Misappropriation of funds (Project for an Assembly Hall in Guadalajara)

by avaddohn94 49 Replies latest watchtower scandals

  • frankiespeakin
    frankiespeakin

    I recall that a similar situation happen in Spain. The spanish JWs donated money to a branch or printing facility and then the Governing Body moved out everything some to some place else. You can only do this for so long until the cat is out of the bag and the gig is up. There maybe a sucker born every minute but even at that rate the Governing Body is long over due to reach a breaking point among the gulible.

    search thru these:

    http://www.jehovahs-witness.net/jw/friends/175871/1/Spanish-JWs-Upset-Over-Bethel-Move#.U0ohv_ldUWY

    n April 1, 2009 a letter was sent from the Governing Body of Jehovah’s Witnesses to congregations in Spain informing them that the printing, shipping, and storage of Watchtower publications would be discontinued at the Madrid Branch office. The letter expressed confidence that the Spanish Witnesses would, despite the move, continue to generously support the world wide work and ends with an appeal to remain united under the direction of the Witness leadership. At a glance, this story may seem like a non-issue, perhaps, just another example of reorganization and consolidation within a multinational corporation; however, the dissolution of the printing branch has caused considerable hard feelings among some of Jehovah’s Witnesses in Spain. To understand the reason we must first look at the history behind the branch office and external factors that some feel prompted this abrupt move. Early in their history, Jehovah’s Witnesses began printing their trademark Watchtower magazines and associated books and tracts in-house at their ”Bethel” headquarters in Brooklyn, New York. As the religious organization grew and expanded overseas, “branch offices” and printing facilities were established in different locations across the globe to support the preaching work in those territories. Such was the case in Spain in 1980, where the need for a local printing facility was explained at Spanish district conventions of Jehovah’s Witnesses. At the time, expansion at the headquarters in New York left the Watch Tower corporation without the finances to build offices and a printing facility in Spain and so the Spanish Witnesses were solicited to follow the example of the Israelites in bringing their gold, silver, and valuable items to Moses in order to build the Tabernacle. ( Exodus 35:5-9 ) The 1983 Yearbook of Jehovah’s Witnesses, reports the generous way that the Spanish Witnesses responded to this appeal.: At the close of the conventions, people were lining up to contribute their jewels, gold and silver rings and bracelets, so that these could be turned into cash to finance the new project. At the convention in San Sebastián in the Basque country, an elderly sister handed over a heavy gold bracelet. When asked if she was sure that she wanted to donate such a valuable item, she answered: “Brother, it is going to do far more good paying for a new Bethel than it will on my wrist!” With the unsparing financial support of the Spanish Witnesses a new branch office and printing facility was later constructed in Madrid. Being financed within the country, this new Bethel was a source of pride for the Spanish Witnesses. Many would make special trips just to tour the facility. Now some are hurt to watch as the printing presses that they gave their precious heirlooms to buy are shipped to Germany and the Bethel that they sacrificed their savings to build is anticipated to be sold, with the proceeds of the sale returning back to the US Watch Tower corporation that was originally unable to finance its construction. This situation might not be near as bitter if it were not for the events that transpired in Spain that some feel to be the impetus behind this relocation. In December 2007, after an investigation , the Social Security office of Spain issued a ruling that the Madrid Bethel was required to provide a pension for those who worked in its printing facilities. Historically, Bethel workers receive no such benefits. Upon joining the Bethel “family” they take a vow of poverty and are inducted into a religious order, not unlike a Catholic monastery. While at Bethel they receive a small monthly stipend for personal items in addition to room and board. Though they are working in a modern printing operation, they are viewed as religious volunteers and have no workers’ compensation benefits or pension to support them, if injury, health, age, or other circumstances should force them out of their Bethel “home”. In recent years, the Watch Tower has seen a fair share of corporate downsizing. This has been particularly felt in the United States headquarters, which has experienced significant cutbacks within the New York Bethel family. Many men and women in their youth were encouraged to make service at Bethel a “life career”, at the expense of family, education, and a secular career. They entered Bethel with the idea that they would stay there for the rest of their life, making it their “home”. Now as older adults they are feeling the sting of cutbacks as they are asked to leave their Bethel home, starting all over again in the secular world without pensions or without having contributed toward retirement or Social Security. This is the current situation in Madrid, where it is estimated that up to 200 Bethel workers are being asked to leave without reassignment. The Spanish Social Security office’s decision to hold the Madrid Bethel responsible for providing benefits for printing factory workers and other members of the order presents a considerable financial hit in a religious organization that has already experienced hardships in tough economic times. This has caused some Spanish Witnesses to believe that the decision to relocate printing operations to another country is specifically motivated by the fiscal implications of the Social Security office’s decision, despite what the Branch Office claims about the reorganization being motivated by other factors such as simplification. The Spanish Witnesses who might normally completely trust the decisions made by the organization’s leadership have reason to be suspicious. After losing their petition against providing Social Security benefits to Bethel workers, the Spanish Branch Office of Jehovah’s Witnesses sent a letter to the local congregations announcing the new provision. In the letter, Witness leadership implies that it was they who petitioned Social Security for entry into the system in order to provide benefits. The congregations were kept in the dark about the real reason that these contested benefits were being provided to those in the religious order. A similar situation occurred in the United States in 1990. At the time, Jimmy Swaggart Ministries was in the US Supreme Court, challenging taxes assessed on publications sold by the popular televangelist. Unknown to US Witnesses, the Watch Tower, filed a “friend of the court” brief (amicus curiae) in the Swaggart Taxation case, because the ruling would open the door for taxing the Watch Tower, as Jehovah’s Witnesses went door to door selling their Watchtower magazine and associated literature. When Swaggart lost the case, the Watch Tower, quickly adopted a new “donation arrangement”, where the magzines and literature were offered without a specified cost, and a donation request was made. In a letter sent to all US congregations the Watch Tower explained the new arrangement saying, “By adopting a method of literature distribution based completely on donation, Jehovah’s people are able to greatly simplify our Bible education work and separate ourselves from those who commercialize religion.” No mention was made of the connection between the new “donation arrangement” and the Jimmy Swaggart case, and to this day, this is relatively unknown among Jehovah’s Witnesses. Similar to the way the Spanish branch handled the Social Security ruling, the US branch office spun the “donation arrangement” as a way of simplification without revealing the real reasons. The Spanish Witnesses feel slighted that the religious organization they gave their life and finances to is now treating them so carelessly. Equally they are hurt by the lack of candor and honesty coming from headquarters about the current situation. Currently the discontent among the religion are organizing and making their case that any funds coming from the sale of the Bethel facility should be go back to the ones that financed it the first place. They suggest that such money could be used in a charitable way, such as providing a retirement facility for those in their ranks that are now aging, without provision, having giving their life in service of the religion. Ironically, they are vying to provide the very care that Witness leadership itself is reluctant to give.

