Street preacher convicted in Utah girl’s abduction

SALT LAKE CITY, (Reuters) – A homeless street  preacher was found guilty yesterday of the 2002 kidnapping of a  Utah girl who was abducted from her bed in the middle of the  night and endured a harrowing, nine-month ordeal in captivity.

A U.S. federal court jury in Salt Lake City convicted Brian  David Mitchell, 57, on two counts: kidnapping and unlawful  transportation of minor across state lines to engage in sexual  activity.

The self-styled prophet, who had been ejected from court  daily for disrupting the trial, loudly sang the hymn, “He Died,  the Great Redeemer Died” in the packed courtroom as the  verdicts were read.

Smart, who was 14 at the time of the abduction and is now  23, testified in graphic detail about her abduction at  knife-point, rape and captivity. She exchanged smiles with her  mother, Lois, in the front row of the courtroom gallery.

Mitchell’s step-daughter, Rebecca Woodridge, sobbed.

Prosecutors told jurors during the six-week trial that  Mitchell kidnapped Smart from her Salt Lake City home on June  5, 2002, with the intent of forcing her to live as his bride.