1471 lines
75 KiB
Plaintext
1471 lines
75 KiB
Plaintext
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GwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwD
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T h e G R E E N Y w o r l d D o m i n a t i o n T a s k F o r c e
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Presents:
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"Bob Larson Parts 3 & 4"
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GwD, Incorporated is dedicated to the exposing of false prophets. We have found
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one such "prophet" in Bob Larson of Bob Larson: Live and formerly of Talk-Back
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with Bob Larson. A supposed Christian radio evangelist, Bob Larson is actually
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only motivated by financial gain. These 14 articles by Kenneth L. Smith prove
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this. From this point on, GwD is anti-Bob Larson.
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PART 3
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Date: Thu, 21 Oct 93 16:12 EDT
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From: "Scott.Mikusko" <21922SM@msu.edu>
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Subject: Bob Larson / CPR review of Smith
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This edited posting was the response of the editor of the Christian Press
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Report, an electronic newspaper out of California. This response was posted
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along with _The Two Faces of Bob_ in the June issue of CPR.
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From the June issue of CPR, Christian BBS out of California
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( 619-487-7746 ):
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CHRISTIAN PRESS REPORT - AN ELECTRONIC NEWSPAPER
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~ Why We Published These Items...
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As is mentioned elsewhere in the Christian Press Report,
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we hope that the items we publish will, first and foremost,
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inspire our readers to pray. Second, we hope that our
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news stories will lead you to praise, protest, or take
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other appropriate actions.
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Ken Smith's expose on Bob Larson is no exception.
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However, as the editor of the CPR, I must say that I have
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been very reluctant to print Ken Smith's article. I
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believe that matters of church discipline should be
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handled by the church, rather than by outsiders. Ken
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Smith, by his own admission, is not a Christian (or, in
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his words, "no longer a professing Christian").
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Over the past few years the immoral, sinful practices of
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many prominent Christian leaders have been exposed.
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Unfortunately, more often than not, it wasn't the Church
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that called the charlatans, adulterers and thieves to
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task, but rather the world.
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What can we do, though, when the Church (including
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Christian journalists, writers and publishers) refuses
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to confront sinful behavior by one of its own?
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[ biblical quotes regarding sinful behaviour and
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Christian responsibility deleted - Scott ]
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Like I said, I was reluctant to print Ken Smith's article,
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mainly because Ken is not a part of the Church.
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Nevertheless, truth is truth. Truth is not ambiguous.
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That's why I hope that Ken's articles will indeed inspire
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our readers to pray - pray for Bob Larson, pray for the
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Christian press, and also pray for Ken Smith (please also
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pray for Ken's father who, at "press" time, was hospitalized
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with a ruptured aorta).
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For the record, I have been able to verify some of the
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information Ken has presented, have talked with one of his
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main sources (who himself is known by others in the
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Christian community as a respectable Christian), and have
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sought the counsel of several Christian leaders - all of
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whom encouraged me to go ahead and publish this information.
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I do not necessarily agree with all of Ken's views. For
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one thing, I happen to like _Christianity Today_ (a magazine
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known for trying to present a well-balanced point of view
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on even the most controversial issues), am a great fan of
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_World_ (which I consider to be one of the finest Christian
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News Magazines available), and appreciate the ministry of
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the _Evangelical Press Association_ (without whom Christian
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journalists and publications would miss lots of information
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and support).
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I am confident, however, that in publishing this information,
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the Christian Press Report is doing the right thing. As
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always, we welcome letters and E-mail responses from our
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readers.
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Stand-alone copies of Ken's two articles and this
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editorial will be available for downloading from Christian
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BBS Abba II. The file name to look for is LARSON-0.ZIP.
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Date: Thu, 21 Oct 93 16:11 EDT
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To: revc@garg.Campbell.ca.us
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From: "Scott.Mikusko" <21922SM@msu.edu>
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Subject: Bob Larson: Looking Out for Number One.
