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Randall W. Harding sang in the choir at Crossroads Christian Church in Corona, Calif., and donated part of his conspicuous wealth to its ministries. In his business dealings, he underscored his faith by naming his investment firm JTL, or "Just the Lord." Pastors and churchgoers alike entrusted their money to him.

By the time Harding was unmasked as a fraud, he and his partners had stolen more than $50 million from their clients, and Crossroads became yet another cautionary tale in what investigators say is a worsening problem plaguing the nation's churches.

Billions of dollars has been stolen in Christian religion-related fraud in recent years, according to the North American Securities Administrators Association, a group of state officials who work to protect investors.

Between 1984 and 1989, about $450 million was stolen in Christian-related scams, the association says. In its latest count - from 1998 to 2001 - the toll had risen to $2 billion. Rip-offs have only become more common since.

"The size and the scope of the fraud is getting larger," said Patricia Struck, president of the securities association and administrator of the Wisconsin Department of Financial Institutions, Division of Securities. "The scammers are getting smarter and the investors don't ask enough questions because of the feeling that they can be safe in church."

Cases in recent years show just how vulnerable religious communities are.

Lambert Vander Tuig, a member of Saddleback Church in Lake Forest Calif., ran a real estate scam that bilked investors out of $50 million, the Securities and Exchange Commission says. His salesmen presented themselves as faithful Christians and distributed copies of "The Purpose Driven Life," by Saddleback pastor Rick Warren, according to the SEC. Warren and his church had no knowledge of Vander Tuig's activities, says the SEC.

At Daystar Assembly of God Church in Prattville, Ala., a congregant persuaded church leaders and others to invest about $3 million in real estate a few years ago, promising some profits would go toward building a megachurch. The Daystar Assembly was swindled and lost its building.

And in a dramatically broader scam, leaders of Greater Ministries International, based in Tampa, Fla., defrauded thousands of people of half a billion dollars by promising to double money on investments that ministry officials said were blessed by God. Several of the con men were sentenced in 2001 to more than a decade each in prison.

"Many of these frauds are, on their face, very credible and legitimate appearing," said Randall Lee, director of the Pacific regional office of the SEC. "You really have to dig below the surface to understand what's going on."

Typically, a con artist will target the pastor first, by making a generous donation and appealing to the minister's desire to expand the church or its programs, according to Joseph Borg, director of the Alabama Securities Commission, who played a key role in breaking up the Greater Ministries scam.

If the pastor invests, churchgoers view it as a tacit endorsement. The con man, often promising double digit returns, will chip away at resistance among church members by suggesting they can donate part of their earnings to the congregation, Borg says.

"Most folks think `I'm going to invest in some overseas deal or real estate deal and part of that money is going to the church and I get part. I don't feel like I'm guilty of greed,'" Borg says.

If a skeptical church member openly questions a deal, that person is often castigated for speaking against a fellow Christian.

Ole Anthony of the Trinity Foundation Inc. in Dallas, which investigates fraud and televangelism, partly blames the churches themselves for the problem. Anthony contends that the "prosperity gospel" - which teaches that the truly faithful are rewarded with wealth in this life - is creeping into mainstream churches.

Chuck Crites, a former member of Crossroads Church, learned firsthand how effective con artists can be.

The businessman was swindled out of $500,000 by Harding in a Ponzi scheme, which uses money from newer investors to pay off older ones.

Crites said Harding, who pleaded guilty last year to wire fraud and money laundering, boasted about helping fund a new Christian high school for Crossroads and hired a music pastor from the megachurch as a sales agent. "At one point he even told me how much money he had given to the church that year," Crites said.

Harding was nabbed with the help of Barry Minkow, who was himself convicted of fraud years ago. Minkow eventually became a pastor in San Diego and started the Fraud Discovery Institute, which is dedicated to investigating scams.

Crites is putting his money toward a new fraud-awareness kit for churches and other groups that Minkow is developing.

"It made me angry at how people are abusing the trust that exists in church communities," Crites said.

Investigators say all denominations are at risk, but the most susceptible communities are ones where members are deeply engaged in church activities, such as service programs and small group prayer, giving con artists plenty of chance to ingratiate themselves with congregants.

Often, perpetrators are so successful building an image as good Christians that churchgoers won't cooperate with law enforcement authorities even after the crime is revealed.

"Money has a way of blinding objectivity, even for we who are believers," Minkow says.

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Anonymous Anonymous said...
Thanks for sharing.

'Fleecing the flock' can go both ways,no doubt about it!

Somebody should write a book covering both topics. The only problem is, such a tome could likely fill a small library!

Personally, I have witnessed the usage of religion as an entry point for business people to have easier access to assets, including real estate dealings involving millions of dollars.


Anonymous Anonymous said...
Are people just now finding this out? I've known religions were a fraud for over 50 years.


Blogger Onanite said...
It all comes down to greed. People don't want the details they just want the cash.

Churches for years have been preaching that the more you give, the more God will bless you. I called it the Jesus ponzi scam.

Onanite


Anonymous Anonymous said...
I wish I knew who to post an news article it is call Evangelicals recruit voters for the republican party headed by James Dobson founder of Focus On The Family. Website is at

http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060817/LIFESTYLE04/608170342/1022/POLITICS


Anonymous Anonymous said...
I am curious to understand why those that claim they were Christians believe they ever were and what turned you around and made you feel like Christianity is now a sham. I would like for someone to explain to me what you believe happens to you after physical death on this planet. Are you comfortable with what is going to happen to you? Are you 100% sure in that belief? What is the express purpose of your life on this planet? I don't post to create an argument just to understand.


