| Topic: |
Religions > Atheism |
| User: |
"Fredric L. Rice" |
| Date: |
07 Jul 2005 11:13:41 PM |
| Object: |
Benny Hinn: Another Christian criminal |
From The Houston Chronicle, 7/6/05:
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/metropolitan/3254357
IRS investigating televangelist's operation, report says
Associated Press
DALLAS --
The Internal Revenue Service is looking into the operations and
finances of televangelist Benny Hinn's organization, according to a
published report.
The IRS wouldn't discuss the case, but a representative for Benny Hinn
Ministries confirmed to The Dallas Morning News that the inquiry is
under way, characterizing it as routine.
Critics have argued that Hinn improperly profits from a ministry that
hasn't met the IRS definition of a church for years.
The ministry is estimated to raise more than $100 million a year.
But his public relations contractor dismissed the possibility that tax
exemptions could be at risk.
Hinn spokesman Ronn Torossian said the ministry has "fully cooperated
with the IRS" and is not being audited.
Hinn's ministry, formally renamed the World Healing Center Church in
2000, has had its administrative and mail-processing headquarters in
Grapevine since a year earlier.
Hinn, 52, and his family live in California.
According to documents provided to the newspaper by a watchdog group,
the inquiry into the ministry began a year ago and the IRS has asked
for dozens of detailed answers.
The Trinity Foundation has investigated Hinn for more than a decade.
Hinn ministry responses to IRS questions and a purported salary list
for ministry officials are among documents that Trinity members said
they salvaged from trash bins outside Hinn-related offices.
The salary document lists Hinn as CEO and his annual earnings as
$1.325 million.
Attorneys for the ministry, in a letter to The News, said the document
was either a fake or had been stolen.
The newspaper found that another watchdog group's complaint to the IRS
-- that the ministry lacks financial oversight and independent
governance -- may have led the agency to question the operation
through what's called a church tax-inquiry letter.
Wall Watchers, a North Carolina-based advocacy group for religious
donors, recently issued an alert about the Hinn ministry through its
Ministry Watch Web site.
Wall Watchers sent a letter to the IRS early last year calling for an
investigation of the Hinn Ministry, said Rod Pitzer, Wall Watchers'
research director.
Hinn and his attorneys, who declined to be interviewed, have
maintained the ministry uses proper accounting.
---
http://www.ElmerFudd.US/ http://www.notserver.com/
Scientology crooks: http://sf.irk.ru/www/ot3/otiii-gif.html
http://PerkinsTragedy.org http://www.rightard.org/
End Republican race hatred: http://www.thedarkwind.org/
.
|
|
| User: "bob young" |
|
| Title: Re: Benny Hinn: Another Christian criminal |
08 Jul 2005 10:20:02 PM |
|
|
"Fredric L. Rice" wrote:
From The Houston Chronicle, 7/6/05:
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/metropolitan/3254357
IRS investigating televangelist's operation, report says
Associated Press
DALLAS --
The Internal Revenue Service is looking into the operations and
finances of televangelist Benny Hinn's organization, according to a
published report.
The IRS wouldn't discuss the case, but a representative for Benny Hinn
Ministries confirmed to The Dallas Morning News that the inquiry is
under way, characterizing it as routine.
Critics have argued that Hinn improperly profits from a ministry that
hasn't met the IRS definition of a church for years.
The ministry is estimated to raise more than $100 million a year.
But his public relations contractor dismissed the possibility that tax
exemptions could be at risk.
Hinn spokesman Ronn Torossian said the ministry has "fully cooperated
with the IRS" and is not being audited.
Hinn's ministry, formally renamed the World Healing Center Church in
2000, has had its administrative and mail-processing headquarters in
Grapevine since a year earlier.
Hinn, 52, and his family live in California.
In abject luxury. "Praise be to de Laaawd"
According to documents provided to the newspaper by a watchdog group,
the inquiry into the ministry began a year ago and the IRS has asked
for dozens of detailed answers.
The Trinity Foundation has investigated Hinn for more than a decade.
Hinn ministry responses to IRS questions and a purported salary list
for ministry officials are among documents that Trinity members said
they salvaged from trash bins outside Hinn-related offices.
The salary document lists Hinn as CEO and his annual earnings as
$1.325 million.
Attorneys for the ministry, in a letter to The News, said the document
was either a fake or had been stolen.
The newspaper found that another watchdog group's complaint to the IRS
-- that the ministry lacks financial oversight and independent
governance -- may have led the agency to question the operation
through what's called a church tax-inquiry letter.
Wall Watchers, a North Carolina-based advocacy group for religious
donors, recently issued an alert about the Hinn ministry through its
Ministry Watch Web site.
Wall Watchers sent a letter to the IRS early last year calling for an
investigation of the Hinn Ministry, said Rod Pitzer, Wall Watchers'
research director.
Hinn and his attorneys, who declined to be interviewed, have
maintained the ministry uses proper accounting.
---
http://www.ElmerFudd.US/ http://www.notserver.com/
Scientology crooks: http://sf.irk.ru/www/ot3/otiii-gif.html
http://PerkinsTragedy.org http://www.rightard.org/
End Republican race hatred: http://www.thedarkwind.org/
.
|
|
|
|

|
Related Articles |
|
|