Are Preachers Getting Rich Off the Poor? Damn right.

Rarely do the televangelist victim’s stories get told, but last week, the BBC published their story, “The preachers getting rich from poor Americans.   Reporter Vicky Baker told Larry and Darcy Fardette’s testimony of being conned by Todd Coontz.  The article also goes into some detail about Trinity Foundation’s investigations.

    

Coontz’s four-year plus prison sentence is on hold while it’s being appealed.  He remains a free man and continues to solicit donations.  Despite committing tax-evasion, his ministry is still recognized as legitimate by the IRS.  The Trinity Foundation filed a brief requesting Coontz’s tax-exempt status be revoked.

 

A Trinity Foundation investigator spoke with former televangelist mega-donor Larry Fardette last week and Larry insisted we quote him.  He calls the televangelists he used to donate to, “Prosperity Pirates”.  We couldn’t agree more, Larry.

Edir Macedo is a new kind of Pope …

Edir Macedo is a new kind of Pope in control of an enormous neo-Pentecostal denomination he created from scratch.  Macedo travels in luxurious private jets using a diplomatic passport–protecting him from prosecution. He owns a bank and a large television network. This New Republic article, “How a Demon-Slaying Pentecostal Billionaire is Ushering in a Post-Catholic Brazil”, by two English-speaking authors–Alexander Zaitchik and Christopher Lord–examines connections between prosperity preacher Edir Macedo and recently elected president of Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro as well as Macedo’s alleged connections with the Colombian Cali drug cartel.  The authors show how impoverishment provides fertile ground for the prosperity gospel, particularly in poverty-stricken areas of Brazil.

 

Illustration by Adhemas Batista (shortened here)

How a Demon-Slaying Pentecostal Billionaire Is
Ushering in a Post-Catholic Brazil

Edir Macedo has a church, a bank, a TV channel, and a Moses complex. And with the election of Jair Bolsonaro, he has emerged as the country’s most controversial kingmaker.

February 7, 2019

The headquarters of the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God does not resemble your typical megachurch. Its eighteen stories dwarf the big-boxes of the Texas and Missouri exurbs. Behind pillared walls of imported granite and marble, a 10,000-seat sanctuary features neither crosses nor organs, but a menorah motif running from entrance to pulpit. Men in shawls and skullcaps that look a lot like Jewish tallits and yalmukahs conduct ceremonies next to Hebrew-inscribed Tablets of Stone and a gilded Ark of the Covenant. The building is meant to be a supersized reproduction of the biblical Temple of Solomon, but by way of Caesar’s Palace.

This is São Paulo, not Vegas or Jerusalem, and the men onstage are Pentecostal pastors, not rabbis. To be more precise, they are Neo-Pentecostal pastors, practicing a syncretic stew of the prosperity gospel, millenarianism, miracle healing, demon invocation, and exorcism, while boasting a level of Judeophilia weird even by the generous standards of Christian Zionism. Once a spiritual outlier, the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God (UCKG) stands at the forefront of Brazil’s rapid transformation into a Catholic-minority country. Its seven million members constitute Brazil’s second-largest Protestant denomination, after the Assemblies of God coalition.

Read the remainder of the article here….

Televangelist Todd Coontz is going down…

January 29th, 2019

…to prison that is.  Todd Coontz was sentenced to five years in prison and $755,669 in restitution today by US District Judge Robert Conrad, Jr.

In December 2012, TV reporter Jim Bradley of WSOC TV in Charlotte North Carolina asked for our help investigating televangelist Todd Coontz.  We were able to help Mr. Bradley in some small ways (click here to see Coontz’s luxury high-rise condo warranty deed titled under Rockwealth International Church). 

