Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary podcast

Duggar Family: A Decade of Cameras and a Coverup Timeline

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The timeline is what makes this impossible to explain away. March 2002 — Jim Bob Duggar learns his teenage son is harming his daughters. He does not call police. He contacts church elders. July 2003 — after a labor program, not licensed treatment, Jim Bob takes Josh to a personal friend in law enforcement. The officer gives Josh a talk, files nothing, and makes no mandated report. That officer was later convicted on serious criminal charges and is serving 56 years in prison. December 2006 — police formally investigate after an anonymous tip. Because of the 2003 contact with the officer, the statute of limitations has already expired. No charges are filed. The girls never see a prosecution.

This week we look back at the most critical chapters in the Duggar story. While Jim Bob was managing the fallout internally, he was also building a television empire. The show that became "19 Kids and Counting" premiered in 2008 and ran until 2015, when In Touch Weekly published a redacted police report revealing what had happened. TLC canceled it — then greenlighted "Counting On" within months. That spinoff ran for over a decade and ended only when Josh Duggar's federal arrest on child sexual abuse material charges made continuation impossible. Two cancellations. Two statements of concern. One unbroken revenue stream in between.

His adult children have spoken. Jill Duggar has described needing her father's permission to enter the family compound as a married adult. Her husband Derick Dillard has publicly alleged Jim Bob controlled their TLC contracts and payments without meaningful consent — allegations not adjudicated in court. Jinger Duggar's memoir describes promoting teachings she now calls hurtful and untrue.

According to testimony given under oath at Josh Duggar's 2021 federal pretrial hearing, the conduct had been ongoing since Josh was approximately 12 years old. The youngest person involved was 5. When Jim Bob took the stand at that hearing and claimed he could not remember the details, Federal Judge Timothy Brooks called his testimony not credible in a written finding — citing selective memory loss and obvious reluctance to testify against his son.

The brand was protected. The children were not.

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