    http://www.jehovahs-witness.net/jw/friends/199157/1/Great-news-Bethel-in-my-country-is-closing-down#.U0ohg_ldUWY

  • joe134cd
    joe134cd

    Frankiespeaken = I just find it heart breaking for those people who gave so much to be just discarded of. That organization needs to be held to account. They just sicken me.

  • BluePill2
    BluePill2

    We must also say that the process of misappropriation is much darker and abominable than the misappropriation of funds, lets say from a company or organization. Within the frame of a religious entity it takes a deeper emotional toll on people.

    If your business partner takes funds away, uses them for another purpose and comes up with a bullshit explanation you have tools and ways to face and cope with the situation. It is clear what happened and you can take the case to court or settle the matter. You know what happened here.

    Not so much with the greedy Watchtower, that, let's not forget disguises herself as a religion. People feel helpless and simply cannot do anything against the wrongdoing, because it puts them in a position where they think that God would punish them - they are rising their hand not against the organization but against Jehovah. This takes it to another emotional level!

    That is why you will never see such things (or even pedophilia cases) being handled and properly addressed.

    In my time at the different Watchtower offices there was not even ONE case of crack down on misappropriation of funds by the "inner circle", but plenty of cases where the Service Department hounded elders and disfellowshipped them because they considered that they used funds for the "wrong purpose" (aka: not giving it to mother and instead using them to fix something at the Hall or helping some poor and even sick brother at the Hall!).

    Believe me (I was there!) the Watchtower doesn't joke around if you touch their money - for whatever reason! The other way around? No problem, the Governing Body decided so and they are Gods mouthpiece. So, shut up and swallow it.

