Times Colonist

Politician charged after church visit

- MITCH WEISS and HOLBROOK MOHR

A leader of a secretive evangelica­l congregati­on has persuaded a magistrate to issue trespassin­g charges against a North Carolina state Senate candidate who brought supporters and a TV crew along to a scheduled meeting at the church.

Democratic candidate David Wheeler says he was invited by Jane Whaley, the leader of the Word of Faith Fellowship, to visit the church in Spindale, North Carolina. The church has been accused of beating congregant­s to expel demons.

Wheeler said Whaley and other members invited him so he could see for himself that it is an open and loving church.

But when Wheeler arrived on Tuesday with a former congregant, a church critic and reporters, he was told to leave.

The next day, Wheeler and two people who accompanie­d him — a man who ran for county sheriff and a former church member — were charged with trespassin­g, based on another church leader’s complaint.

“If the Word of Faith thinks they are going to intimidate me they truly are living in a different world,” Wheeler wrote in an email to the Associated Press.

“This is not Russia. Jane Whaley is not Vladimir Putin. We live in a country where open courts provide a lot of answers and I’m looking forward to our hearing to discuss their ridiculous charge.”

The complaints were filed by longtime minister Jayne Caulder. Wheeler was charged with second degree trespassin­g, along with John Huddle, who left the church in 2008, and Wayne Guffey, a Word of Faith Fellowship critic who was defeated this year in the Republican primary by the incumbent sheriff of Rutherford County.

District attorney Ted Bell said he could not comment on pending cases. Wednesday’s charges will now go to court, with initial hearings scheduled for Aug. 24. A trespassin­g conviction is punishable by up to 20 days in jail and a $200 US fine.

“John Huddle, Wayne Guffey and I will fight this all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court if we have to on behalf of all of the other people that have been victims of or intimidate­d by the Word of Faith,” Wheeler said.

Wheeler’s attempt to meet with Whaley was livestream­ed on Facebook. Video shows that when Wheeler walked inside, a church member asked what he was doing there. He said he had a meeting with Whaley.

At that point, Caulder can be seen in the video. When Wheeler asks if he could see Whaley, Caulder wouldn’t answer the question and repeatedly asks everyone to leave.

Guffey, a critic of local officials he accuses of turning a blind eye to the abuse, said the trespassin­g charge “has the stench of retaliatio­n all over it.”

“If they think they can intimidate me, they are sadly mistaken,” Guffey told the AP. “I will keep speaking out. It’s time for people in this county to get their head out of the sand.”

Guffey himself pressed charges against a church member for stealing one of his campaign signs, a theft he caught on camera. Josh Farmer, a lawyer and Fellowship member, told AP in an email that Wheeler’s group initially refused to leave.

“Mr. Wheeler barged in at the church, well before the scheduled time for the meeting, with members of the media and several critics of the church, none of whom were invited,” Farmer wrote.

“They were asked to leave numerous times and only did so after they heard that someone at the church was calling for the police. Mr. Wheeler’s behaviour was deceptive and the behaviour of all in the group was appalling and unacceptab­le in their refusal to leave.”

This all began when Wheeler, a businessma­n, talked about restoring trust in state and local government at a news conference last week. Wheeler has criticized how local authoritie­s have handled complaints of abuse involving the church, which has been the focus of an Associated Press investigat­ion. Wheeler said two church members then invited him to visit, and he followed up in an email. Wheeler said there were no restrictio­ns on who he could bring along.

The Fellowship claims to have 750 members in North Carolina and nearly 2,000 at church branches in Africa and Brazil.

In a series of stories beginning in February 2017, the AP has cited dozens of former members who said congregant­s were regularly punched and choked in an effort to beat out devils.

The AP also revealed how, over the course of two decades, followers were ordered by church leaders to lie to authoritie­s investigat­ing reports of abuse.

The news agency also outlined how the church created a pipeline of young labourers from its two Brazilian congregati­ons, who say they were brought to the U.S. and forced to work for little or no pay at businesses owned by church leaders.

The stories led to investigat­ions in the United States and Brazil.

In March, Brazilian labour prosecutor­s filed suit to close one of the churches and its school in Sao Paulo, saying its leaders “reduced people to a condition analogous to slavery.”

In May, two church members pleaded guilty to federal fraud charges for taking part in an unemployme­nt benefits scheme that former congregant­s said was meant to keep money coming into the sect.

Two other members, including a church leader, were indicted a month later with conspiracy to commit wire fraud in connection with a similar scheme.

 ??  ?? Word of Faith Fellowship leader Jane Whaley and her husband, Sam, in 1995.
Word of Faith Fellowship leader Jane Whaley and her husband, Sam, in 1995.

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