, and one or two chairs for whoever he has called in. The door closes. The meeting begins. No recording is made. No transcript is kept. No observer is present — or was not, before 2018.

This is where the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints conducts what it calls “worthiness interviews.” Every member who wishes to enter a temple, serve a mission, receive a church responsibility, or be deemed in full standing with the faith must periodically submit to one. For youth, according to reporting by KUER, these interviews take place at minimum annually beginning at age twelve, as well as before specific milestones.

The bishop is a lay leader. He is not a trained therapist, a licensed counselor, or a certified child welfare professional. He is a volunteer, typically a full-time member of the working population in his congregation, appointed to the role by his stake president. He receives what the church calls training — a handbook, guidance from the First Presidency, consultation with supervisors. He does not receive training in child development, psychological safety, or the clinical literature on the effects of sexually explicit questioning on minors. He is asked to assess, among other things, the sexual conduct and practices of the young people who sit across from him.

Floor Plan — Bishop’s Interview Office
Annotated — pre-2018 standard configuration
DOOR DESK B Y 1 2 3 4 NO WINDOW ~100 sq ft
1
Bishop’s chair. Occupied by lay volunteer. No clinical training required. No child welfare certification. No mandatory reporting training prior to interview.Source: Salt Lake Tribune, Dec. 2017; Wheat & Tares analysis of Handbook
2
Youth’s chair. Age 12 minimum. Annual interview for standing; additional interviews before temple visits and missions. No parent present in room pre-2018 unless specifically requested — which most youth did not know they could request.Source: KUER June 2018; Deseret News March 2018
3
Door. Closed. No recording device. No observer. Handbook 1 (pre-2018) did not require an adult in the adjacent room. No supervision of what is asked or how it is framed.Source: First Presidency policy update, March 26, 2018
4
Note. LDS Scouting two-deep rule (no one-on-one contact between adults and youth) was in force for Boy Scout activities. The same two-deep logic was not applied to bishop interviews until 2018.Source: Wheat & Tares, Jan. 2018; BSA youth protection guidelines
12Minimum age for worthiness interviews. Required before temples, missions, responsibilities.
0Clinical child-protection certifications required before a bishop conducts youth interviews.
800+People who marched to LDS headquarters in Salt Lake City, 2018, demanding an end to the practice.

What Gets Asked

The church’s official Handbook of Instructions did not, before 2018, explicitly instruct bishops to ask about masturbation. The word does not appear in the Handbook, according to reporting by the Salt Lake Tribune in December 2017. But the omission had an effect: many bishops interpreted “the law of chastity” to encompass masturbation, and read the absence of a prohibition as tacit permission to go as deep as they deemed spiritually necessary. Some did not. Others routinely asked both boys and girls about it in every interview.

The Salt Lake Tribune documented the pattern in a December 2017 investigation: “Some bishops pose pointed questions about moral cleanliness in these conversations, perhaps quizzing about masturbation, heavy petting or fornication, while others keep their queries more general.” The investigation quoted a therapist, Julie de Azevedo Hanks, directly: youth talking about details of their sexual experience with bishops is “intrusive, inappropriate and sends a mixed message regarding boundaries around sexual conversation with adult men. In no other situation would a parent allow or encourage their minor child to have sexual conversations with an adult.”

The KUER reporting in June 2018 was specific: “questions about sex, masturbation and pornography are common.” These were standard topics in worthiness interviews for youth, driven not by an explicit mandate but by a culture in which sexually explicit questions were understood as part of a bishop’s pastoral role. A bishop who shared in a memoir that the first time he ever heard the word “masturbation” was at age twelve in his bishop’s office is describing a common experience, documented by hundreds of accounts gathered by advocates.

When a youth was confessing what the church classified as a “serious sin,” the questioning could go further still. A 2018 analysis of informal bishop guidance noted that verbal instructions to bishops at leadership conferences often went beyond written policy: if a youth confessed sexual sin, bishops were told they could ask questions “sufficient to understand the extent of the behavior.” The extent to which those questions probed specific physical acts was left to the bishop’s individual judgment.

“The first time I heard the word ‘masturbation,’ I was 12 years old and sitting in my bishop’s office. I believe we were discussing a limited use recommend for an upcoming temple trip.”

Anonymous account published by By Common Consent — Mormon blog, September 2018

Sam Young: The Bishop Who Said Stop

Sam Young was a bishop. He served in a Houston congregation in the early 1990s. Years later, his daughter told him she had been subjected to sexually explicit questioning by a bishop from age twelve to seventeen, in one-on-one interviews, behind closed doors. He had raised her in the church. He had not known it was happening. Then he found out that four of his six daughters had been through the same thing.

In 2017, Young founded Protect LDS Children and began a campaign with a ten-word demand: “No one-on-one interviews. No sexually explicit questions, ever.”

