MOBILE, Ala. — An Alabama evangelist and former paratrooper was convicted Friday of murdering his wife and storing her body in a freezer for four years.

After deliberating for 1½ hours, a jury in Mobile also found 39-year-old Anthony Hopkins guilty of rape, sodomy, incest and sexual abuse of a child between the ages of 12 and 16.

Hopkins was arrested in 2008 while preaching at a rural revival in Clarke County on charges that he killed 36-year-old Arletha Hopkins, a mother of eight.

On Friday, children who grew up in his home and who had testified against him stood in the front row and hugged each other and cried as the verdict was read.

Authorities said a teenage relative that Hopkins had abused and impregnated led police to the body of his wife in 2008.

Investigators say Hopkins killed his wife in a violent fight in 2004 after she caught him having sex with the teenager. They said he then stuffed the wife’s body into a freezer at the Mobile home he shared with her, the couple’s six children and two of her children from a previous relationship.

Advertisement

In closing arguments Friday, Assistant District Attorney Jill Phillips said Hopkins terrorized his wife and young children, isolated them and used the Bible to manipulate them.

Hopkins told jurors Friday that he came home on a December evening in 2004 and found his wife dead on the floor, with the youngest of her eight children, a month-old infant, beside her.

“I was shocked and I began to shake her, and I was like ‘Letha, Letha are you all right?’ I began to shake her, tilt her head back and do CPR,” Hopkins testified.

Hopkins served in the Army in Kazakhstan in the late 1990s and earned a medal for his service. He was arrested in Saraland, near Mobile, in 1998 for being absent without leave from the Army in Fort Bragg, N.C., from June 15, 1995, until April 6, 1998.

He testified Friday that he decided to leave the Army after he got orders to serve in Korea and could not take his family with him. It was then he said that he had a calling to become an evangelist and began preaching at rural churches and revivals around the rural South. He developed a following because many who heard him preach considered him a prophet who could see the future.

 


Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.