Televangelist
Paul Crouch Attempts to Keep Accuser Quiet
A
former worker at TBN threatened to disclose an alleged 1996
homosexual encounter.
By William Lobdell
Times Staff Writer
September 12, 2004
Televangelist Paul Crouch,
founder of the world's largest Christian broadcasting network,
has waged a fierce legal battle to prevent a former employee
from publicizing allegations that he and Crouch had a sexual
encounter eight years ago.
Crouch, 70, is the president of
Trinity Broadcasting Network, based in Orange County, whose
Christian programming reaches millions of viewers around the
world via satellite, cable and broadcast stations.
The source of the allegations
against him is Enoch Lonnie Ford, who met Crouch at a TBN-affiliated
drug treatment center in 1991 and later went to work for the
ministry.
After Ford threatened to sue
TBN in 1998, claiming that he had been unjustly fired, Crouch
reached a $425,000 settlement with him. In return, Ford
agreed, among other things, not to discuss his claim about a
sexual encounter with the TV preacher.
But in the last year, Ford has
threatened to go public with his story, prompting a flurry of
legal maneuvers — conducted in closed court hearings, sealed
pleadings and private arbitration.
In court papers, Crouch has
denied the allegations, and ministry officials have described
Ford — who has a history of drug problems and has served
time for a sex offense — as a liar and an extortionist.
At stake are the public image
of one of the world's most successful televangelists and,
potentially, the fortunes of the broadcasting empire that
Crouch and his wife, Jan, built over the last 31 years.
TBN and Crouch went on the
legal offensive after they learned that Ford had written a
book manuscript that included an account of the alleged sexual
encounter.
In a dramatic flourish, Ford
had appeared at a TBN broadcast studio in Costa Mesa, minutes
before the start of a "Praise-a-thon" fundraiser,
and, without comment, handed Crouch a copy of the manuscript
Ford's lawyer later told
ministry officials that they could keep the work out of public
view by buying the rights. After some discussion, he suggested
that $10 million might be a reasonable price.
While negotiations continued,
Crouch sued to enforce the 1998 secrecy agreement and obtained
a restraining order barring Ford from seeking a publisher for
his book.
Orange County Superior Court
Judge John M. Watson also granted Crouch's request to conduct
the case in secret, sealing all documents and expunging any
mention of the suit from public court records.
Both sides eventually agreed to
let a private arbitrator decide the matter. In June, the
arbitrator ruled that Ford could not publish the manuscript
without violating the 1998 settlement — an act that could
subject him to monetary damages.
This account of the controversy
is drawn from interviews with friends of Ford's, unsealed
court records, correspondence among TBN lawyers and a copy of
the arbitrator's confidential ruling. The arbitrator's
decision contains details about the 1998 settlement and Ford's
manuscript — both of which are under seal.
Records and interviews show
that even as they battled to keep Ford's story from leaking,
TBN lawyers worried that details would eventually come out.
"I am absolutely amazed
that Lonnie hasn't gone to Penthouse or Dianne [sic] Sawyer
with his manuscript, notwithstanding the [judge's]
injunction," TBN attorney Dennis G. Brewer Sr. wrote in a
March letter to the network's other lawyers.
In a subsequent letter, in May,
Brewer mentioned the anguish that Ford's accusations had
caused Crouch's youngest son, Matt, when he learned of them in
1998.
Brewer wrote that the younger
Crouch had told his then-law partner, David Middlebrook:
"I am devastated; I am confronted with having to face the
fact that my father is a homosexual."
Middlebrook and Matt Crouch
have denied that there was such a conversation.
Millions of Viewers
Paul and Jan Crouch started TBN
in 1973, using a rented studio in Santa Ana. Over the next
three decades, they built a worldwide broadcasting network by
buying TV stations and negotiating deals with cable systems
and satellite companies.
Today, TBN's 24-hour-a-day menu
of sermons, faith healing, inspirational movies and other
Christian fare reaches millions of viewers from Spain to the
Solomon Islands.
Paul Crouch is the driving
entrepreneurial force behind the network and one of its most
popular on-air personalities. He and Jan, his wife of 46
years, have cultivated a folksy on-screen image as a devoted
couple.
TBN officials have long been
concerned about how Ford's allegations could affect the
network, which relies heavily on donations from viewers.
Officials said they were particularly worried about possible
comparisons to the scandal that brought down televangelist Jim
Bakker in 1987.
Bakker resigned from his PTL
Ministries in 1987 after admitting to paying a secretary
$265,000 in ministry funds to be silent about an earlier
affair. Bakker later went to prison for bilking donors.
TBN officials said they were
careful not to pay Ford with ministry funds in 1998. They
declined to say whether the money came from an insurer, Crouch
personally or some other source.
Ford, 41, said he could not
discuss his manuscript or his allegations against Crouch but
he did provide basic facts about his background and his time
at TBN.
Ford, whose father and
grandfather were ministers, grew up in Fairfax County, Va.,
moved to California in 1989 and worked in a string of jobs
that included jewelry salesman, produce clerk and gas station
attendant. For years, he struggled to kick a cocaine habit.
In 1991, he checked into a
Christian drug treatment program in Colleyville, Texas, on a
TBN-owned ranch. It was there that Ford met Crouch. In 1992
the network hired him to work on a phone bank in Orange
County. Ford said he also ran errands for the Crouches and
drove Paul Crouch to appointments.