Bradley’s March 2013 story piqued the interest of IRS investigators and following several years of thorough investigation Coontz was indicted for income tax evasion and falsifying tax returns in June of 2017.  A federal jury convicted Coontz on April 5th, 2018 and he has awaited sentencing for almost ten months until today—January 29th, 2019.  In announcing the sentence, Judge Conrad chastised Coontz for his “incredible” and “long term disrespect for the law.” Judge Conrad noted Coontz was “relentless,” in the “ways in which Mr. Coontz tried to cheat.”

Trinity Foundation recently submitted a report to the Exempt Organization Division of the IRS recommending that Coontz’s tax exempt status for Rockwealth International Church be revoked (read our entire report here) and also submitted the report to Judge Conrad prior to today’s sentencing.

For more details on his crimes, read the Justice Department’s announcement of Coontz’s conviction, “Federal Jury Convicts Minister of Tax Crimes

Won’t Coontz get out much sooner than five years on parole?  Due to the Sentencing Reform Act, part of the Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984, parole was abolished for federal crimes.   Mr. Coontz will have to serve out at least 85% of his sentence—that’s at least four years and three months, but only if he gets time off for good behavior. 

Is “Cash” Luna connected with convicted “Queen of the South” drug trafficker?

Notice of Dispute

Pastor Luna and Casa de Dios have filed separate lawsuits against Univision and Trinity Foundation for defamation alleging that certain statements in the Univision article referenced below are false. Pastor Luna and Casa de Dios assert that Casa de Dios has been built entirely from legitimate funding sources and they specifically deny that they have ever requested or received any money from any drug traffickers, including Marllory Chacón aka the “Queen of the South,” and further deny that they have ever laundered any money for anyone, including Chacón.

Univision, America’s largest Spanish-speaking network, presented a three-part series called “Magnates of God” last month.  After reviewing compelling evidence presented by Univision reporters, we’ve carefully translated Part I about “Cash Luna’s” alleged connections to convicted drug trafficker Marllory Chacón into English (read translation here or below).

Though much of their evidence came from an admitted Colombian-cocaine-smuggling pilot, Univision reporters were able to prove that Chacón and Luna’s mansions were located side-by-side with a single entry gate.

Trinity Foundation Investigations of Luna

Soon after expanding our investigations of religious fraud outside US borders in 2015, our investigator travelled to Guatemala in January 2016 taking a closer look into “Cash” Luna’s mega-church, one of Luna´s satellite churches, and his opulent lifestyle.  Luna´s version of the prosperity gospel is a carbon copy of the “name it, claim it” preachers we’ve investigated here in the US.

Trinity Foundation investigator’s photo taken outside the church, January 2016

In previous posts we revealed Carlos (Cash’s real name) lavish lifestyle and travels on his private jet.

For an impressive closer look at Luna’s main church in Guatemala City, Guatemala, click on Univision’s Spanish article, “Los Magnates de Dios”, and view their time-lapse drone image of the “House of God” (“Casa de Dios”).

Franchise Satellite Churches

One particularly disturbing trend of the prosperity gospel is the tendency to re-make Christianity following US corporate franchise business expansion models.  Almost every televangelist we’ve investigated has “planted” additional churches in America and around the world.  Cash Luna is no different.  He spreads satellite churches into other parts of Latin America.

Investigative reporter John Russell first exposed Luna’s church-franchise business after uncovering a strange and macabre murder of one of his related church’s pastors—details revealed in the article “Cash Luna and the Murder of Pastor Claudio Martínez Morales” (in English) (“‘Cash’ Luna y el Asesinato del Pastor Claudio Martínez Morales”  —  Original article  en español…).

Russell says that Luna’s franchise member church organization is called the CIEM (Centro Internacional de Estudios Ministeriales) and each member church has to pay 10% of their revenues to CIEM as a “franchise quota.”  The CIEM supervises the churches closely in order to gain the full amounts levied by Luna.

Trinity Foundation will continue to follow this story and will publish updates as new information becomes available.

