GULF SHORES, Ala. (ABP) -- The International Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention declined to press criminal embezzlement charges in 2005 against a man now accused of stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars in an Alabama insurance scam.
Benton Gray Harvey and an accomplice are suspected of scamming hundreds of thousands of dollars from residents of the Alabama Gulf Coast.
According to legal documents obtained by the Mobile Press-Register , the IMB won a judgment of $359,499.62 against Harvey on March 15, 2005.
The suspect, under the name Gray Harvey, served through the mission board as an accountant for a Baptist outpost in Istanbul.
IMB trustees fired Harvey over allegations that he stole hundreds of thousands of dollars earmarked for earthquake relief and reportedly decided against pressing charges, citing concerns for missionary safety.
The board settled the case for the amount of loss that could be documented -- though some observers believe the amount actually missing could be larger -- and pledged not to talk about the settlement.
Wade Burleson, a former IMB trustee who joined the board after fellow trustees accepted the confidentiality agreement, said he argued vehemently at his first board meeting that the IMB had "a moral obligation" to file criminal charges. But his fellow trustees rejected his argument.
The rest of the story is at http://www.abpnews.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3676&Itemid=53[FONT="][/FONT]
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Benton Gray Harvey and an accomplice are suspected of scamming hundreds of thousands of dollars from residents of the Alabama Gulf Coast.
According to legal documents obtained by the Mobile Press-Register , the IMB won a judgment of $359,499.62 against Harvey on March 15, 2005.
The suspect, under the name Gray Harvey, served through the mission board as an accountant for a Baptist outpost in Istanbul.
IMB trustees fired Harvey over allegations that he stole hundreds of thousands of dollars earmarked for earthquake relief and reportedly decided against pressing charges, citing concerns for missionary safety.
The board settled the case for the amount of loss that could be documented -- though some observers believe the amount actually missing could be larger -- and pledged not to talk about the settlement.
Wade Burleson, a former IMB trustee who joined the board after fellow trustees accepted the confidentiality agreement, said he argued vehemently at his first board meeting that the IMB had "a moral obligation" to file criminal charges. But his fellow trustees rejected his argument.
The rest of the story is at http://www.abpnews.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3676&Itemid=53[FONT="][/FONT]
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