Jury finds youth minister not guilty in sex abuse trial

Jeffrey London was accused of turning boys into sex slaves

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. – A jury found a former youth minister who ran a boys home that was not registered with the foster system not guilty of sexually abusing four boys Thursday.

The four boys, who are now ages 16 to 26, said Jeffrey London abused them for years when they were teenagers.

Jeffrey London stands accused of turning boys into sex boys in Broward.

London, who faces 27 counts of child abuse, said he allowed the boys to stay in his home, because they were in need of a paternal figure.

"I had a need to help," London, 50, said Tuesday in front of Judge Michael Usan in Broward County court in Fort Lauderdale. 

He met the neglected kids when he was a counselor at the Boys and Girls Club of Fort Lauderdale, a youth minister at the Bible Church of God in Fort Lauderdale, and when he was a dean at Eagle Academy, a Lauderdale Lakes charter school.

None of the boys were in the foster care system and the house was not registered with the state as a foster home. The New Vision Children's Foundation subsidized residential expenses and extracurricular activities such as trips to New York and the Grand Canyon.

London said the first time he allowed a boy to stay at his home was in 1990. The boy was covered with fleas, he said.

Earlier in the trial, prosecutors argued London turned the boys into sex slaves, a charge he denied.

London also said his ex-wife Aretha Wimberly was a liar. During her testimony she said she found her then husband in bed with a 16-year old boy. She also said her husband took dozens of boys in who would otherwise be homeless.