Attorneys are asking a federal judge to set a jury trial in the lawsuit filed by a former Mormon missionary who says she was sexually assaulted by a Missionary Training Center leader in 1984.

McKenna Denson says The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints committed fraud by presenting MTC President Joseph L. Bishop as a safe and trustworthy leader, placing him in charge of the faith’s flagship training center in Provo despite “red flag sexual improprieties” years earlier.

Church attorneys wrote in a recent court filing that the case would not be ready for a jury trial until March 2020. They believe it would take 13 days to try the case in federal court in Salt Lake City, where the faith is based.

“The potential for resolution before trial is poor,” attorneys wrote.

The lawsuit was filed in April, less than a month after MormonLeaks published the recorded conversation between Denson and Bishop. She recorded their discussion in December, initially posing as a writer who was interviewing former mission presidents. She then confronted him with her assault allegation.

In the conversation, Bishop said he didn’t remember taking her into a room in the basement of the MTC, let alone sexually assaulting her. However, he repeatedly apologized, describing himself as a predator and saying he had confessed to other sexual misconduct.

(Tribune file photo) Joseph L. Bishop, in 1972, about a decade before he became Missionary Training Center president.

Three days after the conversation, Bishop told Brigham Young University police officers that he recalled going into his small preparation room with her. “Then while talking to her he asked her to show him her breasts,” the report said, “which she did.”

The Salt Lake Tribune generally does not name alleged sexual assault victims, but Denson has agreed to the use of her name.