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Ex-mistress testifies in former Baptist pastor's murder trial Print E-mail
By Bob Allen   
Wednesday, January 20, 2010

WACO, Texas (ABP) -- The star witness at the trial of a former Baptist pastor charged with murdering his wife in 2006 testified Jan. 19 that the accused planned the crime, hoping to make it look like a suicide, and afterward told his ex-mistress that he drugged his wife with sleeping pills and smothered her with a pillow.

Kari Baker

Vanessa Bulls was the 27th witness to testify against Matt Baker. The graduate of Baylor University and George W. Truett Theological Seminary was pastor of several Baptist churches in Texas before his arrest in September 2007, 18 months after the death of his wife, Kari.

The prosecution rested its case at the end of the day Jan. 19. The defense began calling witnesses the morning of Jan. 20. Baker has denied killing his wife in several high-profile media interviews, including CBS News "48 Hours" and the March 2008 cover story of Texas Monthly.

Bulls, 27, told jurors in Waco, Texas, she was raised a strict Southern Baptist and attended the Baptist-affiliated University of Mary Hardin-Baylor. She said she met Baker in 2005 at Crossroads Baptist Church in Lorena, Texas, where he was pastor and her father worked as a music minister.

Bulls said Baker offered to counsel her because she was going through a divorce, and his flirting with her led to a four-month affair. Early on, she said, he told her he had a vasectomy so she wouldn't get pregnant and that he had no sexually transmitted diseases. When she asked him if he had done it before, she said, he laughed, called his wife "clueless" and added, "I did it once at Truett Seminary."

Bulls said Baker told her that he wanted to kill his wife and make it look like a suicide because getting a divorce would ruin his career. After describing details of the crime, she claimed that he warned her not to tell anyone because she was guilty, too, that God had forgiven both of them and that no one would believe her because he was a preacher.

"He was, and still is, a manipulative liar," Bulls said. "He took me in my most very vulnerable state and made me believe everything he said."

Bulls said shortly after his wife's death she and Baker went shopping for an engagement ring, but they broke up. She said he got a new girlfriend after moving with his daughters to Kerrville, Texas, where he worked as a substitute teacher and in a part-time student ministry position funded by the Baptist General Convention of Texas. 

The defense says Kari Baker committed suicide because she was clinically depressed, upset that her husband was cheating on her and never got over the death of an infant seven years earlier. Her family and friends say she was excited about the prospect of a new job and would never have abandoned her two children.

Linda Dulin, Kari Baker's mother, took the stand Jan. 18. She described her daughter as an extrovert who loved life and her daughters. Dulin said Kari and Matt were on the Dulin family's phone plan, and she became suspicious when she saw a bill showing that Kari's cell phone was being used 10 days after her death. She later learned that the phone had been given to Vanessa Bulls.

Baker earlier denied that he was having an affair, but his lawyer began his opening statement admitting that Baker did have a girlfriend, but said it had nothing to do with the death of his wife.

Bulls, who testified against Baker at a grand jury in exchange for immunity, admitted that she lied to investigators and did not tell the whole truth in her grand jury testimony. She said she was afraid of repercussions and thought no one would believe her.

Asked by defense lawyers, why anyone should believe her now, she said she had nothing to gain by testifying and would possibly lose her job as a teacher by doing so.

-30-

This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it  is senior writer for Associated Baptist Press.





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Comments (5)Add Comment
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written by pjerwin, January 21, 2010
How 'bout we leave the salacious and sensational reporting to the secular media.
Sensational???
written by Slick, January 22, 2010
Please! Facts are facts. There are those who prefer to hear all side of an issue or story regardless of the content. Those who don't care to hear it all can read something else. There's noting salacious or sensational in this article.
Is this just the tip of the iceberg?
written by Gene, January 22, 2010
In recent years we have solicited quite a few "dynamic" young men to bring the world to "Baptist perfection." With such dynamic people pretending perfection, comes serious satanic temptation.

In NC we had a SEBTS student arrested in recent years for child pornography. We have such strong outcries against homosexuality, that it could be a cover for those secretly practicing seduction in the church.

Years ago I was a staff member where the attractive and dynamic Senior Minister, some 15 years later, was exposed by his wife as a hidden homosexual. His remostrations against it as we strolled through Golden Gate Park (couples--me and him NOT holding hands) would make one think he was terribly upset by the "sin." Reaction-Formation Psychosis is the technical designation for what he was doing.
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written by pjerwin, January 28, 2010
I'm confused, Gene. Is it "Reaction-Formation Psychosis" or is it wrestling with "serious satanic temptation?"

"Reaction Formation" is a subconscious defense mechanism by which the ego (the conscious source of control of thought and behavior) reacts to the id (the totally subconscious source of instintual impulses) when the id presents urges the ego finds unacceptable. (NOTE: "subconscious defense mechanism.") Conscious dissimulation, sublimation, and hypocrisy are not to be confused with reaction formation. Further, many suppose that reaction formation is an element of neurosis or psychosis (not a form of psychosis as Gene suggests, i.e., there is no technical term "Reaction-Formation Psychosis," at least I don't recall seeing that in the DSM4), but it is actually a typical mechanism of OCD (obsessive-compulsive disorder).

Your "psychoanalysis" falls short. If your former Senior Minister was suffering from reaction formation, is it "Christian" for you to castigate him for his mental illness? If he was a "closet homosexual," then it was conscious dissimulation and/or hypocrisy. Either way, the man was, no doubt, terribly upset by the sin.

Which makes me wonder about your response to that situation: why such a visceral reaction? Is it reaction formation, hypocrisy, or something else, some conscious or subconscious self-loathing?

But I challenge you, Gene, to present one young man, dynamic or otherwise, who has been "anointed to bring the world to Baptist perfection." (BTW: what is "Baptist perfection?") I challenge you to present one Baptist person (since that seems to be your focus), dynamic or otherwise, who pretends perfection. I challenge you to present one Baptist seminary student or Baptist minister who believes he or she is perfect.

Many people -- and it sounds as if Gene is one -- believe that answering God's call to ministry and attending seminary is professing perfection, some sort of advanced spirituality, or some sort of moral superiority. That's a false presumption.

It's also a false premise to believe that if a preacher has to wrestle with a particular sin himself he should not preach about it. That would be sinful. I guarantee you there is at least one place in every sermon at which the godly preacher himself is convicted. He may be preaching more fervently to himself than to anyone else. The godly preacher will not shy away from preaching the truth even when it is against himself. For the godly preacher, the Word of God and the Spirit of God preach to him long before he ever preaches to his people. And even when the conviction of the Spirit may came during the preaching event itself, the godly preach invariably precedes his people in repentance, hopefully showing them the way.

We must admit, however, that just as there are many non-believers, un-believers, and hypocritical believers in the Visible Church, there are many in the Church's pulpits. It's a reflection of the character of the Visible Church. There are undoubtedly more hypocritical laypeople castigating ministers than there are hypocritical ordained ministers preaching against sin.
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written by pjerwin, January 28, 2010
TYPOGRAPHICAL ERROR: In the first sentence of my second paragraph, it should read "the id (the totally subconscious source of instinctual impulses)..."

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