Follow this link for the original Spanish language version of this story; Univision’s impressive drone camera footage of Cash Luna’s church “Casa De Dios”; and Univision television news reports throughout about Cash Luna, Maria Piraquive, Andy Zamora and the faith business of the prosperity gospel…

 

UNIVISION article By GERARDO REYES below:

Millions of low-income Hispanics in the United States and Latin America donate 10% of their monthly income to evangelical churches. It is what is known as the tithes. The faithful or the sheep, as the shepherds often call their followers, also provide cash offerings in each service and work for free for fundraising events of the same churches.

A Univision investigation that followed some of these congregations reveals that their handling of the millions of dollars donated by parishioners is not transparent and little or nothing is known about how the money is invested.

What is apparent is the luxurious lifestyle of the pastors and their families. Private airplanes, mansions, luxury cars and expensive clothing are part of the life of these spiritual leaders, some of whom justify it by explaining that wealth is a blessing from God, a philosophy known as the prosperity gospel.

Guatemalan shepherd Carlos ‘Cash’ Luna summed it up like this:

“I was taught by an apostle, who told me, ‘Cash’ one always carries two things to church, Bible and checkbook, the Bible to learn what God will tell you, and the checkbook to worship him”.

Although they are exempt from taxes, the excessive informality with which the congregations manage their finances has led the authorities to open investigations.

GOD’S MAGNATES (1st of 3 parts)

“The dark side of Casa de Dios (House of God)”

 Sources claim that Pastor ‘Cash’ Luna took advantage of his close friendship with Marllory Chacón, convicted in the U.S. for drug trafficking.

By GERARDO REYES

Cash Luna lets his voice break in front of the microphone, remembering the humble beginnings of his church, the House of God.  The pastor recovers from this sadness slowly lifting his face in search of the spotlights of the stage to exclaim jubilantly, that thanks to his perseverance everything succeeded.

The 12.000 parishioners who listen celebrate the pastor’s words this first Sunday of October 2018 in the immense temple of Guatemala City, the largest of its kind in Latin America.

“Is it a coincidence that we now have bread and word (of God) of this size (noting the immense church building they now have) here (compared to) when we came to a single (small, humble) house?” asks Luna claiming all their achievements are a product of his tireless spirit of service to the church under the hand of God.

This version of Luna’s success is incomplete for some.  Testimonies obtained by Univision point out that there was another worldlier hand that lifted the pastor and his church: that of a woman who presented herself as an investment manager in Guatemala but whose real fortune came from drug trafficking and money laundering.

Chacón, according to the sources, delivered significant amounts of money to the pastor.   She was sentenced in 2015 in the United States to 12 years in prison on charges of drug trafficking, a business she handled that ran along the length and breadth of Central America.  She was known as the Queen of the South.  Although the case records are to a great degree under summary concealment until a future date, the released documents do not mention Luna’s name.

Meetings with Chacón

Chacón’s organization was infiltrated around 2010 by the (US) Drug Enforcement Agency—DEA.  Colombian pilot Jorge Mauricio Herrera, who says he worked transporting cocaine for a powerful cartel in his country, told Univision that he infiltrated Chacón’s organization under instructions from the DEA.

According to Herrera, Luna was present at the first meeting he had with Chacón in mid-2010 in Guatemala. This and other encounters were recorded by him with a video camera given him by the DEA which he wore camouflaged on a button of his shirt, he explained.

“They were basically talking about money deliveries because Pastor ‘Cash’ Luna said they needed to start building and advancing because the work was on the foundations,” Herrera said.

According to the pilot, Luna was close to Chacón.

“The type [Luna], believe me he was Marllory’s right hand […] He was Marllory’s advisor. He is a man, for me, a manipulator,” explained Herrera.

The pilot clarified that Luna was not interfering in matters of drug trafficking but that the pastor was well acquainted with what business Chacón was in and that he received money from her.

“He knew that a drug pilot was coming to talk to them, he knew there was an organization, he knew that the other person with me was a partner, he knew Marllory was a drug dealer. He knew absolutely everything,” said Herrera.

