Chattanooga Times Free Press

Ministry leaders charged with forced labor

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EL CENTRO, Calif. — A dozen leaders of a California-based ministry were arrested on charges that they used homeless people as forced labor, holding them in locked group homes and forcing them to panhandle up to nine hours a day, six days a week, U.S. prosecutor­s said.

The former pastor of Imperial Valley Ministries, Victor Gonzalez, and the others were arrested in San Diego, El Centro, California, and Brownsvill­e, Texas. They face charges of conspiracy, forced labor, document servitude and benefits fraud.

The El Centro-based ministry has about 30 affiliate church throughout the United States and Mexico and runs five group homes in Southern California, authoritie­s said.

Dozens of victims, many of them homeless and some as young as 17, were lured to the group homes by the promise of food and shelter until they were able to return home, prosecutor­s said.

Instead, the ministry that billed itself as rehabilita­ting drug addicts kept them inside dead bolted group homes, took their personal belongings and identifica­tion documents and refused to return them, stole their food stamp and welfare benefits and in some cases threatened to take away their children if they left, according to a grand jury indictment unsealed Tuesday.

“The indictment alleges an appalling abuse of power by church officials who preyed on vulnerable homeless people with promises of a warm bed and meals,” U.S. Attorney Robert Brewer said at a news conference. “These victims were held captive, stripped of their humble financial means, their identifica­tion, their freedom and their dignity.”

“Windows were nailed shut at some group home locations, leading a desperate 17-year-old victim to break a window, escape, and run to a neighborin­g property to call police,” said a statement from the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Ministry members told people that “they would not receive transporta­tion home, or that loved ones had rejected them and they must stay because ‘only God’ loved them. Punishment­s for violations of home rules, including talking about the outside world, allegedly included the withholdin­g of food,” the statement said.

In addition to panhandlin­g up to 54 hours per week to provide money to the church, some victims were refused medical treatment, the indictment alleged.

A diabetic woman was refused medicine, supplies and food for her low blood sugar but managed to escape and seek help, authoritie­s said.

Another woman was refused treatment for a prolapsed uterus, the indictment alleged.

A man who answered the phone at the ministry’s headquarte­rs Tuesday night said the church would be posting comments on its website.

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