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This video is about a year old but has just come to my attention so I am posting it with the new story but it seems this man is a cult leader and bragged on social media about having sex with his woman in front of his kids as well as being naked in front of them. He goes on to disturbingly detail how he let his son touch his penis.
He apparently was arrested and the story below are the details:
DEKALB COUNTY, Ga. - Eligio Bishop, the leader of the suspected cult Carbon Nation, made his first appearance before a DeKalb County judge on Friday facing charges of rape and false imprisonment.
"Prohibition on sexually explicit transmission, three counts of that, one count of rape and one count of false imprisonment," DeKalb County Magistrate Judge Abbi Taylor told Bishop during his first appearance. "Because of those charges, I am not able to set a bond in your case."
Bishop, who has been in the DeKalb County jail since late Wednesday evening, made his first appearance by Zoom on Friday.
"Outstanding" was the only words Bishop spoke during the virtual court hearing.
A preliminary hearing in the case has not yet been scheduled.
Bishop faces charges of rape, false imprisonment, and sending sexual explicit messages. Those charges were levied by a former member of Carbon Nation.
The woman recently left the group and told police how Bishop mistreated women.
"We teach sexual education and we believe in nudity. And so that’s one of the charges that’s trying to be brought against my chief that’s for revenge porn, but the female that was here, the woman that was here, she gave consent to actually release it for sexual education, it’s not just like porn, it’s for educational purposes," said Daylin Armstead, current Carbon Nation member..
A former member of Carbon Nation said the group started out as a Black counterculture group. The woman, who was with the group for a year, said it began with a shared common goal, but turned into something else entirely.
"It's a cult. It's definitely a cult," said Erikka Carroll.
Carroll said she joined the group around 2016 and was a positive experience at first.
"Initially, it was a great experience. It was a community of people all with the same goal but when that goal started to change, that's when it became toxic," said Carroll.