Blogger J. C. Samuelson said...
"I am curious to understand why those that claim they were Christians believe they ever were..."

First off, your language here gives you away. You, like many of your misguided brethren (and formerly, like many of us), think that those who "fall away" were never Christians to begin with. This view not only defies logic, but also demonstrates the believer's lack of understanding of the Bible.

The reason this view defies logic can be shown by asking the question, "How can someone who never took part 'fall away'?" That is, if your view is correct, then we are not apostates or heretics having never been a part of your faith.

As for the Bible, the theme of apostasy is quite common in the Pauline epistles. Re-read Paul's letter to the Romans, particularly Romans 14:15 in which he admonishes the believer not to cause his brother to fall. Also, 1 Corinthians, particularly 1 Cor. 8:11. The word 'perish' as used by Paul means the opposite of 'saved.' Galations is full of references to apostasy. In particular, Gal. 5:4 illustrates this nicely. Finally, the book of Hebrews is almost entirely about the danger of falling away from the faith.

If your Bible says Christians can leave the faith, whence cometh thy doctine?

"...and what turned you around and made you feel like Christianity is now a sham."

I'm sure everyone has different reasons, or shades of the same, but for me what really did it was - hold on to your hat - it started when I actually read the Bible!

"...explain to me what you believe happens to you after physical death on this planet."

Our bodies decay, entering another state of existence (dirt, dust, and eventually something else depending on natural processes). I'd like to think there's some cosmic consciousness that my "spirit" will join, but I don't worship that idea or hold out hope for it.

"Are you comfortable with what is going to happen to you? Are you 100% sure in that belief?"

Yes to the first question. As for the second, I know with 100% certainty that my body will decay and enter another state of existence entirely unlike that of a human being. As for "spirit" well, I guess I'll find out if there is one. Or not. Either way, I'm comfortable with it.

"What is the express purpose of your life on this planet?"

By "express purpose" I assume you mean one that is set in stone, ordained by god, etc. Well, I don't have an "express" purpose. Like our vocations, purpose changes over time. It evolves. Early in my life, my purpose was to learn and grow. At this stage of my life it is to love and teach my daughter, and to be a good parent, friend, brother, and son. Later, it will likely be different.


Anonymous boomSLANG said...
Anonymous X-ian pondered: "I am curious to understand why those that(who) claim they were Christians believe they ever were..."

Simple---we believe we were formerly Christians, thus, making us "Ex-Christians", the SAME WAY a woman who was formerly married and who is now an "Ex-wife", believes she was "really" a "wife".

Now my question to you: Anon--or any Christian---what kind of result do you think you would get if you were to barge in on a battered-wife support group meeting and tell a woman who was emotionally abused by her husband---a man who told her such things as, "You need me, bitch!...you are NOTHING without ME!"...and things like, "if you ever try to leave me?...I'll kill you!"---what kind of response would you honestly expect if you told such a person that they were never really a "real wife"? Better yet, would you even make such an idiotic condescending comment? Think about it.

Anon's question continued: "....and what turned you around and made you feel like Christianity is now a sham(?)"

Two things: First, I actually opened the bible and read it, and what I found was a lot of things that just didn't make logical sense. Secondly--I analyzed all the same thing(s) that lead me to believe that Islam, Buddhism, Scientology, etc., were all false religions, and then I took into consideration that if all those other religions that didn't make logical sense could be wrong, then my religion could be wrong too. It was a long process, actually. It didn't happen overnight.

Anon inquired: "I would like for someone to explain to me what you believe happens to you after physical death on this planet."

Provided the brain is healthy and functioning properly---"thought" is generated in the brain. Nowhere else. The lower animal's thoughts are limited to survival instinct and all of the involuntary things that keep the organism alive. The human animal's brain performs those same functions, however, we have self-awareness and the ability to reflect, and reason. When the lower organism dies, everything that took place in the brain ceases.

Now back to your question---when we die, everything that took place in the brain, INCLUDING self-awareness..i.e.."consciousness" ceases, as well. There is a complete cessation of thought--- similar to being under anesthesia. Much in the same way we don't "experience" sleep, we won't experience our death. Mind you, all of the scientific data we have today, supports this hypothosis.

Anon asks: "Are you comfortable with what is going to happen to you?"

No, not entirely. As for death, I as just described, that will be something that I won't even experience, thus, nothing to fear at all. However, being as that I'm alive this second-- I don't think 60, 70, 80 years is long enough. Also, I'm not thrilled that I won't see my friends and family ever again......notwithstanding, I know that just because I "feel" a certain way about it, it is NOT going to change the reality of it. This is in contrast to those who let their emotions dictate their belief about "death".

Anon asked: "Are you 100% sure in that belief?"

Am I sure that I believe it?..is that the question? Yes. I'm I sure that THAT belief is absolutely true? No...no one, including you, can have absolute knowledge rearding such a thing. However, from what we know using the scientific method, the materialist's idea regarding death is more likely to be true than the dualist's. There is zero objective evidence this thing called a "soul". None.

Anon asked: "What is the express purpose of your life on this planet?"

Whatever I MAKE that purpose. I would rather live only 50 years never having accomplished every single thing I wanted to do, than to live infinitely, bored out of my frickin' skull(pun). In other words, time doesn't give purpose to life.

Anon said: "I don't post to create an argument just to understand."

To truely "understand" someone elses POV, you need to temporarily forget about your own, and it's rare to see a religionist do that. We'll see.


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