    Just as a side note: in many countries, like South America and also Mexico the accounts are kept at the Branch - exactly because the Borg doesn't trust the local elders and fears "long fingers" in their coffers. So, they just move it internally from one account to the other, but physically they get to keep all that cash in physical bank accounts with the Watchtower name on it - ready for investment purposes and also gains of interest! It doesn't matter if the money belongs to you - as long as THEY can handle it for you, because in the meantime it becomes "play money" for them.

    Watchtower Treasury Department

  • Band on the Run
    Band on the Run

    I believe not one Witness read the paperwork. It isn't only Witnesses. I volunteered to sit on the financial committee at my church. Although I am not an accountant, I had to learn accounting principles. The committee was not reading the financial statement correctly. There are important ratios. A bunch of numbers on a page are not that revealing. The accountant was given access to the database containing the figures so changes could have been made. I suggested we consult an easy accounting book, find out what the state standards for serving on such a committee, etc. They had retirement plans, children, grandchildren, nice cars, homes, investments. I find out you can't force people to do things.

    I believe other religions do the same thing. Look at Joel Osteen. Pat Roberts. Tammy Faye and Jim.

  • frankiespeakin
    frankiespeakin

    The Jim Bakker Scandal:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Bakker

    By the early 1980s, the Bakkers had built Heritage USA in Fort Mill, South Carolina (south of Charlotte), then the third most successful theme park in the US, and a satellite system to distribute their network 24 hours a day across the country. Contributions requested from viewers were estimated to exceed $1 million a week, with proceeds to go to expanding the theme park and mission of PTL. [5] In justifying his use of the mass media, Bakker responded to inquiries by likening his use of television to Jesus's use of the amphitheater of the time. "I believe that if Jesus were alive today, he would be on TV," Bakker said.

    In their success, the Bakkers took conspicuous consumption to an unusual level for a non-profit organization. According to Frances FitzGerald in an April 1987 New Yorkerarticle, "They epitomized the excesses of the 1980s; the greed, the love of glitz, and the shamelessness; which in their case was so pure as to almost amount to a kind of innocence." Detractors often said that PTL stood for Pass The Loot.

    Scandals [ edit ]

    PTL's fund raising activities between 1984–1987 underwent scrutiny by The Charlotte Observer newspaper, eventually leading to criminal charges against Jim Bakker. From 1984 to 1987, Bakker and his PTL associates sold $1,000 "lifetime memberships," which entitled buyers to a three-night stay annually at a luxury hotel at Heritage USA. According to the prosecution at Bakker's later fraud trial, tens of thousands of memberships had been sold, but only one 500-room hotel was ever completed. Bakker "sold" more "exclusive partnerships" than could be accommodated, while raising more than twice the money needed to build the actual hotel. A good deal of the money went intoHeritage USA's operating expenses, and Bakker kept $3.4 million in bonuses for himself. A $279,000 payoff for the silence of Jessica Hahn, a staff secretary at the church, was paid with PTL's funds to Hahn through Bakker associate Roe Messner, who later married Tammy Fay Bakker. [6] Bakker, who apparently made all of the financial decisions for the PTL organization, allegedly kept two sets of books to conceal the accounting irregularities. Reporters from The Charlotte Observer, led by Charles Shepard, investigated and published a series of articles regarding the PTL organization's finances. [7]

    On March 19, 1987, following the revelation of a payoff to Hahn to keep secret her allegation that Bakker and another minister had raped her, Bakker resigned from PTL. [6] Bakker acknowledges he met Hahn at a hotel room in Clearwater, Florida, but denies raping her. Following Bakker's resignation as PTL head, he was succeeded in late March, 1987, by Jerry Falwell. [8] Later that summer, as donations sharply declined in the wake of Bakker's resignation and the end of the Bakkers' popular PTL Club TV show, Falwell raised $20 million to help keep the Heritage USA Theme Park solvent, including a well-publicized waterslide plunge there. [9] Falwell called Bakker a liar, an embezzler, a sexual deviant, and "the greatest scab and cancer on the face of Christianity in 2,000 years of church history". [10] In 1988, Falwell said that the Bakker scandal had "strengthened broadcast evangelism and made Christianity stronger, more mature and more committed." [11] Bakker's son, Jay, wrote in 2001 that the Bakkers felt betrayed by Falwell, whom they thought, at the time of Bakker's resignation, intended to help in Bakker's eventual restoration as head of the PTL ministry organization. [4] :33–37

    Legal problems [ edit ]

