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Missouri summer camp CEO, embroiled in child sexual abuse scandal, is retiring

This 2007 photo shows campers at Kanakuk Kamps in Missouri.
Courtesy of Nancy French, used with permission.
This 2007 photo shows campers at Kanakuk Kamps in Missouri.

The CEO of Kanakuk Kamps, a Christian summer camp in southwest Missouri plagued by a history of sexual abuse, is said to be retiring later this year.

In a letter to camp families, Joe White, 77, reportedly said he would retire Aug. 31 after decades of overseeing the camp that has brought thousands of children to Branson. He cited medical treatments that followed his leukemia diagnosis in 2000.

"Thirty-five anesthetized surgeries later, it is time to pass the baton to the next very capable generation," White wrote in the letter, which was posted online by D Magazine in Dallas, Texas.

Kanakuk and White did not respond to requests for comment by The Midwest Newsroom.

White's announcement comes almost a year after Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe signed a bill — named after a former Kanakuk camper — into law that voids non-disclosure agreements reached in child sexual abuse cases. It was named after Trey Carlock, who was sexually abused by former Kanakuk director Peter Newman. Carlock signed an NDA and in 2019 died by suicide.

Carlock's sister, Elizabeth Carlock Phillips, called White's retirement letter "disappointing" — it omitted the "very publicly known child sexual abuse" that occurred at the camp under his leadership, she said.

"This isn't retirement; it's a cop out," Phillips said in a statement to The Midwest Newsroom, adding there has not been real accountability for the abuse survivors. "This is yet another PR move, and survivors are neither surprised nor appeased by Joe White stepping back cowardly."

Phillips has been advocating for other states to pass their own "Trey's Law." U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas has also introduced a federal version of the law.

In Kansas, four Republicans this year sponsored legislation to make past and future NDAs unenforceable in child abuse cases, but it died in committee. Todd Latiolais, director of policy and advocacy for No More Victims alliance, said the group would advocate for it next session.

"The unanimous passage of Trey's Law in the House sent a clear message: Survivors of child sexual abuse and trafficking in Kansas should not be muzzled by a system meant to hold bad actors accountable," Latiolais said in a statement.

One of the largest evangelical camps in the country, founded in 1926, Kanakuk has been plagued by allegations it covered up sexual abuse.

In 2010, Newman pleaded guilty to seven counts of sexual abuse, though prosecutors said his victims might have numbered in the "hundreds." Newman, who was hired by Kanakuk in 1995, is now serving two life sentences, plus 30 years, at the Jefferson City Correctional Center.

Logan Yandell, pictured in 2009, alleges he was sexually abused at Kanakuk Kamps from by its former director, Peter Newman.
Courtesy of Logan Yandell /
Logan Yandell, pictured in 2009, alleges he was sexually abused at Kanakuk Kamps from by its former director, Peter Newman.

A 2022 lawsuit filed by Logan Yandell, who as a child was abused by Newman, alleged camp leadership concealed knowledge about Newman's behavior, which influenced his family's decision to settle and sign an NDA.

As early as 1999, the camp received reports that Newman engaged in nude activity with young boys, according to an affidavit by Newman's former supervisor. He recommended Newman be fired in 2003 but instead, Newman was later promoted.

Kanakuk and White continue to face lawsuits by former campers, including one filed last year by a woman who said she was abused by Newman.

"Faced with overwhelming evidence of illegal sexual misconduct involving a minor, Joe White and Kanakuk took no action to terminate Newman," wrote the attorneys for another Newman survivor, who won a $5 million judgment against Newman and who is now suing the camp.

Camp leadership has called Newman a "master of deception" and denied past knowledge of his abuse.

In a statement on its website, Kanakuk said many kids had their "happiest memories" there, but the camp acknowledged for others, "a dark chapter" in its history continued to cause pain.

"We wish that chapter in our history didn't exist, and we also wish we hadn't added to the pain and hurt written within," the camp wrote. "We now know we did, and for that we are sorry."

A 2021 investigation by journalist Nancy French in the Springfield News-Leader revealed the abuse spanned decades. Other men tied to Kanakuk, French reported, had been convicted of sex crimes, including a counselor who abused three campers ages 9 to 12.

Speaking in 2022 on St. Louis on the Air, French said Newman was one of the "most prolific serial abusers" she'd ever heard of.

"I started digging into it," she said, "and realizing that many of the camp leaders, including the ones that are still running the camp today, were aware of a lot of this abusive behavior and looked the other way — not only looked the other way, but promoted him repeatedly."

The Midwest Newsroom is an investigative and enterprise journalism collaboration that includes Iowa Public Radio, KCUR, Nebraska Public Media, St. Louis Public Radio and NPR.

There are many ways you can contact us with story ideas and leads, and you can find that information here.

The Midwest Newsroom is a partner of The Trust Project. We invite you to review our ethics and practices here.

METHODOLOGY
Reporter Luke Nozicka reached out to advocates for survivors of child sexual abuse at Kanakuk Kamps for comment on Joe White's retirement. He also sought comment from White and Kanakuk's communications team, neither of whom responded to emails.

REFERENCES

Kanakuk camp CEO announces upcoming retirement (Springfield Business Journal | May 7, 2026)

Joe White totally, fully resigns from Kamp Kanakuk (D Magazine | May 6, 2026)

Governor Kehoe signs SB 81 into law (Mike Kehoe, Missouri governor, website | June 10, 2025)

A new push to open the doors on childhood sexual abuse (The New York Times | April 8, 2025)

S.3966 — TREY'S Law (Congress.gov | introduced 03/03/2026)

"Trey's Law" filed in Kansas and Georgia Legislatures (Trey's Law news release | Feb. 5, 2026)

HB 2688: Providing that a nondisclosure agreement shall not be judicially enforceable in a dispute involving childhood sexual abuse or human trafficking allegations or claims. (Kansas Legislature | died in Senate committee on April 10, 2026)

Missouri-based camp blames its insurance company for withholding info about sexual abuse (KSMU Ozarks Public Radio/Missouri Independent Nov. 14, 2023)

Petition for damages (Circuit Court of Taney County, Missouri | Nov. 17, 2022)

For the first time, a woman alleges sex abuse by convicted former Kanakuk director Peter Newman (KSMU Ozarks Public Radio | April 17, 2025)

Our response to abuse and child safety (Kanakuk Kamps | undated)

Survivors, ex-employees say unreported abuse at Kanakuk camps in Branson spans decades (Springfield News-Leader | Updated May 28, 2022)

Survivors, ex-employees say Kanakuk Christian camp 'ministered' to its sexual predators (USA Today Investigations | May 27, 2022)

Update: Missouri Kanakuk counselor charged with sexual abuse (Columbia Missourian | April 3, 2012)

Decades of abuse at Kanakuk evangelical camp leads reporter to St. Louis ministry (St. Louis On the Air/St. Louis Public Radio | June 29, 2022)

TYPE OF ARTICLE 

News — Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.

Copyright 2026 St. Louis Public Radio

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