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An Indianapolis pastor charged this week with ripping off money intended for Indiana's poor is under investigation for receiving disability payments for which he may not have been eligible.

Rochell Johnson reportedly received more than $20,000 a year in benefits while holding two jobs -- as pastor of Greater Faith Missionary Baptist Church and bus driver for Lawrence Township Schools.

According to court records, he received the money based on conditions including sickle cell anemia and congestive heart failure.

Roger Rayl, a spokesman for the Marion County prosecutor's office, confirmed that Prosecutor Carl Brizzi has been told the Social Security Administration is investigating Johnson's eligibility. Rayl said no results of the inquiry have been received.

A phone message to the Social Security Administration was not returned. John Schwartz, attorney for Johnson, declined to comment.

Johnson's wife, Denise, also faces charges of theft and welfare fraud over allegations the couple wrongfully obtained food stamp benefits between June 2003 and July 2005. They allegedly committed the fraud despite a combined annual income of more than $100,000.

The Johnsons and the church's associate pastor, the Rev. Shedrick Footman, are accused of working with two former employees of the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration to illegally obtain the assistance money. Eight other people were charged in connection with the alleged scheme.

The two ex-employees, who were criminally charged in June, allegedly provided church members with electronic cards that could be used to receive cash or food stamps.
Footman has been in trouble before.

Court records show there have been four small-claims judgments against him, and he has yet to pay about $10,000 he was found to owe.

Footman was criminally charged twice before the recent charges, accused in 1997 of check deception and in 2003 of check fraud.

On the first charge, he entered into a diversion agreement through which he avoided having a conviction on his record. The 2003 charge was dismissed after a witness failed to show up at his trial.

A woman who says she was victimized by Footman says he won her over with a good sales pitch.

Cheryl Newsom wanted to have her house renovated, and Footman, who operated a construction business, offered to do it. He drove her around to homes that he said he had rehabilitated. Newsom was impressed and hired Footman.

She took him to be a man of his word because he was a man of God.

"You put your trust in them because they're supposed to be doing it right," Newsom says. "They're supposed to be an honest person."

But Newsom said Footman fell far short of finishing the job, costing her and her husband thousands of dollars.

"He probably did about 10, 15 percent of what he was supposed to do," she said, adding that she complained to the Better Business Bureau and Indiana attorney general's office.

Melvin Earl Allen was in a hurry to get renovation work done on his rental property and said he found Footman persuasive. "He came here with a smile and talked to me. Talked like he knew what he was doing."

Allen's wife, Joan, remembers that Footman came off as a quality person.

"The way he talked to you, it was like a disciple of Jesus or something," she said.
When the work lagged behind schedule, Melvin Allen tried in vain to contact Footman.
Allen went to small-claims court and received a judgment against Footman, but he says Footman never refunded his money.

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"I didn't get no service. I didn't get my money back. Nothing."
 
Comments:
Blogger dead__fish said...
The fact that he was a "MAN OF GOD" should have been the tip off! I'm 48 years old, and EVERY SINGLE TIME I got ripped off, assaulted and abused in my life, it was by a so-called christian! In fact, we just wona small claims case against our former contracter who ripped us off for $7000.00. Just before he took our money and walked off the job he was bragging to us about what a great christian he was! I predicted to my husband that night, that he would find some way to rip us off! sure enough. Next time I will go out of my way to find an athiest to do my remodel work! Oh, and bTW, the bastard never paid us back, even AFTER we won the lawsuit!
I live in Indiana (Jesus Land). I'm surrounded by these wackos! My kids and I have a very small group of friends, Asians and Athiests! Our Asian friends are always being told that they are going to hell because they are Buddists! They think it's pretty funny!


Blogger Bentley said...
I can certainly relate to that dead__fish, I was in the service industry for 15 years and every time a person told me up front that they were a Christian, I always got screwed, I caught them in so many lies, I got to were if they told me up front that they were a Chistian, I would tell them I was just too busy, a lie yes, but I'd had enough, sometimes I would double my prices and hope that they would call someone else.

Most of the time I would have to threaten them with a day in court before they would pay me, and then they would try to make me think I was being cruel or mean, usually we were on unfriendly terms afterwards, and most people that held no claim usually paid me up front in advance, some nonclaimers, paid me in full before I started working for them.

I believe since Christianity is based on lies and fantasy that the Christians are not living in a real state of mind. And no matter what they do, they know that they can run back to Jesus and get instant forgiveness especially from all the church members.


Anonymous Religious Economist said...
Many religious people grow up, being taught that they don't need money, they need to rely on the people around them for things. Its a huge pyramid labor scheme. Sure, it works, if everyone pitches in equally, isn't that the dilemna. Seems these type religions, don't agree with the economic structure of the U.S.

Bartering went out long ago, but religions have their own little micro-economic systems within the U.S. economy. Faith based initiatives, NFP tax exemption status, and many other forms of control that allow them to disconnect with the rest of society. Sure, its attractive to those who don't have jobs, and really don't want to work in society, but, of course, that means they don't have a paycheck either. So, when they do have to interact with society to "pay" for something, it appears to cause a little confusion.

Perhaps, a true christian would consider "love brokering" an equatible payment option for services rendered Ben :-)


Anonymous freedy said...
I was a painting contractor in the 90's.I painted an apartment complex for a christian fundementalist and never got paid,...not one red cent.


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