    Following a 16-month Federal grand jury probe, Bakker was indicted in 1988 on eight counts of mail fraud, 15 counts of wire fraud and one count of conspiracy. [6][12] In 1989, after a five-week trial which began on August 28 in Charlotte, the jury found him guilty on all 24 counts, and Judge Robert Daniel Potter sentenced him to 45 years in federal prison and a $500,000 fine. [4] :52 [13]

    He served time in the Federal Medical Center, Rochester, in Rochester, Minnesota, sharing a cell with activist Lyndon LaRouche and skydiver Roger Nelson. [14]

    In February 1991, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit upheld Bakker's conviction on the fraud and conspiracy charges, but voided Bakker's 45-year sentence, as well as the $500,000 fine, and ordered that a new sentencing hearing be held. The court held that Potter's statement at sentencing that Bakker's actions resulted in "those of us who do have a religion" being lampooned as "saps from money-grubbing preachers or priests" was evidence that he had injected his own religious beliefs into considering Bakker's sentence. [15]

    Jim and Tammy Bakker were divorced on March 13, 1992. On November 16, 1992, a sentence reduction hearing was held and Bakker's sentence was reduced to eight years. [4] :104

    In August 1993, Bakker was transferred to a minimum security federal prison in Jesup, Georgia, and was subsequently granted parole in July 1994, after serving almost five years of his sentence. [4] :116, 130 Bakker's son, Jay, spearheaded a letter-writing campaign to the parole board on his father's behalf, urging leniency. [4] :106–115

    His Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) number was 07407-058, and he was released from BOP custody on December 1, 1994. [16]

    On July 23, 1996, a North Carolina jury threw out a class action suit brought on behalf of more than 160,000 onetime supporters who contributed as much as $7,000 each to Bakker's coffers in the 1980s.

    He now makes money selling enema kits and what not:

    Disgraced televangelist Jim Bakker now selling ENEMA KITS and apocalyptic survivalist gear to his followers to help make up money he owes to the IRS

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2145334/Televangelist-Jim-Bakker-selling-ENEMA-KITS-apocalyptic-survivalist-gear-pay-IRS.html

    Televangelist Jim Bakker, known best for losing his multi-million dollar empire amid a sex and embezzlement scandal, is building his new brand around the end of the world.

    The disgraced pastor is now selling pricey cordless generators and survivalist food packs on his website in an effort to help earn money to pay off his debts to the IRS.

    The most unusual item on the docket are the collection of enema kits for sale, perhaps in a nod to his late wife Tammy Faye who died after a long battle with colon cancer in 2007.

    However, an indictment for fraud and conspiracy was what landed him in jail for six years.

    Those charges accused him of keeping millions from the donation money his company accrued, and later sought after by the IRS for $6million in tax liens dating back to the 1980s.

  • sir82
    sir82

    The Mexicans are, generally speaking, some pof the most fiercely loyal adherents the WTS has. Why alienate them by sending such a condescending letter?

    The continued growth in Mexico is one of the primary pillars that props up overall JW worldwide growth. Seems awfully risky, at least in the long term, to screw them over.

  • villagegirl
    villagegirl

    What is unbelievable to me is that the money is never used to help

    any actual people !!! You know, food, clothing, shelter, for children, widows,

    orphans, needy people who need shoes, help with any number od daily needs.

    Other churches do not wait for "disasters" to help people. A huge amount of

    real community help is done by churches. In the Bible it talks about a distribution

    by the congregations to the poor.

  • objectivetruth
    objectivetruth

    avaddohn94 - Thank you for your effort, and the work you put into translating this.. It's very important to make efforts at closing the Gaps between languages. Take care

  • frankiespeakin
    frankiespeakin

    I think legal action can be taken but the problem is the Governing Body can disfellowship anybody they want on any sort of grounds if they threaten a material loss for the corporation.

    I'm sure in time this will not stop some of the rank and file and congregation BOE to take legal action and risk being disfellowshipped on trumped up charges and special committees to remove from power those appointed who rebel against a WT/ GB directive. And add to the mix ill treated CO with no retirement benefits when they get old and I see trouble a brewing.

    I see a house of card waiting to collapse.

  • joe134cd
    joe134cd

    I just wonder how long they can keep behaving like this and rail roasting people before it dose a U turn and comes back and bit them on the arse. They would never getting away with this type of behaviour if there were investors.

Share this

Google+
Pinterest
Reddit