Episodios

  • law enforcement weigh in on the amish restoration team
    Apr 7 2026

    Picking back up where we left off in the last recording, I sat down with a law enforcement officer out of Ohio to hear his perspective on The Amish Restoration Team.

    You’ll hear his real-time reactions to the answers the RT has been giving Amish women within their communities—and what that actually looks like from the outside looking in.

    Law enforcement often gets a bad reputation in these conversations, accused of not doing enough to address abuse. But the question we have to ask is… how much can they do if the barriers put in place by the church prevent them from even knowing what’s happening?

    If you want to follow along with this work, access additional research, and support these stories being told, you can find more on Substack at The Plain People’s Project, and follow along on Instagram at The Plain People’s Podcast.

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    51 m
  • The Amish Restoration Team
    Mar 30 2026

    Last year, over 300 abuse cases were documented by what is known as the “Restoration Team” in Holmes and Wayne County, Ohio.

    Fewer than 10 of those cases ever made it to the Wayne County Sheriff's Office.

    So what’s happening in between?

    In this episode, Jasper brings you into the beginning of her investigation into the Restoration Team—an Amish-led intervention group presented to churches as a safe haven for handling abuse within the community.

    What unfolds is not a simple system, but a layered and complex structure involving steering committees, church authority, and internal processes that shape how—and if—abuse cases move forward.

    These recordings capture conversations with Amish women in real time, as they describe the barriers they face when trying to report abuse, seek help, and pursue justice.

    This episode is intentionally left as it was originally recorded, allowing listeners to follow the learning process as it happened—before later developments and deeper understanding came to light.

    In the next episode, we expand on this conversation with insight from Ohio law enforcement and revisit a case referenced here, including new developments.

    This is where the conversation begins.

    Links & Resources:
    Substack: The Plain People’s Project
    Website: theplainpeoplespodcast.com
    Instagram: The Plain People’s Podcast


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    50 m
  • Meet K
    Mar 23 2026

    In this episode of The Plain People’s Podcast, we continue our look into Amish and Mennonite mental health systems—specifically, what are known as “the facilities,” or residential treatment centers for those struggling within plain communities.

    This episode focuses on Hoffnung Heim, a facility widely known among the Amish as a trusted place for women to receive help.

    But what is the reality inside these treatment centers?

    Our guest shares her firsthand experience at Hoffnung Heim after growing up in a violent and abusive Amish home. Through her story, we explore the structure of Amish support systems, including church-appointed support groups—a system designed to guide individuals in crisis, but one that often requires full transparency, compliance, and submission to authority.

    Many survivors are now asking:
    Are these systems truly helping—or are they protecting the church?

    This episode also introduces a unique recording approach. A portable recording device was left in Ohio, allowing Amish women to share their stories privately, in their own homes. While the audio quality may vary, the goal remains the same: to document real experiences directly from Amish women.

    These are Amish voices, speaking about abuse, mental health, religious control, and the barriers to seeking help.

    This is part of an ongoing series uncovering:

    • Amish mental health treatment centers
    • Religious trauma in Amish and Mennonite communities
    • Abuse and systemic barriers within plain communities
    • Survivor stories and lived experiences

    These are Amish women speaking.

    For more research, resources, and ongoing work:

    Substack: The Plain People’s Project
    Website: www.theplainpeoplespodcast.com
    Instagram: The Plain People’s Podcast

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    1 h y 29 m
  • People Helpers and Plain Run Facilities
    Mar 15 2026

    For years, Mennonite and Amish women have quietly spoken about “the facilities” — residential programs where church members are sent for restoration, discipline, or mental health support.

    But what exactly are these places?

    In this episode of The Plain People's Podcast, Jasper Hoffman begins unpacking one of the most complex and hidden barriers facing Amish and Anabaptist survivors: a network of unlicensed and unregistered residential treatment facilities operating across multiple states.

    This series features Amish women speaking in their own words about their experiences inside these programs and the pressure they faced when being sent away.