Ford repeatedly ran into
trouble with the law, but TBN stood behind him. In 1994, he
pleaded no contest in San Bernardino County to having sex with
a 17-year-old boy and served six months in jail, according to
court records. TBN took him back after his release.
In 1995, he pleaded guilty in
Orange County to possession of cocaine and served about 30
days in County Jail. Again, TBN took him back.
Lake Arrowhead Cabin
The alleged sexual encounter
between Ford and Crouch occurred in the fall of 1996,
according to Sandi Mahlow, a Tustin housewife who met Ford in
a Fullerton church 10 years ago and became a close friend.
Mahlow, 50, who helped Ford
write his manuscript, said he broke down in tears after
returning from a weekend spent alone with Crouch at a TBN-owned
cabin near Lake Arrowhead. Mahlow said Ford told her that he
and Crouch had engaged in sexual acts.
"Lonnie had a lot of bad
traits; one thing he isn't, and that's a liar," Mahlow
said. She said she helped Ford with his manuscript for no pay,
as a favor to a friend, and has no financial interest in the
book.
After the alleged encounter,
Ford continued to work at TBN. For a time, he lived rent-free
in an apartment at the network's Tustin headquarters,
according to Mahlow and another friend of Ford's, Diane
Benson, who met him at an Anaheim church 14 years ago.
A third friend of Ford's said
that in October 1996, about the time of the alleged Arrowhead
encounter, ministry officials gave her a $12,000 check to pay
back money Ford owed her. The woman spoke on condition that
she not be named, saying she feared retaliation.
TBN officials acknowledged that
the ministry paid some of Ford's debts. They said the network
commonly extends such generosity to employees in financial
trouble.
Within weeks of the Arrowhead
trip, Ford tested positive for drug use and was arrested for
violating terms of his probation. While Ford awaited
sentencing, the ministry again came to his support, urging the
judge not to impose more prison time.
Ford "has continuously
shown a very positive attitude regarding whatever we have
asked him to do," wrote Ruth M. Brown, Paul Crouch's
sister and TBN's director of personnel. "He carried out
his duties cheerfully and always tries to do more than
asked."
The judge sent Ford to the
California Rehabilitation Center in Norco, a drug treatment
facility in the state prison system.
In August 1997, Jay Jones,
TBN's director of telephone ministry, wrote prison officials
that Ford would have a job with the network after he got out,
despite his "extended leave of absence."
But Ford said that after he was
released in February 1998, he was told he no longer had a
position at TBN.
"There comes a point in
time when you have to say, 'Enough is enough,' " said
John Casoria, a TBN lawyer who is a nephew of the Crouches.
Ford responded with his threat
to sue. The settlement followed.
Despite TBN's efforts to keep
Ford's charges secret, they surfaced in an unrelated 1998
lawsuit. A former bodyguard for TBN personality Benny Hinn
testified in a deposition that during a European bus tour that
year, Hinn had told a group of associates about "a sexual
relationship that Paul Crouch had with his chauffeur."
The witness, Mario C.
Licciardello, quoted Hinn as saying: "Paul's defense was
that he was drunk."
Hinn and six others mentioned
by Licciardello, who died in 2000, told The Times that Hinn
never made such remarks. However, Rick Jones, a retired police
officer and ordained minister who worked for Hinn, said he
heard Hinn talk about Crouch's alleged homosexual relationship
on that bus.
Jones said he was disgusted by
the talk and "got up and walked away. I didn't want to
hear gossip."
Asking $10 Million
Meanwhile, Ford began to have
second thoughts about keeping silent. Last year, with Mahlow's
help, he wrote his manuscript, titled "Arrowhead."
Friends said Ford wanted to
expose what he viewed as Crouch's hypocrisy. They said he also
needed money and hoped to earn some by selling the manuscript.
It's unclear how Ford spent his 1998 settlement, but today he
leads a modest existence, living in a room of a Lake Forest
home and working as a mortgage salesman.
Ministry officials learned of
the book in April 2003, when Ford walked onto the set of TBN's
Costa Mesa broadcast studio and handed a copy of the
manuscript to Crouch.
Ford's attorney, Eugene Zech,
said that Brewer, the TBN lawyer, called him the next business
day. In court papers, Zech said that Brewer asked "if
Ford might be willing to accept $1 million in exchange for the
manuscript."
Zech said in the court filing
that he suggested $10 million.
When the parties went to
arbitration, Crouch's lawyers argued that publication would
violate the 1998 settlement and cause irreparable damage to
Crouch's reputation. Ford's lawyers argued that the secrecy
agreement was overly broad and violated his free-speech
rights.
Arbitrator Robert J. Neill
ruled that Ford's right to make his allegations public
"was sold to [Crouch] for $425,000." Ford
"bargained away his right to speak on certain matters and
now suggests that his right to free speech trumps that
bargain…. [His] right to discuss these matters was bought
and paid for. He relinquished that right."
Paul Crouch Jr., a TBN
executive and the televangelist's oldest son, said that
despite the favorable ruling, he wished his father had never
entered into the settlement with Ford.
Crouch said advisors persuaded
his father that it would be cheaper to settle than to
litigate. He said TBN was particularly anxious to avoid
negative publicity because the ministry was celebrating its
25th anniversary that year.
"In hindsight, we should
have fought Lonnie tooth and nail," the son said in an
interview. "We should have drawn the battle lines right
there."
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