At the time of the meetings that describes Herrera, Chacón was a thriving drug trafficker of Central America.  During court testimony for the United States against two Guatemalan brothers accused of drug trafficking, she explained that she assumed her husband’s drug business after he was arrested in 2002.

“I had my own workers, I had my own cocaine suppliers in Colombia, and I had my own buyers who were the Mexican cartels,” Chacón said.

The prosecutor asked how much money she had laundered for the cartels. She said more than 200 million dollars.

Infiltrated

A document of the case of Chacón in Miami, prepared by the district attorney’s office, gives an account of a Colombian informant, only identified as CS1, who attended a meeting at the residence of Chacón in Guatemala City at the end of 2010.

During that meeting, the informant asked her if she could make the (smuggling) infrastructure available in Honduras in order to land with a shipment of 800 kilos of cocaine, the prosecution said.

The document describes what was captured by the video.

Chacón is seen and heard on video using two cell phones to coordinate the receipt of the shipment,” says the document.  “Chacón gave instructions on the phone for tracking specifications, and how much fuel was necessary to supply (the planes),” he adds.

Herrera claims he’s the informant who recorded that meeting. The DEA does not disclose any information about its confidential sources. In a memorandum addressed to a U.S. immigration judge, Herrera explained his infiltration in the organization and said that Miami lawyer Joaquin Perez put him in touch with DEA agent Paul Cohen. Perez told Univision that he facilitated Herrera’s contact with the DEA, but gave no details. A Miami DEA spokesperson said that this organization “is not going to comment on the case.”

In 2010, when the covert operation that culminated with the delivery of Chacón to the United States authorities was advancing, the building project of the Temple of the House of God continued.

The impressive coliseum in the form of a Holy-Spirit-dove with a capacity for 12.000 spectators cost 45 million dollars, according to Luna when he told the BBC. The temple performs two large services on Sunday with a massive display of light and sound technology.  It was inaugurated in 2013 by (former) president Otto Pérez, who is serving a sentence on charges of corruption.  Luna has said that the temple was built with contributions from its faithful.

At the end of the religious service on October 7th, Univision requested an interview with Luna through its spokesman Marly de Armas, letting him know about their interest in knowing the origin of church funds.  She told us that the pastor would be very busy for the next two months, which would make it almost impossible for him to accept the interview. Based on the declarations of the sources interviewed, Univision sent Luna a questionnaire with 26 questions, including some asking for his version of the relationship with Chacón.  More than three weeks later, Armas replied:

“We regret that you have been deceived in good faith by an unreliable source, since the information you claim to have received from that person is false.”

Sacks of Money

Another person close to the Chacón family, but who asked not to be identified, told Univision that he took cash to Luna’s house on the orders of Chacón.

“It was half a sack,” the source said, explaining that it was a bag of felt used for transporting valuables.  The bags contained dollars and he delivered them in a place that was known as the “House of Horses,” he added.

According to the source, Luna constantly asked Chacón for money, which she disliked.

“That son of the great p… said, every day he wants more,” the source recalled what Chacón said.

Chacón and Luna shared the same entrance to their homes in Guatemala City, as Univision was able to verify through the images of a drone. It is a piece of land south of the city near the highway to El Salvador where there are only both residences, separated by less than fifty meters and surrounded by an imposing wall.

“They had the same gate but used different intercoms,” the source explained.

Herrera also remembers that, according to him, the first meeting with Chacón was in the the woman’s house. The pilot described the residence as an “extraordinary mansion” surrounded by a zoo “in the style of Pablo Escobar”. He was struck, he explained, that outside the house, in the open air, fragrance atomizers were intermittently activated to neutralize the smell of animal excrement.

“We arrived to the front entry, there was tremendous security. After we passed a first ring of safety, we were locked between two sets of bars,” said Herrera, “the first to give permission to enter was Mr. Cash Luna. He gave his authorization and we entered.”

