LDS positions: Missionary, Scout leader,
During alleged crime: Unknown position, - LDS mission:
United States - Utah Salt Lake City South 2001-2003
Alleged:
10 or more victims, Multiple victims, Unknown number of victims,
Alleged crime scenes:
Online/computer/phone,
Criminal case(s): Ongoing, - AKA Rich Mallard
updated May 9, 2026 - request update | add info
Rich Mallard was a Mormon church member in Orem, Utah.
Mallard went on a mission for the LDS church (Utah Salt Lake City South) from 2001 to 2003.
In July 2025, Mallard was charged with 41 felony counts related to child sexual exploitation.
In August 2025, Mallard was released on bond, despite initially being held without bail.
Several individuals sent the court letters of support on Mallard’s behalf prior to his detention hearing.
One letter came from Grant Jensen, dean of the College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences at Brigham Young University (BYU), which is owned by the Mormon church.
In Jensen’s letter, he called Mallard “a deeply religious man” and “a tremendous volunteer.”
Mallard was a Boy Scout leader for a couple of years alongside Jensen, the letter said.
Another letter noted that Mallard “decided to serve an LDS mission and returned home with distinction.”
Floodlit obtained a copy of a police affidavit in Mallard’s case, thanks to your donations.
According to the probable cause statement, Mallard allegedly uploaded multiple videos containing child sexual abuse material (CSAM) to the Kik messenger app.
Describing one video, the affidavit stated that “Orem Detectives turned off the audio for the remainder of the video due to it being so egregious and unbearable to listen to.”
Mallard allegedly asked other app users for CSAM videos “many times with many different users,” according to Kik chat logs, the affidavit says.
Mallard also sent dozens of CSAM files to other Kik users, most of them depicting “prepubescent children,” according to the police statement.
Have any info on this Mormon sex abuse case? Contact us.
Sources
- Orem man released on bond after being charged with 41 felonies involving CSAM,
- A BYU dean wrote in support of a man charged with child sex abuse crimes. It’s not an isolated case.,
- Protect Utah’s Children: Demand Accountability in the Richard Mallard Case,
- Richard Kirkland Mallard,
- Orem man released on bond after being charged with 41 felonies involving CSAM,
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1. Orem man released on bond after being charged with 41 felonies involving CSAM
OREM, Utah (ABC4) — An Orem man accused of possessing and sharing child sexual abuse material (CSAM) has posted bond and is out of jail, documents say. He received multiple letters of support prior to his bail hearing.
Richard Kirkland Mallard, 44, was charged on July 21, 2025, with nine counts of aggravated sexual exploitation of a minor, a first-degree felony, and 32 counts of sexual exploitation of a minor, a second-degree felony.
Initially, Mallard was being held without bail. After a detention hearing on Aug. 10 that amended his bail order to $10,000 cash or bond and set rules for his release, Mallard posted bond on Aug. 14, 2025. While out on bond, Mallard must obey the following pretrial release conditions:
The Defendant shall have a private GPS ankle monitor installed prior to release.
The Defendant shall not leave the State of Utah without approval from the Court.
The Defendant shall not have access to the Internet by any electronic means.
The Defendant shall not possess or have access to any sexually stimulating materials.
The Defendant shall not have contact with any individuals under the age of 18, with the exception of his own children.
The Defendant shall stay away 50 feet from minors, and shall not enter private or public property where minors are known to frequent.
The Defendant shall submit to a psychosexual evaluation and comply with recommended treatment.Prior to the Aug. 10 hearing, character letters were sent to the court. Read more about those letters and Mallard’s charges below.
Letters of support
Before Mallard’s detention hearing, the court received several letters of support from individuals in the community and people who knew Mallard. These letters came from friends, neighbors, and even the dean of one of the colleges at Brigham Young University.