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Bob Larson: Looking Out For Number One
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In my previous CPR articles concerning Bob Larson, I have focused on his
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financial affairs, and his inability to deal with honest scrutiny. But the most
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intriguing part of the Bob Larson story is how his vision of himself has molded
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the ministry which bears his name.
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As you might expect, Larson is not that eager to make BLM's deepest, darkest
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secrets available to us, but his generous employees have been more than able to
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fill in most of the gaps. In recent weeks, significant new sources of
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information have come forward, and fresh caches of internal Ministry memos have
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surfaced. And now, the picture of everyday life behind the walls of Larson's
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third-floor fortress seems clear enough that the story can be told. It is a
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most disturbing tale -- of a world of smoke, mirrors, and startling
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contradictions.
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Secrets of Freemasonry Revealed:
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Two o'clock. The music rolls, and Bob Larson leans into the microphone:
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"Ted Bundy, Jeffrey Dahmer, Henry Lee Lucas, and Charles Manson.
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Kids will soon be bartering these serial killers on trading cards
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thanks to a California company that's recently introduced the
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series. In addition to horror films and violent
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books, the media have taken one more step contributing to
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adolescents' evil addictions."1
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To the casual listener, Larson seems urbane, eloquent, and possessed of an
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astounding memory. His many impassioned pleas are straight from the heart --
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and totally off-the-cuff. His command of Scripture is as fine as his control of
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the callers. But on Talk-Back, nothing is left to chance. Even when Bob Larson
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talks about Bob Larson, he is reading from a script. This Larson speech came
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from the pen of staffer Mary Kilgannon:
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"I've been threatened by a bullet in the brain. I've also
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been warned that I may be offered as a satanic sacrifice. For
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weeks, I've been told by death metal rockers and sinister
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Satanists that I'm to die today. But I'm still alive and in
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God's service...."2
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That Larson should read his opening lines is hardly surprising. But the
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extent to which Talk-Back is scripted, pre-packaged, and painstakingly
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orchestrated is remarkable. His openings, monologues, and wrap-ups are totally
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canned; he even reads the phone numbers.3 And, as the following snippets from
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an internal Ministry memo written by Kilgannon (initialed by her and substitute
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host Bonnie Bell) suggest, everything from what Bob says between callers to why
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he says it is menu-driven':
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"TOPIC: BOB BATTLES BACK
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DATE: FRI 8-28-92
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SLANT: Your donors let you down earlier in the week. Then,
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they abandoned Bonnie while you were called by God to
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write your sequel. Instead of supporting your efforts
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to help the abused, donors have financially and
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spiritually abused you and this ministry....
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WHY I'M DOING THIS SHOW:
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*I had to take time out of my hectic schedule to rescue
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yesterday's show. Members of my staff called in a panic because
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you didn't support this ministry. I'm called by the Lord to
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write the sequel to Dead Air, and I couldn't count on you....
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BULLETS:
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*I don't like having my private time writing this book with the
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Lord to be interrupted. But you force that on me....
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*I've got one day left to save stations. Yesterday's show could
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mean the loss of major stations.
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*If you believe in the mission of this ministry, it's time you
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supported it."4
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In essence, Larson is like a network anchorman. Even his knowledge of
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Scripture is prompted -- for instance, in the "Gay Power" episode, a Larson
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employee provided him with a list of Bible verses addressing homosexuality.5
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The only actual variable is the callers, and every effort is made to control
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them as much as possible. A prospective caller must first run the gauntlet of
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Larson's call-screeners -- who, for the most part, are instructed to give him
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the kind of callers that he wants. If he wants to have an argument, they screen
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out his supporters. If Bob gets into trouble, and the show is going poorly, a
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stream of "Bob-backers" miraculously appears. And the final few minutes of the
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show generally are reserved for those who would praise him.