The campaign gathered more than 22,000 petition signatures. In March 2018, Young organized a march of 800 to 1,000 people to church headquarters in downtown Salt Lake City, where he delivered books containing 3,000 personal accounts from members who described what had been asked of them as children — or what they had asked of others. The church received the materials. It declined to meet publicly with Young or acknowledge the specific accounts.

3,000 Personal accounts delivered to LDS Church headquarters March 2018 — Protect LDS Children march, Salt Lake City — Source: Deseret News; Salt Lake Tribune

In July 2018, Young began a hunger strike. It lasted 23 days. He continued to hold news conferences and publish accounts from survivors on the Protect LDS Children website. More than 800 people shared their stories of trauma, pain, abuse, or discomfort in those interviews. The church made two significant policy updates in 2018: in March, it announced youth could request that a parent or adult be in an adjoining room during interviews; in June, it released a standardized set of questions for youth interviews. Young acknowledged the changes. He described them as insufficient. His specific demand — no sexually explicit questions, no one-on-one interviews — was not adopted.

What Changed in 2018 — and What Didn’t

The March 2018 First Presidency letter updated Handbook 1. The June 2018 letter updated it again. Together they represented the most significant policy revision to youth interview practices in the church’s modern history. They also documented, by the necessity of addressing them, what the prior standard had been.

■ Pre-2018 Standard
No parent or adult required in adjoining room
No standardized list of permitted questions
No explicit guidance limiting depth of sexual inquiry
Masturbation not mentioned in Handbook; tacit permission to ask
No mandatory notification to youth that they could bring an adult
Interviews for youth as young as 11 possible without parents present
■ Post-2018 Policy (March + June updates)
Adult may be requested in adjoining room; another adult may participate if interviewee desires
Standardized question list published for youth temple recommend interviews
Leaders instructed to ensure discussions “do not encourage curiosity or experimentation”
“Leaders should avoid all circumstances that could be misunderstood”
Still does not ban one-on-one interviews — adult presence is an option, not a requirement
Still does not ban sexually explicit questions categorically — guidance is instructional, not prohibitive

The two remaining “no” items in the post-2018 column represent the core of what Young had asked for and did not receive. The adult presence provision is opt-in: it requires the youth to ask. Critics noted that the most marginalized children — those who had absorbed the church’s culture of deference to priesthood authority, those from families where questioning the bishop was understood as inappropriate — would be the least likely to exercise the new option. The policy depended on knowledge and confidence that the children most vulnerable to harm were least likely to have.

One critic quoted in the Salt Lake Tribune called the change “cosmetic at best,” arguing it left “all the wiggle room in the world for the bishop never to offer it.” The question of what bishops were told in training sessions — verbally, beyond the written policy — remained closed to outside review.

The Excommunication

In August 2018, Young received a letter informing him that a formal disciplinary council had been convened. The disciplinary council met on September 9 in Sugar Land, Texas. A week later, in a news conference streamed online, Young read the council’s decision aloud in front of a crowd of supporters gathered at the Salt Lake Temple.

■ Disciplinary Record — Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Subject
Sam Young, former bishop, Houston Texas South Stake
Council date
September 9, 2018 — Sugar Land, Texas
Decision
Excommunicated. “Conduct contrary to the laws and order of the church.”
Stated reason
“Your persistent, aggressive effort to persuade others to your point of view by repeatedly and deliberately attacking and publicly opposing the Church and its leaders.”
Explicit denial
“This action was not taken because of your opinion or position in protecting children.”
Appeal
Submitted to First Presidency, highest governing body of the church.
Appeal outcome
Denied. First Presidency “affirmed the decision.” November 2018.
Church statement
“Church leaders at every level have met with him to express love, to listen and to counsel with him.” (July 2018 statement, prior to council.)
Sources
Newsweek, Sept. 17, 2018; KSL.com; Deseret News; KUER, Nov. 13, 2018; Young’s published blog post confirming First Presidency decision

The letter Young read publicly stated that the excommunication was not about his position on child protection. Young’s response, to the crowd and on record: “They are wrong about that.” He described the outcome as the institution doing what institutions do: “The whistleblower has been kicked out and labeled with the brand of apostasy. I’ll wear that as a proud label.”

The excommunication completed a cycle that all three previous parts of this series have documented. In Part 1: a bishop called the helpline and was told not to report; the church routed disclosure through its own attorneys. In Part 2: the financial structure that funded settlements was hidden from federal regulators for 22 years. In Part 3: the attorney who told the bishop not to report also held a legislative seat and fought to keep the law that made his advice viable. In Part 4: a former bishop who asked publicly for a change to practices that put children alone in a room with untrained adults asking sexual questions was removed from the church. The mechanism in each case is the same — not suppression of the specific act, but suppression of the conditions that would require accountability for it.

“I believe you have people who have been traumatized on a wide scale, spiritually traumatized. People are submitting themselves to this practice, and they can’t speak up about it because there is so much on the line.”