“He’s also a deeply religious man — we are both members of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints…” the BYU college dean wrote. “As far as I could tell he followed all the teachings of the Church, avoiding all alcohol, tobacco, coffee, tea, smoking, drugs, etc. I have no reason to believe he was not completely faithful to his wife… In our interactions he was always honest, kind, and trustworthy. I was completely shocked by his arrest.”Another letter shared with the court detailed a neighbor who often received support from Mallard. The neighbor said that he had a disability, and Mallard would frequently assist him with day-to-day tasks and help him during emergencies.
One letter from a youth group leader read that Mallard had attended and helped out during a teenage girls’ camping trip. The youth leader stated that Mallard is “a teacher and a rescuer and a helper.” She also explained that Mallard had always obeyed youth protection rules, “He has acted appropriately and has followed the policies set in place to protect the youth,” she wrote.
Other character letters from longtime friends and associates expressed shock at Mallard’s charges and reiterated that they did not believe the actions he is accused of were in line with his character.
A letter from a medical professional also cited some personal health issues that could be better treated outside of the jail, which may have contributed to Mallard being granted bond.
What is Mallard accused of?
According to documents, on May 1, 2025, detectives with the Orem Police Department received a tip from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Kik, a messenger app, reported to law enforcement that a user was allegedly in possession of CSAM, and provided an email address and phone number that were connected to the account.
Police obtained a search warrant for the email account and discovered that the user had links to graphic sexual stories and videos in his inbox and outbox. Using the email address and phone number, detectives connected the account to Mallard. Search warrants returned from Kik revealed that he had been messaging various users to obtain CSAM.
Mallard not only requested, but also distributed CSAM files, according to documents. Some videos were so graphic that detectives had to mute the files while reviewing what CSAM Mallard allegedly possessed. Documents say most of the files included prepubescent or very young children.
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2. A BYU dean wrote in support of a man charged with child sex abuse crimes. It’s not an isolated case.
The case highlights how Latter-day Saint leaders and others affiliated with the church have vouched for defendants in Utah, even as the church discourages the practice.
He had been behind bars for 23 days when he got his first chance to ask for bail last summer.
Charged with 41 felonies tied to allegations that he possessed child sex abuse materials, the 44-year-old Utah County man had submitted letters to the court from those who knew him, and who assured a Utah County judge that he would be no risk to the community if he were released, despite the serious charges he was facing.
One was written by a Brigham Young University dean.
Grant Jensen began his letter by introducing himself as the dean of the College of Computational, Mathematical and Physical Sciences at BYU, the university owned by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He wrote about how he had known the defendant for 16 years, beginning when the man’s wife worked as his administrative assistant.
For as long as Jensen had known him, he wrote, the man had gone to church every Sunday — and followed all the teachings of the LDS Church, “avoiding all alcohol, tobacco, coffee, tea, smoking, drugs, etc.”
“I have no reason to believe he was not completely faithful to his wife,” Jensen wrote. “I believe he contributed generously (a full tithe). He accepted many assignments and served well. In our interactions he was always honest, kind, and trustworthy.”
What unfolded in that Utah County case reflects a broader practice in which Latter-day Saint bishops and other people connected to the church have vouched for defendants accused of serious crimes — even as the church itself has discouraged such interventions as potentially harmful.
And behind the scenes, a Salt Lake Tribune inquiry revealed, some Utah County prosecutors have taken an unusual step when letters like these appear: They contact Kirton McConkie, the outside law firm which represents the LDS Church, whose lawyers then instruct the bishop to withdraw the submission, the office confirmed.
That practice raises its own ethical concerns. One legal expert told The Tribune it is “wholly inappropriate” for prosecutors to try to limit this type of material from a judge making a weighty decision about whether to grant bail or how long someone should spend in prison.
While these types of letters are meant to attest to a person’s character, experts say this support can cause victims — or other church members — to feel betrayed when they see a leader supporting an alleged perpetrator rather than encouraging accountability.
That’s why the LDS Church instructs its local leaders to not become involved voluntarily in court cases involving members of their ward or stake, it said in a statement to The Tribune. It confirmed that when it learns that a leader has not followed church policy and submitted a support letter, “the Church contacts the leader and ensures he is aware of the policy and its purpose.”