Lifestyle

The real name of ‘Cash’ Luna is Carlos. The charismatic pastor of 56 years has explained that the reason people ended up calling him ‘Cash’ was because he could not pronounce his name correctly as a child and instead of Carlos said ‘Cash’. His critics have said that it is a name that perfectly fits he and his family’s sophisticated lifestyle in one of the poorest countries in Central America.

His fortune has been a constant object of criticism and suspicion. Luna, 56 years old, travels in a Cessna Citation with American registration (N-200LH). It was acquired in September 2014 under Glory Wings 3, a company registered in Delaware, the paradise of corporate anonymity in the United States. Next, he transferred it to Casa de Dios and finally registered it under a trust of the Bank of Utah that does not reveal the owner’s names. In an interview with the BBC network, Luna said the plane is owned by the church. A person familiar with the transaction, who asked not to be identified, explained that the aircraft was purchased for $2 million. After the purchase, Luna made some improvements for about $250,000 dollars and painted a biblical passage reference “Mark XII” on one of the turbines.

In the last six months Luna has used the plane to travel to Colombia and Mexico. In these countries the pastor presented campaigns on stage platforms known as Nights of Glory attended by thousands of followers in which he imparts controversial healing blessings to the sick.

Many of Luna’s fans don’t seem to be worried about his lifestyle. Robin Martinez, who was a photographer for the congregation, told Univision that what is important is the message that God sends through the pastor.

“If he misuses the tithe (people’s donations) he will realize that, but I go to the word that transformed me and that he gave me,” said Martínez who now does reporting on a bicycle in Guatemala City. “I can’t just put my eyes on money management,” he added.

The Delivery

Herrera, the Colombian pilot, said he had decided to work with the DEA because he knew that the entity was keeping tabs on his boss, Daniel “The Madman” Barrera, and sooner or later would catch up with him. His (Herrera’s) work at that time consisted of smuggling cocaine shipments in executive planes to Central America and Africa from runways in Venezuela, where he said he had the protection of the Governments of Presidents Hugo Chávez and Nicolás Maduro.

“I believe that 90% of Colombia’s cartels moved to Venezuela, all of them. We met many there in restaurants working for different groups,” recalled Herrera.

According to Herrera, Cohen, the DEA’s supervisory agent, approved the infiltration operation after the pilot explained Chacón’s power and importance in Central America.

“Marllory (Chacón) was the new drug trafficker of a new era and was even above “Chapo” Guzman, says Herrera.

The infiltration operation into Chacón’s organization was so effective, Herrera said, that he did not have to spend a single day in federal prison. Public records consulted by Univision do not show any charges for drug trafficking against him.  Other sources familiar with his passage through the drug cartels confirmed to Univision that Herrera was a discreet and daring pilot. According to them, he flew dangerous routes from airports on the Venezuelan coast to Guinea, West Africa, with planes that had to refuel in mid-air.

In an interview last July in front of Univision cameras, Herrera explained that his relationship with Cohen was complicated because the agent withdrew him from the operation in Guatemala without any explanation. Herrera questioned that the DEA had not at least interrogated Pastor Luna.  After his relationship was broken with the DEA, the pilot was left in a migratory limbo.

Less than two weeks after the Univision interview, ICE agents broke into his Miami residence and transferred him to the Krome detention center. On October 31st he was deported to Colombia where he fears for his life.

Transparency: What’s a 990?

Our website now has a link to the easy to operate 990 finder here…

https://trinityfi.org/non-profit-lookup/

Donors would like to believe their money is going to organizations that take the least amount of money out for administrative purposes and utilize the majority of it to directly meet real charitable needs.  How can we know?

The IRS form 990 is a good start.  Among its good points:  donors can know the salaries of all of the board members and the highest paid individuals in the organization, how much the highest paid independent contractors are making, what countries grant money may be going to, whether or not the organization is funded by public donations or just a few wealthy individuals, how much they are spending on travel, how much on housing, etc., the detail list is long.

