Tag: Hillary Rodham Clinton

  • Congressional showdown with televangelists

    The aptly-named Creflo Dollar Jr. flies a Lear jet between his million-dollar mansion Atlanta and church services in New York City, where he also keeps a $2.5 million apartment.

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    Tampa televangelist Paula White , who has homes in San Antonio, Malibu and New York, bought a Bentley convertible for fellow televangelist Bishop T.D. Jakes for his 50th birthday.

    David and Joyce Meyer spent $23,000 on a marble topped toilet, $30,000 for a conference table and $11,219 for a French clock for the Fenton, Mo. headquarters of their not-for-profit an tax-exempt mission headquarters.

    Such are the earthly rewards of preaching the so-called prosperity gospel, a controversial iteration of Christianity which holds that God rewards the faithful with material, as well as spiritual wealth.

    But now the shepherds themselves are facing a reckoning. Dollar, White and the Meyers are among a half dozen TV evangelists being probed by Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, ranking Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, for possible misuse of donor funds and their tax-exempt status as religious organizations. The other targets are faith healer Benny Hinn of Grapevine, Texas; prosperity preacher Kenneth Copeland of Newark, Texas and Bishop Eddie Long of Lithonia, Ga.

    Yesterday was a showdown of sorts – the deadline in the four-month inquiry to voluntarily submit information to Congress. Four of the six ministries indicated they would cooperate, even if they did not hand over the requested material; Dollar and Copeland, however, were defiant in their refusals.

    Through an attorney, Dollar, a former board member of Oral Roberts University, called the inquiry an “unprecedented inquiry into the religious activities of a church.”

    Copeland, also a former Oral Roberts board member, said through a representative that only the IRS had jurisdiction to question his ministry about finances.

    A leader of the prosperity gospel movement, Copeland is close to former GOP presidential contender Mike Huckabee who appeared on his national television show last fall “for six days of frank discussion on the Biblical perspective of character.”

    When Huckabee’s campaign struggled for cash, Copeland invited him to attend a national ministers meeting at his west Texas headquarters in January. The candidate, a Southern Baptist minister, raised $111,000 in contributions and another million dollars in pledges there, according to the Tulsa World. Copeland denied the appearance was a political endorsement, saying that Huckabee’s campaign simply rented a room, and Kenneth Copeland Ministries did not make a contribution.

    Grassley sent a particularly extensive questionnaire to Copeland, requesting credit card records and information on offshore banking accounts; receipts for planes, and information about whether the ministry used its mineral rights to capitalize a for-profit company. ( The Ft. Worth Star Telegram reports that FAA records show Copeland owns three planes and his ministry has several more).

    But it looks as if the Iowa Republican may have to issue subpoenas if he is going to succeed at forcing the church to render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s.

    A spokeswoman for Grassley said yesterday that the inquiry is a “step-by-step process,” and no decisions have been made about congressional hearings or subpoenas. Grassley has defended the probe, saying he is investigating whether tax-exempt organizations are accountable to their donors, not their religious practice.

    “The allegations involve governing boards that aren’t independent and allow generous salaries and housing allowances and amenities such as private jets and Rolls Royces,” he said when he announced the probe last November. “. . . I have an obligation to donors and the taxpayers to find out more.”

    Kenneth Behr, president of the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability, an accreditation agency for Christian ministries, called the inquiry “a very big deal,” in an interview with the Tampa Tribune. He said he is not aware of a high-ranking lawmaker ever undertaking such an extensive investigation. “I think he’s picking a fight,” Behr said. “He is not just asking them to come in and talk, he is asking them for everything.”

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    2 Comments

    • #1.   John Laird 04.01.2008

      Jesus,hear my plea ,take these hypocrites vulgar gains and place them in chains. I don’t know if you have that power or your father “God” but surely “Senator Grassley” and the “Senate Finance Committee” do.
      The only people who received prosperity are those “Bible Pimps” by using Jesus and the big Kahuna “God” as their cohorts to steal from these poor blind sheep. They got these bible thumping fools in a suffocating religious illusion so much so, that if these heathens are sent up the river the government better have the army protect them from themselves because they are so mind controlleded the KOOL AID might come flying off the shelf.