“Sharing information in legal proceedings can be misinterpreted and may cause harm,” the church’s statement reads, “particularly to victims and their families.”
Courtroom arguments
At a bail hearing last August, defense attorney John Easton highlighted the BYU’s dean’s letter several times when he argued to 4th District Court Judge Kasey Wright — himself a BYU alum — that his client should have the chance to bail out of jail.
The Tribune generally does not report on individual cases of possession of child sexual abuse material, and because of this, is not naming the defendant at this time.
“I look at some of these letters — particularly a dean of a significant program at BYU college — that’s here willing to support him,” Easton said, according to a recording of the hearing. “Scoutmasters that have watched him interact with children. Very appropriate. There’s been no allegation of any personal physical touching that’s inappropriate in any way.”
But the allegations against the man are serious, Deputy Utah County Attorney Adam Pomeroy countered during the hearing. He is accused of not only possessing child sex abuse materials, Pomeroy said, but police also allege he had graphic chats online about his preferences in videos of young children and shared illegal materials he had obtained with others.
Orem officers began investigating the man in March 2025 after the messaging app MediaLab/KIK sent a tip to a federal hotline about sexually explicit content on an account that police say belonged to the man. One investigator wrote in charging records that detectives reviewed the child sex abuse videos linked to that account, and at some points turned off the audio because it was “so egregious and unbearable to listen to.”
Speaking about the letters that the defendant gave the judge, Pomeroy — also a BYU law school alum — said he noted that none of them acknowledged these serious allegations: “And you’re talking about deeply religious people, people involved in our community, people involved with youth. And there’s no actual indication that they truly understand what the defendant is charged with here.”
Pomeroy told The Tribune in a statement that he didn’t alert Kirton McConkie to Jensen’s letter because the dean wasn’t the defendant’s church leader. The case, he conceded, was “unique in that a BYU dean, name dropping the school, wrote in on the defendant’s behalf.”
BYU declined to comment for this story. Jensen did not respond to emails requesting comment.
‘Wholly inappropriate for prosecutors’While Pomeroy didn’t tell church lawyers about this letter, some prosecutors in his office contact Kirton McConkie when bishops write letters, and generally they are then withdrawn.
A statement from the Utah County Attorney’s Office said this was a practice that began about 15 years ago, after lawyers at Kirton McConkie asked the office to notify them when a bishop filed a letter on a defendant’s behalf. However, there was never an “official policy” implemented — though the office acknowledged in its statement that some prosecutors have continued to comply with the request since then, particularly if the bishop’s document was sent on church letterhead.
The statement said Utah County Attorney Jeff Gray wasn’t aware of Kirton McConkie’s request until a Tribune reporter asked about it, and he didn’t know prosecutors in his office were still alerting the church’s law firm to letters written by church leaders in support of defendants.
Bruce Green, who teaches legal ethics at Fordham University’s law school, said that those who know a defendant and have truthful information should be encouraged to bring that information to a judge — including church leaders.
“It is wholly inappropriate,” he said, “for prosecutors, who are supposed to serve the public interest, to induce church leaders to withdraw letters sent to the sentencing judge if those letters are truthful, as presumably the church leaders’ letters are.”
Gray agreed that this specifically “raises concerns about a defendant’s ability to present information to the sentencing court,” according to his office’s statement.
“Now that he is aware of the issue,” the statement reads, “Mr. Gray is considering how to best address it.”
Neither the Salt Lake County district attorney’s office nor Davis County prosecutors have a policy to contact church lawyers when a bishop or church leader sends a letter to a judge.
“We address any submitted letter in support of a defendant on the merits asserted,” Salt Lake County District Attorney Sim Gill said. “In other words, we treat everyone the same.”
Both Gill and Davis County Attorney Troy Rawlings said prosecutors in their offices used to see letters from bishops filed in support of criminal defendants more frequently than they do now.
But it does still happen: In another Utah County case where a father was sentenced last December for sexually abusing his young daughters, his one-time bishop wrote to the sentencing judge that the defendant was active in their church and served in “whatever capacity he was asked to participate in.”