Langston, former LDS member, candidate for Lutheran ordination — CNN, September 2018

The Same Architecture, a Different Room

The bishop’s interview is the point in the institutional architecture where the abstract becomes personal. The helpline, the financial structures, the legislative lobbying — those operate at a remove. The interview room is where a child sits across from an adult, alone, and answers questions about their sexual conduct as a condition of belonging to everything their family and community holds sacred. Temple. Mission. Marriage. Faith itself.

The power differential is not incidental. It is structural. A child who says “no” to a bishop’s question, or who requests that a parent be present, is — in the institutional logic of the church — exercising distrust of a priesthood leader. The culture that makes tithing mandatory for temple access is the same culture that makes the bishop’s interview feel obligatory. The opt-in adult presence provision works only for children who understand they have the right to opt in. In a structure that defines worthiness, and where the bishop is the designated arbiter of worthiness, the existence of that option does not make the interview consensual in any meaningful sense.

Part 5 of this series completes the picture: when the ward is your entire world — your social network, your family connections, your understanding of your own eternal standing — speaking out carries costs that no NDA ever had to put in writing.

◆ What the Public Record Shows

The church’s own policy updates of 2018 confirm, by their existence, what the prior standard was: children as young as twelve were interviewed alone, behind closed doors, by untrained lay volunteers, on matters including masturbation and pornography, with no standardized question list, no required adult presence, and no mandatory notification that an adult could be present. The man who publicly asked for this to end was excommunicated. The First Presidency upheld that decision on appeal.

📁 Red String Series
The Covenant
Five investigations into the institutional architecture of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
1
Child abuse disclosures routed through the church’s own law firm — not police.
✓ Published
2
$100B+ in assets, 22 years of SEC violations, and settlements paid from tithing.
✓ Published
3
The helpline attorney was a sitting legislator. He fought to keep the law that made his advice legal.
✓ Published
4
The Interview Room
Closed door. Untrained adult. Child, age 12. Sexually explicit questions. The man who asked for it to stop was excommunicated.
● You Are Here
5
🔒 The Exit
When your ward is your entire world — family, employment, community — speaking out carries a cost the NDA never had to enforce.
Coming March 9 · 9am ET
Primary Sources
[1]
Salt Lake Tribune, December 12–15, 2017. “All the buzz about sexual harassment has some Mormons wondering if bishops’ interviews go too far.” Documents common questions, therapist analysis, lack of Handbook guidance on masturbation. Quote from Julie de Azevedo Hanks, licensed therapist.
[2]
KUER, June 20, 2018. “Mormon Leaders Release New Guidelines For Youth Interviews.” Confirms annual interviews from age 12, questions on sex/masturbation/pornography as common. Documents standardized question list release.
[3]
Deseret News, March 27, 2018. “Updated LDS policy allows another adult to sit in on leaders’ interviews.” Full text of First Presidency policy change. Documents what previous policy was by contrast.
[4]
Deseret News, June 20, 2018. Second Handbook update. Standardized question list. Guidance against encouraging curiosity or experimentation. Youth under 11 policy clarified.
[5]
Salt Lake Tribune, March 28, 2018. Policy change analysis. Quotes critic calling changes “cosmetic at best.” Documents Young’s march and petition. BSA two-deep contrast noted.
[6]
Protect LDS Children / protecteverychild.com. Sam Young’s direct account of discovering 4 of his 6 daughters were questioned with sexually explicit questions as children. Organization history and campaign actions 2017–2018.
[7]
Newsweek, August 30 and September 17, 2018. Young facing excommunication; confirmed excommunicated. Disciplinary letter text published. Church spokesman statement on personal nature of disciplinary process.
[8]
CNN, September 24, 2018. “Mormon ex-bishop excommunicated for criticizing church’s practice of sexually explicit youth interviews.” Langston quote on spiritual trauma. Young’s excommunication letter text.
[9]
KSL.com; KUER, November 13, 2018. First Presidency appeal denial confirmed. Young blog post on receiving denial. Church statement: decision “consistent with the process for an appeal to the First Presidency.”
[10]
Deseret News, September 16, 2018. Young excommunication announcement. Disciplinary council letter text. Sugar Land, Texas council date confirmed. “The whistleblower has been kicked out” — Young.
[11]
Wheat & Tares / By Common Consent, 2018. Analysis of verbal vs. written bishop guidance; BSA two-deep contrast; anonymous account of first hearing “masturbation” at age 12 in bishop’s office.
METHODOLOGY & LEGAL NOTE
This investigation is based exclusively on primary sources cited within the article: court records, government documents, official filings, peer-reviewed research, and named expert testimony. Factual claims reflect what those cited sources establish. Where findings are disputed or unresolved, those disputes are noted. Characterizations represent the documented record, not conclusions beyond it. Red String is an independent investigative publication. Corrections: [email protected]  ·  Editorial Standards