HONG KONG — The pastor of a Singapore megachurch was convicted of fraud on Wednesday, with a judge finding that he had used millions in church funds to promote his wife’s career in pop music.
The
pastor, Kong Hee, of City Harvest Church, and five other church
officials were convicted of charges related to the misuse of $36 million
to support the career of Mr. Kong’s wife, Ho Yeow Sun, a singer also
known as Sun Ho. The six church leaders were indicted in 2012, and their
140-day trial has been followed closely in Singapore, which is known
for aggressively prosecuting corruption cases.
Mr. Kong and the other leaders, who were convicted of varying counts of criminal breach of trust, face up to 20 years in prison. No date has been set for their sentencing.
“The
accused persons chose to engage in covert operations and conspiratorial
cover-ups,” Judge See Kee Oon said. “They contrived to create cover
stories and clever round trips concealing their unlawful conduct.”
Ms. Ho released several Mandarin-language albums in Taiwan and an English-language album aimed at the United States market, including “China Wine,” a 2007 song on which she collaborated with Wyclef Jean.
Ms. Ho released several Mandarin-language albums in Taiwan and an English-language album aimed at the United States market, including “China Wine,” a 2007 song on which she collaborated with Wyclef Jean.
The
church funded Ms. Ho’s first Mandarin albums, and in 2007, Mr. Kong
tried to conceal those payments after a church member complained about
how the donations had been used, Judge See found. Money from the
church’s building fund was ostensibly put into bonds but was in fact
used to promote Ms. Ho’s albums and career, the judge found. Additional
funds were used in an effort to conceal the initial fraudulent
investments, the court ruled.
he judge said that the defendants all believed that they were acting in the best interests of the church and that there was no evidence of wrongful gain. Church leaders believed that Ms. Ho’s music career could help the church expand its membership, according to news reports in Singapore.
Mr.
Kong founded the Pentecostal church in 1989, and his ministry
emphasized the material wealth that he said could come from spiritual
devotion. Over two and a half decades, the church expanded drastically,
with 15 weekend worship services and a reported membership of more than
17,000 last year. It has 50 affiliate churches with an additional 27,000
members, mostly in Indonesia, Malaysia and Taiwan.
Ms. Ho, who was not charged, said she was “disappointed by the outcome,” according to a statement posted on the church’s website. The six defendants are studying the judgment and awaiting advice from their lawyers, said Ms. Ho, who is the church’s executive director.
“More
than ever before, let’s have a unity that is unbreakable,” she wrote.
“We are not alone as many of our friends and churches around the world
are also interceding fervently for us.”
NY Times
NY Times
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