The former bishop didn’t ask for leniency, but told the judge that he’d be praying for the judge’s “discernment” for the right sentence. “I believe he is a good man at his core,” he wrote about the father.
And in a Utah County case from 2019, a bishop himself faced sentencing after he was caught in an undercover police prostitution sting. His ward’s executive secretary — a priesthood holder who managed his calendar and sat outside his office while the bishop interviewed ward members — wrote a support letter, adding that he assumed the judge was also a Latter-day Saint, given that he went to BYU law school.
In the letter, the man shared stories about times when the bishop gave a sick woman a blessing, and how he was generous in paying for dinners or smoking brisket for their neighborhood.
‘Chilling for the whole community’Experts say support letters like this from bishops and those affiliated with the church can cause feelings of betrayal for not only the victim, but the wider church community.
Jennifer J. Freyd is a professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Oregon who first introduced the concept of “institutional betrayal” in the 1990s. She said these letters supporting an accused defendant or perpetrator can feel like a “second concussion,” another wound on top of the harm from being victimized.
“It’s going to be chilling for the whole community,” she said. “If I learn that somebody who’s got institutional power in an institution I’m a part of is doing something harmful to someone else, I can still be betrayed.”
Nicole Bedera, a sociologist and researcher of sexual violence, said that the criminal justice system also engages in a type of “institutional betrayal” when it allows for admissibility of character evidence like support letters in cases involving sexual violence.
These types of letters, she said, are often written by people who don’t know if the person actually did what they are accused of. She questioned whether this information is appropriate for a judge to consider.
“There is no way that a church leader can know that someone wasn’t violent, that someone wasn’t breaking the law, that they would never do that again,” she said. “It’s outside of relevant information for the case.”
Bedera emphasized that victims who are depicted in child sexual abuse materials are often deeply harmed by this crime, particularly because they don’t know who has downloaded or looked at these images.
“Are they people who they know in real life? Are they all strangers?” she asked. “And so there’s this sense that the perpetrator could be anyone, and all of us.”
In the child sexual abuse materials case where the BYU dean wrote a support letter, the judge ultimately allowed the defendant to post bail. But he said he didn’t consider Jensen’s letter or others like it when making that decision.
Instead, he said, the law required him to weigh whether the man posed a danger to the community or was likely to flee.
In the end, the judge said, the letters — no matter who wrote them — were not part of the decision he had to make.
Tribune reporter Tamarra Kemsley contributed to this report.
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3. Protect Utah’s Children: Demand Accountability in the Richard Mallard Case
Introduction:
Richard Kirkland Mallard of Orem, Utah, has been charged with 41 felony counts of child sexual exploitation, including 9 counts of aggravated sexual exploitation of a minor. Despite the seriousness of these crimes, he was released on bond — after receiving letters of support from community members, including a Brigham Young University dean.
This decision endangers children and highlights a broader problem: powerful community figures and institutions too often shield predators instead of protecting victims.
Why This Matters:
Children’s safety must come first — not releasing those facing such serious charges. The release of Richard Mallard, even with overwhelming evidence against him, is a failure of the justice system and a betrayal of community trust.
The fact that respected leaders in positions of influence — including within Utah’s dominant religious and educational institutions — vouched for him shows how deeply entrenched protection of abusers can be. This is not just about one man — it is about a pattern where reputation is prioritized over children’s safety.
Our Demands:
We, the undersigned, demand:
Immediate review of Richard Mallard’s release on bond and stricter enforcement of protections for the community.
Utah lawmakers to ban bail release for individuals charged with aggravated child sexual exploitation.
Greater accountability and transparency from all institutions — religious, educational, and civic — when leaders or members, or their friends and family are implicated in crimes against children.
Creation of a statewide child protection task force to ensure no institution shields predators from accountability.This is not about religion — this is about children’s lives. Our community cannot allow people facing such serious charges, especially those with institutional or community support to walk free while victims are left unprotected.
We call on Utah courts, lawmakers, and institutions across the state to take immediate action. Protect the children. End the cover ups. Demand accountability.
We need your help. The silence in Utah ends here!
