TD Jakes: Defamation Suit Filed After Health Incident Because ‘Enough Is Enough!’

T.D. Jakes
Bishop T.D. Jakes appears to The Potter’s House congregation via video, Dec. 1, 2024. (Video screen grab)

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(RNS) — Dallas megachurch pastor Bishop T.D. Jakes continued to deny claims by two other ministers who have accused him of sexual misconduct, describing the accusers in a newly filed affidavit as “bullies” and himself as the victim of a scheme to “destroy” him.

“In all my years, I have never initiated a lawsuit against anyone,” Jakes said in the eight-page affidavit that was part of a 562-page package of legal documents filed in a Pennsylvania federal court on Friday (Feb. 14). “We filed this lawsuit against individuals who were supposed to be men of God but are clearly not.” Two men, the brothers Duane and Richard Youngblood, allege that Jakes made sexual advances decades ago, when he was pastor of a church in West Virginia.

Jakes’ legal team filed a defamation suit against Duane Youngblood in November, a day after Jakes suffered an unspecified medical incident in front of his congregation attending a Sunday service at The Potter’s House in Dallas.

Jakes claimed the incident, for which he was briefly hospitalized, along with other family health situations, spurred him to take the legal action.

“All of this was happening while I found myself helping my wife recover from knee replacement surgery and while helping my brother navigate kidney failure,” he wrote in the statement filed Friday. “This unwarranted stress brought me to a place of having a health crisis on stage in front of my entire congregation. As a guy who’d had no previous health challenges, this near-death experience was a turning point for me. Enough is enough!”

Friday’s filings came in response to a January motion to dismiss the defamation suit by Duane Youngblood, a Pennsylvania man who made his allegations against Jakes in two 2024 interviews on the “Larry Reid Live” YouTube talk show.

In his affidavit, Duane Youngblood recalled a long conversation he had with Jakes as a teenager at the private home where the elder minister was staying. “As I prepared to leave, he pulled me close and tried to kiss me,” according to the affidavit. Youngblood said Jakes called him the next morning and “told me he wanted me to be the only person he had a sexual relationship with when he came to town.”

The motion to dismiss Jakes’ suit included a sworn affidavit from Youngblood’s older brother, the Rev. Richard Edwin Youngblood, who testified that he had heard Duane Youngblood describe the alleged misconduct by Jakes. But Richard Youngblood also claimed that Jakes climbed into bed with him on a church business trip.

Richard Youngblood said he first met Jakes around the spring of 1986 and worked as an assistant and praise and worship leader in Jakes’ church before “things started to become weird,” including Jakes discussing oral sex. Later, he said, Jakes rented a hotel room one night for them with two beds.

“That night, while I was laying in my bed, I felt Elder Jakes climb into my bed. He pressed his body against mine and asked, ‘Youngblood, do you feel that?’” reads the statement, signed in December 2024. “He was referencing his erection that he was pressing against my back side.”

Jakes and his legal team responded to the allegations by noting that Duane Youngblood has felony convictions for sexual assault and corruption of minors and said Richard Youngblood’s “story surfaced only after I declined to hire him due to his lack of qualifications.” Jakes said the request from Richard Youngblood occurred about 10 years ago.

In a second affidavit in Friday’s filings, Jakes’ son Jermaine spoke in support of his father. In Duane Youngblood’s filings, the younger Jakes was accused of sending the accuser a “message perceived as carrying a direct threat of harm.”

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AdelleMBanks@churchleaders.com'
Adelle M Bankshttp://religionnews.com
Adelle M. Banks, production editor and a national reporter, joined RNS in 1995. An award-winning journalist, she previously was the religion reporter at the Orlando Sentinel and a reporter at The Providence Journal and newspapers in the upstate New York communities of Syracuse and Binghamton.

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