Faith-healing televangelist, Benny Hinn |
A day after criminal investigators from the IRS
and inspectors from the U.S. Postal Service executed a closely guarded raid on
the offices of his ministry in Grapevine, Texas, Wednesday, last week,
popular faith-healing televangelist Benny Hinn revealed they are looking
into "certain operations of the church."
Hinn did not go into much detail about which
aspects of his ministry federal officials are reviewing, but in a statement on Facebook he said he's
confident the investigation will end favorably.
"As has been widely reported, Benny Hinn
Ministries is cooperating fully with the governmental entities that are
reviewing certain operations of the Church. The ministry has undergone intense
scrutiny over the years, and we remain confident that there will again be a
positive and speedy outcome in the days ahead," the statement said.
It ended: "Pastor Benny appreciates the
love, prayers, and support of our beloved partners as we continue to minister
the saving and healing Gospel of Jesus Christ throughout the world."
A report from NBC 5 said a large number of federal
agents including IRS officials who primarily investigate tax evasion and
general fraud against the government were seen walking in and out of Hinn's
offices with boxes Wednesday.
"It looked like a big raid — people
everywhere, police people everywhere out there, and just rushing in," John
Ebert, who works next door told the network. The activity began around 9 a.m.
he explained and lasted for hours.
As news of the raid spread on social media,
many reports recalled that Hinn was one of six televangelists who were part of
a 2007 Senate inquiry.
The investigation which went on for three
years, raised questions about the personal use of church-owned airplanes,
luxury homes and credit cards by pastors and their families, and expressed
concern about the lack of oversight of finances by boards often packed with the
televangelists' relatives and friends. No definitive findings of wrongdoing
were made.
Hinn, who was born into a Christian family in
Israel, has repeatedly been accused of being a fraud and criticized for living
extravagantly while leading a ministry that rakes in more than $100 million
annually.
In a 2009 interview on ABC's "Nightline" Hinn
denied being a fraud.
"I think if I was fooling the people,
over 35 years of it now, I would have been caught already fooling them," he
told the network.
....additional report from The Christian Post
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