    Drawing on years of investigation, survivor interviews, and newly obtained documents — including an updated Mental Health Facility Research Guide issued by the Amish Steering Committee — Jasper explores how these facilities are organized, how they avoid oversight, and how families are guided to select programs based on theology, obedience to ministry leadership, and views on reporting abuse.

    Many women who enter these facilities are described as “choosing” to go.

    But as one Amish woman told Jasper:

    “If no is not an option, then yes is not a choice.”

    Over the next several weeks, we will examine the role these facilities play within a larger system involving ministry leadership, restoration teams, tourism economies, and community power structures.

    Before crimes can be solved, they first have to be seen.

    Topics discussed in this episode: Amish communities, Amish women, Amish abuse, Amish mental health, residential treatment facilities, unlicensed treatment centers, religious trauma, Anabaptist communities, cult recovery, investigative journalism, and survivor advocacy.

    Support & Resources

    This investigation is made possible by listeners and supporters who help fund continued research and reporting.

    To learn more, read additional research, and support this work:

    Website:
    www.plainpeoplespodcast.com

    Substack:
    The Plain People’s Project
    https://plainpeoplesproject.substack.com

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    1 h y 10 m
  • Why is Amish Crime Happening?
    Mar 12 2026

    For years, conversations about abuse in Amish and other plain communities began with denial. Survivors, advocates, and researchers were forced to answer the same basic question again and again: is abuse actually happening?

    But something has shifted.

    In this episode, Jasper shares recordings that began in August of 2023 after a group of current Amish women from Holmes County, Ohio reached out asking for help. They wanted to bring attention to the barriers they were facing while trying to report abuse and seek protection within their communities.

    Holmes County sits at the center of Ohio’s Amish Country and is home to the largest concentration of Amish residents in the United States, with roughly 40% of the county’s population belonging to Amish communities. The region also attracts millions of tourists each year, drawn by the image of a simpler way of life.

    But the conversations in this episode reveal a much more complicated reality.

    These interviews were originally recorded before the Ruth Miller trial and before the Ivan Miller homicides brought national attention to crime within Amish communities. Since then, the public conversation has shifted. The question is no longer whether abuse exists.

    Now the question is why it continues.

    Through these recordings, listeners follow Jasper’s own evolving understanding as the investigation moves beyond documenting abuse to exploring the systems, structures, and cultural dynamics that allow it to persist.

    This episode of The Plain People’s Podcast explores abuse, advocacy, and accountability within Amish and other plain communities, with a focus on Holmes County, Ohio, home to the largest Amish population in the United States. The discussion touches on topics including Amish culture, barriers to reporting abuse, religious communities and crime, Amish women seeking help, and the systems that allow abuse to persist in insular communities.

    For additional research, writing, and ongoing reporting related to this work:

    The Plain People’s Project (Substack)
    https://plainpeoplesproject.substack.com

    Website
    https://www.plainpeoplespodcast.com


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    53 m
  • Breaking Amish with Dawn Martin
    Jun 8 2021

    From Groffdale Conference Mennonite to Black Bumper (Horning) to Breaking Amish season 5, Dawn has been on a momentous journey. We were fortunate to sit down and spend some time talking about what is real in the process of shooting reality tv and find out where she is today.

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    33 m
  • Behind Blue Curtains with Lizzie Hershberger
    Jun 1 2021

    Lizzie Hershberger is a former Swartzentruber Amish member , which is largest and most conservative subgroups of Old Order Amish. Her recent memoir titled Behind Blue Curtains was published this spring and she sits down with us to talk about what it is like to write, and walk within, your trauma story.

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    42 m
  • Deb's Story, Pt 2
    May 24 2021

    Last week we introduced you to the incredible Deb....also known as Moxie. This week we pick back up in the story and learn how Deb hiked the entire Appalachian Trail and the fierce tenacity that drove her to finish.

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    48 m