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When the screener decides that a caller is to appear on the program, the
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office machinery goes into action. If he or she has been on Talk-Back before,
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the screener performs a background check. Vital statistics (e.g., age, sex,
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caller's location) are flashed on Bob's screen, and, if an earlier call was
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particularly poignant, the tape is pulled from Ministry archives and given to
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him. And he always "just happens" to have it in the studio....
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More than a year ago, Westword reported that Larson actively courted
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"exhorters": Christians who would appear on his broadcasts, on cue, to sing his
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praises.6 Other sources close to Larson have confirmed that charge; former BLM
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vice-president Lori Boespflug went so far as to say that then-Compassion
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Connection director Margo Hamilton would "call up her kids" and prompt them into
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giving on-air testimony.7 And now, an internal memo further fans those flames:
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"TO: BOB
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CC: TAMMY, CC STAFF, DEANN
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FROM: MARGO
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DATE: 7/10/92
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SUBJ: TODAY'S SHOW, HOPE LINE STORIES
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_______________________________________
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4) HOPE LINE STORIES:
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* Due to the sensitive issue of exploitation of HOPE line
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callers who wish to remain anonymous I want the referral
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operators to ask HOPE line callers who are enthused about
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the help the [sic] received to give us a number to call
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them during the show and speak directly to you about the
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help they've received."8
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To the casual observer, the sudden appearance of these formerly distressed
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callers seems too remarkable to be the result of naked chance. It would appear
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that divine intervention can be ruled out, as well.
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The Prophet Motive:
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Talk-Back is not a ministry; it is a business. And Bob Larson runs it like
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one. His obsession with the bottom line is painfully clear in this snippet from
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a June, 1992 memo:
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"The following is Bob Larson's analysis of reports compiled by
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Debbi and memos prepared by her and Bonnie covering: year end
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reports 1991; month end stats; large donor analyses....
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YEAR END OVER THE AIR ANALYSIS
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1. Accounted for 52% of revenue in 1991 and 1990 and 51% 1989.
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CONCLUSION: Half of revenue is raised at "point of sale" by
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impulse response by emotional live appeals.
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2. Success if a combination of campaign themes, premiums and
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good caller." [sic]9
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Larson's call screeners are forced to balance his need to have "good caller"
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and an honest desire to offer help to those which ask for it. And sometimes,
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the callers' interests lose. In World's January, 1993 expose, former Ministry
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employee Tammy Brown created a firestorm when she charged:
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"Bob would put [callers] on hold and we would have to
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manipulate them, push them over the edge so they could
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go back on the air with Talk-Back and be saved by Bob
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Larson ... We had to push until they said, 'OK, I need
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God'."10
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Sound ministry doesn't always make for riveting drama. But money is the name
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of Bob Larson's game -- you have to grip the audience to grab hold of their
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checkbooks. And in the cold, hard world of radio ministry, there is bound to
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be a certain amount of human carnage. The following is from a 1992 letter to
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Bob from a Washington therapist:
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"One client recently wrote to you [name withheld] ... She also
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worked up her courage to phone you last week. What she had
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hoped for was encouragement and prayer from you and your Hope
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Line. What she received was something quite different. After
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briefly talking to you on the air, she was passed on to a woman
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on the other line. This woman told her that you believed she
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was multiple. She then began asking [name] questions about her
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abuse. Had she been involved in group sex? Sex with animals?
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Had her father ever dressed her in white? ...and more. [Name]
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answered no to these, and she then asked if she could produce
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an alter who knew about these things. [Name]'s system does not
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operate on command' so she answered No. The woman said she
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would then put her on hold, and when she came back on the line
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she wanted to talk to an alter. When she returned, and no
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alter has appeared, she basically said we can't help you, and
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hung up. [Name] called several more times, wanting prayer, and
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perhaps someone who would validate and affirm her.... When she
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told her name, she was actually hung up on."11
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Judging by this excerpt (from an anonymous letter to the editor of the
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Colorado Christian News), the Washington woman's story is not at all unique:
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"I have been a caller on TALK-BACK on more than one occasion.
