Marion Covington, a minister at Word of Faith Fellowship church, and Dianne McKinny are accused of concocting a scheme that resulted in $250,000 in phony unemployment claims.
When the 2008 recession hit, a top minister at a secretive North
Carolina church concocted a devious plan: “lay off” employees at his
businesses, make them collect unemployment benefits—then force them to
keep working full time, according to a federal indictment.
Marion
Kent Covington, a minister at Word of Faith Fellowship church, carried
out the scheme–which resulted in over $250,000 in fraudulent
unemployment claims between November 2008 and March 2013—with Diane Mary
McKinny, a church member, and other “co-conspirators,” the indictment
says. On Thursday, Covington, 63, and McKinny, 65, were charged by a
federal grand jury with wire fraud, and they now face up to 30 years in
prison and a $1 million fine, the Charlotte Observer reported.
The
indictment comes one month after fellow Word of Faith members Jerry
Gross and Jason Lee Gross pleaded guilty to their involvement in the
scam, according to the Associated Press.
This isn’t the first scandal the sect has weathered. Past members have accused leaders of “beating the demons” out of congregants, including gay worshippers, and operating a human pipeline that sent young Brazilians to work for ministers at the church in the small town of Spindale for little or no pay.
“The
justification was to keep God’s businesses afloat. That was the reason.
100 percent, for the people who were doing it, they didn’t feel like
they were necessarily defrauding anybody,” former Word of Life member
Vicenta del Toro told the Charlotte Observer.
In the
fraud case, Covington and McKinny came up with the plan in 2008, first
testing it out at Diverse Corporate Technologies, the minister’s plastic
manufacturing company, the indictment says. Covington and McKinny
allegedly “laid off” workers at the company, then instructed them to
file claims for unemployment benefits.
“Next,
Covington called a business meeting at DCT and informed the remaining
DCT employees that the company could no longer afford to pay their
wages, and that they therefore would be placed on UI Benefits, but that
Covington expected the employees to continue to work at DCT full-time in
order to help the business survive,” the indictment states. “Covington
used his position of authority within his church community, which
included most, if not all, of the employees at DCT, to coerce the
employees to comply.”
The alleged scam resulted in over six months of free labor for the
plastics company, so the duo spread the word to the Grosses, a
father-son pair who owned the Foot and Ankle Center of the Carolinas,
and the owner of a for-profit contracting business, who was referred to
as J.F. in court records, according to the documents.
The church
members maintained the scheme for five years, replicating it at
Covington’s Integrity Marble & Granite in 2010 and again at Sky
Catcher Communication, a business the minister managed, federal
officials said.
Covington and McKinny’s attorney, Stephen Cash,
did not respond to requests for comment. The government is seeking at
least $310,000 in forfeitures, and the pair are set to be arraigned on
June 18.
Covington is married to Brooke Covington, one of several Word of Faith members accused of beating a gay teenager for over two hours in order to get rid of his “impure thoughts,” as previously reported by The Daily Beast.
“I
didn’t think I was going to come out alive,” Matthew Fenner said in
2014. “I had at least 15-20 college age men around me, screaming,
shaking me, punching me, hitting my chest, grabbing my head, telling me
to repeat different phrases,” Fenner stated in an affidavit.
Local authorities delayed investigations of Fenner’s abuse
allegations, leading the 24-year-old to pursue misdemeanor charges
against the congregants and leaders, according to an AP investigation into the church. The case ended in a mistrial last year.
Jane
Whaley co-founded the controversial church in 1979 with her husband,
Sam. The congregation has grown to include over 750 members, with
affiliate churches in Ghana and Brazil. Former members accused Whaley
and company of encouraging Brazilian followers to come to the United
States and work for church families, according to the AP. Andre Oliveira
told the outlet that leaders confiscated his passport and money when he
arrived in western North Carolina at the age of 18. He allegedly worked
15 hours a day with little to no pay.
“They trafficked us up
here. They knew what they were doing. They needed labor and we were
cheap labor—hell, free labor,” he told the AP
in 2017. Forty-three former followers also said that leaders and
members beat the demons out of people by smacking and choking them. The
sect has denied several abuse allegations. There are ongoing criminal investigations into Word of Faith by state and federal authorities.
In March 2018, Brazilian authorities sued
the North Carolina church, calling for it to be shut down and claiming
it “reduced people to a condition analogous to slavery.”
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