Every non-profit in the country except churches and church related organizations have to file the 990.  Traditionally, mainline denominations have maintained reasonable oversight over their member churches for the most part, but as religious non-profit organizations run by a single person or family at the top have multiplied, there is little to no accountability and zero transparency.

 

Where opacity exists, the temptation also exists to bend and break IRS guidelines.  Independent mega-churches and ministries calling themselves churches in this single person/family category have spread around the globe and as they proliferate, the large mansions, private jets, luxury cars, and opulent lifestyles have mushroomed.

 

Opacity comes in many different forms:  shell corporations, gated communities, requiring staff to sign non-disclosure agreements, for-profits feeding off of non-profit orgs owned by the same ones running the non-profit, and the most ironic—church status.

 

Not having to file a form 990 or reveal any other financial information of any significance (except salaries to the IRS privately) is a huge opportunity for profiteering, luxurious living using the organization as one’s own piggy bank, and even money laundering.

 

We could provide hundreds of examples but one will suffice to illustrate the piggy bank scenario.  When she was alive, Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN) vice-president Jan Crouch resided a long while at #1 Yorkshire, Newport Beach, CA, an opulent mansion purchased for $5.6M by the Trinity Christian Center of San Marcos  (TCCSM), listed as the TBN corporation’s church— but in reality, another shell company operated by TBN’s founding family (we tried for years to find an actual church with that name but never could).

 

Churches have the privilege of providing tax-free housing for their pastors, who traditionally have received more meager incomes than most and could use the extra boost, but it’s unknown whether the palatial mansion was used as Jan’s “parsonage” (tax-free housing) and no public financial information is available, because the actual owner, TCCSM is a church.

 

Believers might do well to remember what Jesus said about transparency, “For nothing is hidden that will not be revealed, and nothing concealed that will not be made known and brought to light.”[1]

Forbes Magazine’s Peter Reilly recently reported on a petition and a book by Reverend Frank B Jones the pastor of Pentecostal Temple in Compton, CA calling for churches to start filing the IRS form 990, which exposes salaries and where the money goes in general. The book, Stop the Prosperity Preachers, takes aim at the lack of financial transparency by churches.

Filing the 990 can be a difficult task that can take weeks to complete but it’s a step toward transparency that we encourage larger churches and ministries to take.

 

 

 

[1] NET version, Luke 8:17

OVER $ 1.2 BILLION: FCC allows Christian NON-PROFIT Television Stations to sell…

How would you like to own a slice of air and suddenly it’s worth tens of millions?

The cost for Americans’ insatiable demand for instant internet use just went up a few notches, or maybe more than just a few… The various “airwaves” licensed to television broadcasters and purchased for millions decades ago are now worth billions.

In recent years, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has recognized a need by AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile, and other large cell phone or internet service providers to gain larger slivers of a rapidly disappearing spectrum “pie” for portable and non-portable cellular device usage. Consequently, the FCC has organized and conducted a number of heavy-duty auctions enticing TV station owners to sell portions of spectrum they own and use for broadcasting.

The US public was largely uninformed and, for the most part, left out of this process; a process which, no doubt will show up as an increase in our phone and internet bills soon enough. “Christian” television providers—think private jets, multiple large mansions with Italian marble floors, five-star European hotels and restaurants, expensive rare wines, yachts, etc.—have profited hugely to the tune of $1.2 BILLION.

The ubiquitous Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN) has profited far above a slew of others, such as as Lesea, Morning-Star, Maranatha, Good life, Daystar, etc. TBN and its affiliates have taken in a whopping $634.3 million dollars so far from its own sale of television broadcast spectrum.

In the process, they’ve actually lost few if any of their TV stations in audience markets around the country due to the large increase in the number of digital slots made available with the switch from analog to digital, high-definition television. Viewers will simply change channels.

Now, what are they going to do with the money? Will any of it go to real charity—such as homelessness, hunger, and medical needs?