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On each of these occasions, after placing me with the referral
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operator, Bob would begin pleading with the audience for a
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thousand dollar champion' or a five hundred dollar hero'
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[sic] in order to help me.
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Although Bob told his audience that he needed the money to
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help me, he in fact did nothing of the sort. He would not
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accept my calls nor would he answer my mail. At one point, one
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of his staff promised a therapy program, saying they had in
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fact called for counseling in reference to me and it was a
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matter of my waiting. When the wait became too long, I decided
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to check it out myself. They said they had no idea what I was
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talking about. BLM had never contacted them."12
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Still, in the midst of all this misery, some ministry does in fact get done.
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Unfortunately, the bulk of it is done by the Compassion Connection affiliates.
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All BLM does is make referrals, from what is nothing more than a computerized
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telephone directory.
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At one point, Compassion Connection was a more noble endeavor. But in an
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apparent response to Larson's divorce, Salem Broadcasting president Ed Atsinger
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cancelled the show on several crucial stations. That derailed Bob's gravy
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train; as a reaction, he decided to make drastic cuts in program services:
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TO: BOB
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CC: ANGELO
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FROM: MARGO
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DATE: 11/26/91
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SUBJ: CC CUTBACKS
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===============================================================
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THE FOLLOWING ARE IMMEDIATE CUTBACKS WE CAN IMPLEMENT INTO COM
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PASSION CONNECTION TO COMPENSATE THE LOSE OF THE SALEM STATIONS
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[sic]
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1) HOPE LINE HOURS: Immediate cutback of Saturday hours.
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We should let Randy know ASAP.... [approved by BL]
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8) CC INTERVENTION: We have promised Eric we would fly him to
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San Diego [they eventually paid $165 for a bus ticket13]
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and Amy is coming closer to a decision about moving to
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Albuquerque. I propose we support them in their moves, but
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put an immediate freeze on other crisis intervention
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financially supported by the ministry and rely solely on the
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database and the Friendship connection until we can resume
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ministry intervention [approved by BL]."14
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Of course, the desperate financial climate would not deter Bob from funding
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projects essential to the Ministry's mission ... like installation of a
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broadcast studio in his mountainside mansion, only minutes from his Lakewood
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office.15
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I Love Myself...:
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It seems that almost every aspect of Bob Larson Ministries is bathed in a
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torrent of hypocrisy. This spiritual heir of Billy Sol Hargis is constantly
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trapped between the demands of his public persona and his compulsive need to be
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important. And as such, the simple act of telling the truth -- one most of us
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find to be second-nature -- becomes an overwhelming task.
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On his Jan. 29, 1993 broadcast, Larson claimed that he "always flies coach,"16
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unless he earns frequent flier upgrades. And again, internal BLM documents cast
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grave aspersions upon that claim. A memo dated Nov. 10, 1992 listed Bob's
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itinerary for an Apr. 2, 1993 appearance in Columbus, Ohio, indicating that he
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would be sitting in seat 4C (first class) on both legs of that trip, and the air
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fare would be $728.17. Likewise, his October, 1992 trip to Cleveland cost the
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Ministry $855, and again, he was sitting in the first cabin.18 But even for Bob
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Larson, there are limits: on a recent trip to Vancouver, he actually DID fly
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coach.
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On George Orwell's fictional Animal Farm, all animals were equal ... but some
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were more equal than others. It seems that, on a recent trip to Scottsdale, Bob
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Larson wouldn't suffer the indignity of having to stay in the stables with the
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hired help. While Larson employees Linda Brown and Bonnie Bell doubled up in a
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modest $105 room at the Red Lion Inn, Bob Larson (using Dane Roberts, one of his
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pseudonyms) was enjoying life in a $215/night room at the nearby Marriott.19
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And for Larson, that almost qualifies as slumming it -- according to Lori
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Boespflug, Bob prefers to stay at the Phoenician, where high-season rates for a
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room with a view exceed $300.20. His computerized address book contains phone
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numbers for such humble abodes as the Ritz-Carlton Laguna Niguel, The Beverly
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Hills Hilton, and the Hyatt Regency San Francisco.21 Granted, he's not the
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Donald, but it is fair to say that he travels well.
