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Houston: A US jury on Wednesday sentenced an elderly Hindu religious leader to 14 years in prison and fined a $ 10,000 on each of 20 counts of molesting two girls who grew up on the ashram he founded and led in Central Texas.
Prakashanand Saraswati, known to his devotees as Shree Swamiji and head of the 200-acre Hindu ashram in Texas, was sentenced by a Hays County jury after he failed to appear before it for the punishment phase of his trial.
District Judge Charles Ramsay will decide later whether 82-year-old Swamiji's prison sentences are to be served concurrently.
Last week the jury found Swamiji guilty of indecency with a child by sexual contact, based on his repeated groping of two teenagers whose families lived at the ashram he founded southwest of Austin.
Now 27 and 30 years old, the women brought charges against the Swamiji three years ago, saying he molested them on the Barsana Dham ashram in Driftwood in the mid-1990s while they were in their teens.
The parent organisation to which Swamiji's Barsana Dham ashram belongs owns and operates temples and hospitals in India and other countries.
Meanwhile, the search for the guru, missing since Sunday evening, continued with police reporting no new leads as to his whereabouts. Prakashanand is thought to be traveling with his longtime assistant and caregiver, Vishwambhari Devi.
A warrant has been issued for his arrest.
Earlier, prosecutors asked the jury to sentence Swamiji to 20 years in prison 400 years total for each and every one of the 20 criminal counts on which the guru was convicted of molesting two girls.
"This defendant is not a good candidate for probation because he can't even make it to the rest of the trial," said Hays County assistant district attorney Kathy Compton.
The Swamiji's defence attorneys told the court that their elderly client's various ailments coronary disease, hypertension and back pain make him too infirm to be in prison.
"To put him in a penitentiary setting at his age with these types of physical disabilities would be a death sentence for Swamiji," said Jeff Kearney, his lead attorney.
Spokesmen for the ashram that he founded in Driftwood say they don't know where he is.
Peter Spiegel, a wealthy devotee who posted a $ 1 million cash bond that was forfeited when Swamiji failed to appear in court on Tuesday, testified that he doesn't know the guru's whereabouts, either.
Spiegel also signed a $ 10 million indemnity agreement in 2008, in exchange for the court allowing Swamiji to travel abroad while he was awaiting trial.
However, the guru's passport was revoked in 2010.
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