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4. Richard Kirkland Mallard
Name: Richard Mallard
Booking ID: 459025
Booking Date: July 15, 2025 6:07 PM
Gender: M
Race: W
Height: 511
Weight: 180
Hair: BRO
Eyes: BRO
City: Orem, UT -
5. Orem man released on bond after being charged with 41 felonies involving CSAM
OREM, Utah (ABC4) — An Orem man accused of possessing and sharing child sexual abuse material (CSAM) has posted bond and is out of jail, documents say. He received multiple letters of support prior to his bail hearing.
Richard Kirkland Mallard, 44, was charged on July 21, 2025, with nine counts of aggravated sexual exploitation of a minor, a first-degree felony, and 32 counts of sexual exploitation of a minor, a second-degree felony.
Initially, Mallard was being held without bail. After a detention hearing on Aug. 10 that amended his bail order to $10,000 cash or bond and set rules for his release, Mallard posted bond on Aug. 14, 2025. While out on bond, Mallard must obey the following pretrial release conditions:
The Defendant shall have a private GPS ankle monitor installed prior to release.
The Defendant shall not leave the State of Utah without approval from the Court.
The Defendant shall not have access to the Internet by any electronic means.
The Defendant shall not possess or have access to any sexually stimulating materials.
The Defendant shall not have contact with any individuals under the age of 18, with the exception of his own children.
The Defendant shall stay away 50 feet from minors, and shall not enter private or public property where minors are known to frequent.
The Defendant shall submit to a psychosexual evaluation and comply with recommended treatment.Prior to the Aug. 10 hearing, character letters were sent to the court. Read more about those letters and Mallard’s charges below.
PREVIOUSLY: Orem man charged with 41 felonies for possessing, distributing CSAM online
Letters of supportBefore Mallard’s detention hearing, the court received several letters of support from individuals in the community and people who knew Mallard. These letters came from friends, neighbors, and even the dean of one of the colleges at Brigham Young University.
“He’s also a deeply religious man — we are both members of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints…” the BYU college dean wrote. “As far as I could tell he followed all the teachings of the Church, avoiding all alcohol, tobacco, coffee, tea, smoking, drugs, etc. I have no reason to believe he was not completely faithful to his wife… In our interactions he was always honest, kind, and trustworthy. I was completely shocked by his arrest.”
Another letter shared with the court detailed a neighbor who often received support from Mallard. The neighbor said that he had a disability, and Mallard would frequently assist him with day-to-day tasks and help him during emergencies.
One letter from a youth group leader read that Mallard had attended and helped out during a teenage girls’ camping trip. The youth leader stated that Mallard is “a teacher and a rescuer and a helper.” She also explained that Mallard had always obeyed youth protection rules, “He has acted appropriately and has followed the policies set in place to protect the youth,” she wrote.
Other character letters expressed shock at Mallard’s charges and reiterated that they did not believe the actions he is accused of were in line with his character. A letter from a medical professional also cited some health issues that could be better treated outside of the jail.
What is Mallard accused of?
According to documents, on May 1, 2025, detectives with the Orem Police Department received a tip from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Kik, a messenger app, reported to law enforcement that a user was allegedly in possession of CSAM, and provided an email address and phone number that were connected to the account.
Police obtained a search warrant for the email account and discovered that the user had links to graphic sexual stories and videos in his inbox and outbox. Using the email address and phone number, detectives connected the account to Mallard. Search warrants returned from Kik revealed that he had been messaging various users to obtain CSAM.
Mallard not only requested, but also distributed CSAM files, according to documents. Some videos were so graphic that detectives had to mute the files while reviewing what CSAM Mallard allegedly possessed. Documents say most of the files included prepubescent or very young children.
Charges are allegations only. All arrested persons are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
Documents
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Criminal case documents
Floodlit has a copy of a related probable cause affidavit, but it is not currently available for download. Please check back soon or contact us to request an copy.Civil case documents
Floodlit does not have a copy of a related civil complaint. Please check back soon or contact us to request that we look for one.Other documents
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