Charity Watchdog Raps  Barnet Church After £15k Goes Missing From Funds

Charity Watchdog Raps Barnet Church After £15k Goes Missing From Funds

By Gavin Mackintosh-

The Charity Commission has concluded that the trustees, having stepped away from the Redeemed Christian Church of God (‘RCCG’)

A pastor pocketed £15,000 of Church money meant for its charity and set up and agreement plan to return it after the Charity Commission arrived on the scene to police the situation. The inquiry discovered a payment of £50,000 to a pastor of the charity, arranged by the administrator, despite the administrator not being registered as a trustee.

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Inadequate financial controls had also failed to ensure the funds paid to the pastor were spent on the purposes of the charity and the pastor could only show that £35,000 had been spent on the charity’s objects. A repayment agreement has since been drawn up between the pastor and the administrator to cover the amount owed in full.

The finding by the Charity Commission is a disgrace to the leadership of the Church who ought to have spent all the money on the charity as it claimed.The pastor of the New Life Assembly House of Prayer for All Nations  left the charity without a governing body,  and created the circumstances where charitable funds could be misapplied. The charity has now been removed from the Commission’s register of charities.

The charity, which operated in Barnet, was apparently set up to advance the Christian faith, but appears to also have been to advance the pockets of some of its leaders. The Charity Commission previously engaged with the charity after it failed to file its accounts and was added to the Commission’s ‘double defaulter’ inquiry, which examines charities in default, in 2014.

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The overdue accounts were eventually filed with the Commission, but the charity went into default again for its 2013 accounts, leading to the Commission opened an inquiry to examine further. The inquiry concluded there were no trustees running the charity. Instead the charity’s administrator provided information to the inquiry.

The inquiry found that £50,000 had been paid to a pastor of the charity, which had been arranged by the administrator, despite the administrator not being registered as a trustee.

Inadequate financial controls had also failed to ensure the funds paid to the pastor were spent on the purposes of the charity and the pastor could only show that £35,000 had been spent on the charity’s objects.

A repayment agreement has since been drawn up between the pastor and the administrator to cover the amount owed in full.

Amy Spiller, head of investigations team, at the Charity Commission said:
”The public rightly expects trustees to carefully steward funds in the best interests of their charity and its beneficiaries. Charity can and should lead the way in taking public expectations seriously.

Our inquiry found this charity existed without adequate leadership or financial controls. As a result, the funds were left at risk of misuse and money intended for charitable purposes was spent outside of this – we’re therefore pleased that a repayment schedule has been agreed for the money not spent on charitable purposes to be paid back”.

We say shame on the New Life Assembly Church Of Prayer for taking the money in the first place. The leader of the church ought to resign!

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