Here’s a list our volunteer investigator Barry Bowen compiled from the FCC:

WCLJ-TV – Indianapolis, IN – Trinity Broadcasting of Indiana, Inc. — $18,759,808 (TBN)

WHMB-TV – Indianapolis, IN – LeSEA Broadcasting of Indianapolis, Inc. — $18,325,111

WKBS-TV – Johnstown-Altoona, PA – Cornerstone Television, Inc. — $10,361,255

WAGV – Knoxville, TN – Living Faith Ministries, Inc. — $7,536,418

WTLW – Lima, OH – American Christian Television Services, Inc. — $7,697,376

WVCY-TV – Milwaukee, WI – VCY America Inc. — $76,342,409

WTBY-TV – New York, NY – Trinity Broadcasting of New York, Inc. — $162,402,181 (TBN)

WACX – Orlando-Daytona Beach-Melbourne, FL – Associated Christian Television System, Inc. — $20,310,061

WTGL – Orlando-Daytona Beach-Melbourne, FL – Good Life Broadcasting, Inc. — $20,394,122

WFMZ-TV – Philadelphia, PA – Maranatha Broadcasting Company, Inc. — $140,482,163

WGTW-TV -Philadelphia, PA -Trinity Christian Center of Santa Ana, Inc.– $80,807,629 (TBN)

WDWL – Puerto Rico – Teleadoracion Christian Network, Inc. – $7,780,506

WHFL-CD – Raleigh-Durham, NC – Free Life Ministries, Inc. — $2,721,376

WRAY-TV – Raleigh-Durham, NC – Radiant Life Ministries, Inc. — $62,419,828

WFFP-TV – Roanoke-Lynchburg, VA – Morning Star Broadcasting, LLC — $23,182,528

WNYI – Syracuse, NY – word of god fellowship, inc. — $2,319,390

WFGC – West Palm Beach-Ft. Pierce, FL – Christian Television of Palm Beach County, Inc. – $3,359,483

Total amount: $1,223,872,598

Postscript: We regularly illustrate the wealthy lifestyles of televangeslists, Christian TV broadcasters, etc. For a small example of how the money gets spent, read these 2 Orange County Register articles to view 1) a mansion belonging to TBN and occupied by the late Paul Crouch, Sr. which is currently on the market for $4.35M and 2) a separate mansion belonging to TBN and occupied by the late Jan Crouch which sold for $5.15M in December 2016.

Bizarre Church We Investigated is Accused of Slavery

The Word of Faith Fellowship (WOFF) we investigated in the 90’s has recently been accused of enticing Brazilian nationals here to be used as slave labor.  16 Brazilians told the AP (read herethey were lured here with promises of learning English, gaining a college education, seeing a bit of the US, and improving their relationship with God, yet were forced to work as slaves.
Our investigator, who spent months undercover inside this church during the mid 90s and underwent 11 exorcisms while there, also remembers that fellow congregants were required to work for senior church leaders.
Ex-members interviewed during that time period by the Trinity Foundation related similar stories of being packed into suburban homes turned into communal compounds and forced into minimum-wage jobs, working for church leaders.
A local policeman, interviewed by Inside Edition at the time, told of helping a foreign national escape and being met at the airport by church leaders attempting to prevent the youngster from leaving the country.

This Wednesday, March 29, 2017 photo shows Ana Albuquerque, 25, during an interview in Belo Horizonte, Brazil. Albuquerque traveled to the Word of Faith Fellowship church in Spindale, N.C., from Brazil 11 times over the course of more than a decade, starting at age 5 with her parents. Over time, she said she witnessed so much screaming and shoving to “expunge devils” that she began to see the behavior as normal. Silvia Izquierdo AP Photo

 

This undated photo provided in 2017 by a former member of the Word of Faith Fellowship from Brazil shows founder Jane Whaley with children at the church in Spindale, N.C. Members visit the Spindale compound from around the world, but Brazil is the biggest source of foreign labor and Whaley and her top lieutenants visit the Brazilian outposts several times a year, the Associated Press has found. AP Photo)

