[Jehovah's Witness] Church elder ordered to
repay $4.7 million to fleeced flock
Posted March 18 2003

A church elder was ordered by a federal judge on Tuesday to pay
more than $4.7 million in restitution to almost 50 victims of a
Ponzi-like con game – many of them elderly members of his
own congregation.
Financial consultant and ex-missionary Raymond L. Knowles, a former
resident of Pembroke Pines and Opa-locka and more recently San Antonio,
Texas, was sentenced to 57 months in federal prison in January by
U.S. District Judge Donald L. Graham for defrauding elderly and
financially unsophisticated investors during a multimillion-dollar
securities fraud scheme. He was convicted last October of 16 counts
of mail fraud, four of wire fraud and four of securities fraud.
Many victims were fellow members of the same Jehovah's Witnesses
congregation where he was an elder.
According to a statement by South Florida U.S. Attorney Marcos
Daniel Jimenez, Knowles used his position as an elder to sell millions
of dollars worth of risky promissory notes to worshipers, falsely
representing that the investments would return between 8.5 percent
and 20 percent. He also was accused of diverting investor funds
to lease luxury cars, pay personal, business and other expenses
including trips to South Africa and Disney World near Orlando.
A Ponzi scheme is named after Charles Ponzi, an immigrant who ran
such a scheme in 1919-1920. It involves an investment scheme in
which returns are paid to earlier investors, entirely out of money
paid into the scheme by newer investors.
Copyright © 2003, South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Source: South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Another Elders & Fraud story:
Jehovah's Witness elders sentenced to 15 years
for $6 million theft Two Jehovah's Witness elders who fleeced
a 100-year-old Deer Lodge woman out of her life savings and family
ranch were sentenced to 25 years in prison with 10 suspended. (added
05/13/2003)

|