    • #2.   Linda Rayborn 04.01.2008

      This article tells us much more about Mike Huckabee, our best hope for the future of the country than it does these tv evangelists. If Mike Huckabee wanted riches and fame, he could certainly have it. He is the most articulate, best motivator, most charismatic figure out there now for conservatives. He could certainly land a big time tv spot and live comfortably much like Gore, basking in the limelight. But Huckabee is running on principles and the sincere desire to make a better country for the future generations. He wants to make a difference and his religious foundation is important only in that it grounds him, making him consistent, strong, calm and collected. Conventional wisdom would have said that Huckabee should have dropped out, like Romney when he realized the odds were not in his favor. But Huckabee was running for the people who supported him and the principles he believed in more than the favor of the GOP elite. THAT is the kind of president we need and deserve!!! As Huckabee often says, “he would rather lose an election than lose the principles that got him into politics in the first place”. May we only hope and PRAY we have another chance to put this man in the White House!!

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  • Hat, rather than debauchery, blocks Horsley entry to US

    Hats off to Sebastian Horsley, the British writer and self-described “dandy,” who may have been barred from the U.S. for wearing a hat.

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    To be sure, the customs office cited reasons of “moral turpitude” for keeping Horsley out on March 18.

    That’s believable, as Horsley has fashioned a career out of chronicling his own enthusiastic (former, he says) use of drugs.

    He’s also eagerly open about his time as a male escort and his frequenting of prostitutes. Indeed, he claims to have spent the equivalent of $200,000 in purchasing sex from 1,000 prostitutes.

    He also insists his memoir is true, which, if so, would separate it from a recent line of true memoirs that have proven to be false.

    “I’m not a politician, I’m an artist,” Horsley told the New York Times a day after his eviction. “Depravity is part of the job description.”

    But the Times reported Sunday that Horsley is now saying that the real reason for his being sent home after landing at Newark International Airport was his trademark stovepipe hat.

    “They asked my girlfriend, ‘Why is he wearing that hat?’” he told Times staffer David Colman. “And she told them, ‘Because it wouldn’t fit in his suitcase.’”

    It was downhill from there. After eight hours of questioning, Horsley was gone.

    Expulsion on moral grounds from the land of Eliot Spitzer and Larry Craig is an author’s dream if his book, Dandy in the Underworld: an Authorized Autobiography, is now available in the U.S. in paperback and in need of promotion.

    Americans who won’t be able to see Horsley and his hat on book tour, can go to his MySpace.com page for blurbs on the volume that London’s Sunday Times calls, “One of the strangest, funniest and most revolting memoirs ever written.”

    Not surprisingly, Horsley uses his MySpace page to rant about his forced departure from Newark.

    Sample: “God Bless America, land of the free, but sadly not home of the depraved.”

    On his own behalf, he also links to a supportive London Independent editorial. It suggests that Horsley, who once had himself crucified in the Philippines for no apparent reason, could have had better timing, as he came to American during Easter week.

    “Although he has no religious pretensions other than ardent self-worship – far from dying for the sins of others, he lives for his own – such behavior tends to go down rather badly in America, particularly among immigration officials,” the Independent wrote.

    Horsley, 45, was born to wealth and family dysfunction.

    His father, the late Nicholas Horsley, was the millionaire chairman of England’s Northern Foods.

    “A self-confessed champagne socialist, he enjoyed gambling and drinking and parties,” The London Times wrote upon Nicholas Horsley’s death in 2004.

    In an interview with The Sunday Times last year, Nicholas Horsley’s first wife, Valerie, said that she and her husband drank continually, even during her pregnancies.

    “I was not a great mother to Sebastian,” she said. “I’m not being hard on myself, or even reveling in guilt. It’s just true.”

    Sebastian’s brother, Jake Horsley, is a film critic.

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  • Sale of Blixseths’ Yellowstone Club falls through

    Recent weeks have brought financial upheaval to Tim Blixseth.

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    Robert Frank of the Wall Street Journal reports today the collapse of a deal to Yellowstone Club, the exclusive resort developed by Blixseth and his wife. CrossHarbor Capital Partners of Boston sent a letter March 26 saying it was pulling out of an agreement to buy the club for $450 million.

    Blixseth informed club members on Saturday that the club is no longer on the market.

    The Associated Press reported yesterday that Blixseth had sold a 160-parcel at the club, where he once planned to build the world’s most expensive home.

    And Bloomberg reported earlier this month that Blixseth missed a $20 million payment to champion cyclist Greg LeMond and three other Yellowstone investors. Blixseth said then that he couldn’t pay the sum, which settled a lawsuit over Yellowstone holdings, until he sold the club.

    In addition to the expensive lawsuit, Blixseth is in the midst of a divorce from his wife, Edra. The split started as a friendly one, so friendly that Frank wrote about it. “Their peaceable parting marks a triumph of hope over history, and reason over money,” he wrote. “Most wealthy spouses follow the greed principle: The more stuff you have, the more there is to fight over.”