This Wednesday, March 29, 2017 photo shows people at the Word of Faith Fellowship church in Sao Joaquim de Bicas, Brazil. An Associated Press investigation has found that Word of Faith Fellowship used its two church branches in Latin America’s largest nation to siphon a steady flow of young laborers who came on tourist and student visas to its 35-acre compound in rural Spindale, N.C. Silvia Izquierdo AP Photo

 

In this Wednesday, March 29, 2017 photo, Ana Albuquerque explains how she was spanked during an interview in Belo Horizonte, Brazil. Bent over a desk, Albuquerque says church founder Jane Whaley and another member repeatedly spanked her with a flat piece of wood while screaming that she was “unclean” and possessed by the devil when she was 16. Silvia Izquierdo AP Photo

 

This February 2016 photo shows Andre Oliveira in Spindale, N.C. When Oliveira answered the call to leave his Word of Faith Fellowship congregation in Brazil to move to the mother church in North Carolina at the age of 18, his passport and money were confiscated by church leaders _ for safekeeping, he said he was told. Trapped in a foreign land, he said he was forced to work 15 hours a day, usually for no pay, first cleaning warehouses for the secretive evangelical church and later toiling at businesses owned by senior ministers. Mitch Weiss AP Photo

TODD COONTZ INDICTED

 

Channel Nine News of Charlotte, NC recently broadcast the news that Todd Coontz has been indicted by the federal government on several charges of tax fraud.  The Trinity Foundation began working with investigative reporter Jim Bradley in December 2012 to help provide information on Todd Coontz and his ministry.  Bradley’s March 2013 report on Coontz features a brief interview with Ole Anthony, President of the Trinity Foundation(view video here).  Recently Ole was interviewed by the Christian Post about our work with Bradley on that investigation and Ole’s response to the indictment (read article here).

Channel 9 June 23 news clip about Coontz’s indictment can be viewed here.

The federal indictment by the US Secret Service includes items mentioned in Bradley’s 2013 report on Coontz: that he owned a $1.38 million condo, a Ferrari, and a Maserati under his ministry’s name; and used ministry funds to pay for more than $227,000 in clothes and $140,000 at restaurants; in addition to taking luxury vacations. According to the government, Coontz owes a surplus of $326,000 in tax payments from the years 2010-2013.

Carra Crouch Lawsuit Outcome Ruled To Be Complete Responsibility of TBN

Carra Crouch received a favorable outcome in court on Monday on a case which took eleven years to go to trial!  On June 5th the court awarded Carra $2 million dollars for her pain and suffering after a sexual assault by a TBN employee.  Although initially they ruled that Jan Crouch was only 45% responsible for her pain and suffering, assigning the remainder to her mother and the assailant, that was overruled based on the fact that California law only apportions accountability in negligence claims. 

 

This was initially ruled as an intentional infliction of emotional distress because of the way that Jan Crouch reacted to her granddaughter when she told her about the assault.  Now, TBN is responsible to pay Carra the entire $2 million in damages, as reported by the Orange County Register here.

TBN’s lawyers, who have filed a total of 22 lawsuits against Carra’s sister Brittany, were once called “vexatious litigants” by a federal judge.  Having been given a chance to correct their behavior, they (view our post here) have indicated that they reserve the right to fight the decision by the judge.

TBN Found Liable for Damages to Jan Crouch’s Granddaughter

 

The granddaughter of the late TBN founder Jan Crouch was just awarded $2 million dollars in damages for emotional pain incurred from an alleged molestation and rape in 2006.  The court ruled that TBN is responsible to pay Jan Crouch’s portion of that ($900,000) because of Jan’s mishandling of her granddaughter’s claim of abuse that happened at a telethon by a TBN employee.  We are deeply disturbed to see this family involved in so much litigation with one another and saddened to see them in so much pain.  (Read the New York Times Article on the Trial here)