Chandler Dad Who Burned Son for Touching Bible Pleads Guilty to Child Abuse; Family Blames Bath Salts | Valley Fever | Phoenix | Phoenix New Times | The Leading Independent News Source in Phoenix, Arizona
Navigation

Chandler Dad Who Burned Son for Touching Bible Pleads Guilty to Child Abuse; Family Blames Bath Salts

A Chandler dad who burned his 5-year-old son with a cigarette lighter because he thought the boy was possessed was in Maricopa County Superior Court this morning where he pleaded guilty to child abuse.Johnny Salazar, 25, was arrested in July after he admitted to relatives that he'd burned the boy...
Share this:

A Chandler dad who burned his 5-year-old son with a cigarette lighter because he thought the boy was possessed was in Maricopa County Superior Court this morning where he pleaded guilty to child abuse.

Johnny Salazar, 25, was arrested in July after he admitted to relatives that he'd burned the boy for touching his bible.

After church one Sunday, the boy's grandparents noticed a burn on his hand. They asked Salazar what happened, which is when he made his startling admission.

"He thought my grandson, by touching (the Bible), was causing power to come out of it," his mother, Connie Salazar, told a local TV station.

Connie Salazar also says her son was under the influence of bath salts, a designer drug that often causes people to trip out, at the time.

"He was hallucinating that he was seeing demons and spirits and stuff," Salazar told the Arizona Republic at the time of her son's arrest.

According to police, Salazar was talking gibberish and making absolutely no sense at the time of his arrest

Salazar apparently had recently broken up with his baby-mama. His mother claims he turned to bath salts to cope with the stress of the breakup, which led to him burning his own son.

Salazar's sentencing is scheduled for October 25.

KEEP NEW TIMES FREE... Since we started New Times, it has been defined as the free, independent voice of Phoenix, and we'd like to keep it that way. Your membership allows us to continue offering readers access to our incisive coverage of local news, food, and culture with no paywalls. You can support us by joining as a member for as little as $1.