    Over time, hope and reason apparently fell victim to history and money. The Blixseths wound up in court and the club they had built together went on the market.

    Members of the private golf and ski area include Bill Gates and former vice president Dan Quayle.

    (Note: This item was first posted on Sunday, March 30, and updated Monday, March 31, 2008.)

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    1 Comments

    • #1.   Anne Hall 03.30.2008

      Is this all you have time to do in your life? Have you asked those individuals and their families if they want their names on your diagram? Your information is incorrect. I would encourage you to spend your time and money productively instead of writing damaging gossip columns. Perhaps you could go out and make a fortune, and then others can write about you.

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  • Bear Stearns bid would mean $100M to Joe Lewis

    Things are looking up, but only slightly, for Bahama billionaire Joe Lewis.

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    JPMorgan Chase today upped its offer for Bear Stearns from the bargain-basement price of $2 a share to $10 share. The increase amounts to an additional $97 million for Lewis, who holds 8.35% of the company stock.

    Yet even at the higher price, Lewis will lose mightily. Over the past year, he has bought up Bear Stearns shares at an average price of $104. At $10 per share, his losses would exceed $1 billion.

    Like many stockholders, Lewis was outraged by the initial deal. In documents filed last week with the Securities and Exchange Commission, he promised that his companies would “take whatever action that they deem necessary and appropriate to protect the value of their investment.”

    The Bear Stearns bailout and the resulting shareholder outcry have combined to bring unwanted attention to Lewis and his financial empire. As his daughter Vivienne once explained, “He doesn’t like to talk to people. It aggravates him.”

    Lewis started building his fortune as a teenager, when he left school to work for his father’s London catering firm. He made millions when he sold the business in 1979, then moved to the Bahamas, where he made millions more in currency trading. He oversees a complex of companies centered around a holding company, the Tavistock Group.

    His interests include land development, life sciences, energy, restaurants such as the Napa Valley Grille and the Alcatraz Brewing Company, and sports, including the Tottenham Hotspur soccer team. His company organizes the annual Tavistock Cup golf tournament, scheduled to be played today and tomorrow, with his friend Tiger Woods among the competitors.

    Lewis hasn’t yet publicly responded to JPMorgan’s revised offer, and the SEC listed no new filings from him by the close of the business day. Maybe he chose to spend the day concentrating on golf.

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  • Muckety This Madonna to Dalton Trumbo

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  • Some passport reviewers worked for outside firms

    At least three of the people accused of improperly accessing presidential candidates’ passport records worked for two companies that have long histories with the State Department and other government agencies.

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    The State Department has acknowledged that an employee and several contract workers pried into passport records for the three major presidential candidates – Barack Obama, John McCain and Hillary Rodham Clinton. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has called all three to apologize.

    Two people who have been fired worked for Stanley Inc., an employee-owned company in Arlington, Va. A third contract worker, whose employee status is under review, worked for The Analysis Corporation of McLean, Va.

    The Analysis Corporation is headed by John O. Brennan, former head of the CIA’s National Counterterrorism Center. Stanley’s leadership includes several former Navy officers, including chairman & CEO Phil Nolan, who served with the Navy’s Tomahawk program.

    Stanley has won a number of State Department and Department of Defense contracts over the last several years, including:

    • A five-year $570 million contract just last week to provide the State Department with passport services support.
    • A 10-year contract, potentially worth up to $50 billion, to provide computer support at federal agencies. Stanley is one of a number of contractors that gets a portion of the $50 billion.
    • A $164 million State Department contract to oversee passport production at two centers, one in Arkansas and another in Arizona.
    • A three-year contract worth up to $225 million with the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services for computer processing services.
    • A five-year contract with the Navy, worth up to $115 million, to provide technical support to the service’s weapons testing branch.

    Stanley, Inc.’s increase in government business has paralleled its stepped-up use of lobbyists.

    Senate records show that over the last three years the company has enlisted the services of Advantage Associates, a lobbying firm run by retired members of Congress including Ron Dellums, D-Calif., former chairman of the House Armed Services Committee; and Bill Dickinson, R-Ala., former ranking Republican on the House Armed Services Committee.

    Stanley, ranked by Fortune as one of the nation’s best 100 companies to work for, issued a release saying it manages more than 1,800 people on State Department contracts. According to Fortune, the most common hourly position at Stanley is “passport associate,” a job that pays an average $28,935 annually.

    The Analysis Corporation also released a statement yesterday, saying that the employee accused of improperly accessing passport files had violated company policy. The company said it was fully cooperating with the federal probe into the privacy breaches.

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