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Former Larson confidants have told me that he is so completely self-absorbed
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that he even keeps an 8" X 10" glossy picture of himself on his desk! [If you
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saw his cameo appearance in the recent HBO special on Satanism, you might have
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noticed it in the right-hand side of the screen.22 One can just picture the
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inscription: "To Bob Larson -- All my love. Bob Larson."] And, at a Mark
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Russell concert, this balding man of nearly fifty bounded on-stage with an
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almost childlike glee ... to have his picture taken with the patron saint of
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political satire.23
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As Christianity Today reported, and former employees have confirmed, Larson is
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a perfectionist.24 Perfectionists do have a penchant for dwelling on the
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negative, and, for all his accomplishments, Larson has borne his share of
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failures. Like David Koresh, he never quite made it as a rock star. He dropped
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out of college, failed in his marriage, couldn't really cut it as a legitimate
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novelist. Even the one thing insiders insist he has wanted more than anything
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else -- a son -- has been denied him. After almost a decade of psychotherapy,25
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and almost thirty years "in the Lord's work," inner peace has been denied him.
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As an anonymous BLM employee observed in a letter to Salem Broad casting
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president Ed Atsinger:
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"It's also known that Mr. Larson is a psychotic person who
|
||
|
doesn't really like himself and needs the constant cajoling of
|
||
|
others such as his psychologist [presumably, his psychotherapist,
|
||
|
Dr. Kenneth Mesplay26 of many years and one or two close
|
||
|
employees who he uses until something better comes along. He
|
||
|
leaves them betrayed and dismayed at the meaning behind the man
|
||
|
and his ministry...."27
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bob Larson is a man lashing out in pain. And, like the wounded bear in the
|
||
|
cave, he will attack anything which comes his way. He has lost the capacity to
|
||
|
help others, for he can no longer even help himself.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Jailhouse Rock?:
|
||
|
Bob Larson is a statistician's nightmare. He hurls figures like the young
|
||
|
Nolan Ryan threw fastballs: at least 100 miles per hour, and not all that
|
||
|
accurately. In his January 4, 1991 appeal letter to donors, he lamented that,
|
||
|
"With our air time costs more than double what they were two years ago, our
|
||
|
income is actually less than it was then."28 And in his February 4 follow-up,
|
||
|
he wrote:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Now, I'm faced with the most critical decision since TALK-BACK first
|
||
|
went on the air!
|
||
|
|
||
|
What do I do with a $213,000 deficit last year?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Will I have to cut back 1 or 2 days of TALK-BACK?"29
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taken together, the letters paint a picture of a ministry in serious financial
|
||
|
distress. Yet, in reality, Bob Larson Ministries was in the veritable flower of
|
||
|
fiscal health. Ministry tax returns revealed that revenues for 1990 had
|
||
|
actually increased by more than $1.5 million, as compared to 1988.30 The
|
||
|
Ministry's Stewardship Report showed a profit of more than $500,00031; the
|
||
|
deficit reported in February was nowhere to be found. Similarly, the tax
|
||
|
return revealed cash reserves of more than $1.5 million ... after making an
|
||
|
unscheduled $1 million principal payment on the building it owns.32
|
||
|
Still, Larson's cries of poverty continued. In his December 2, 1991
|
||
|
fundraiser, he told donors that, "Because our finances are so low, I'm sorry I
|
||
|
can't make any offers available."33 He repeated that claim in a February, 1992
|
||
|
appeal letter,34 despite the fact that the Ministry's annual audit was completed
|
||
|
the day beforehand, and its' audited financial statements showed a $246,000
|
||
|
profit for the year.35
|
||
|
|
||
|
That Bob Larson made these misrepresentations consciously and deliberately is
|
||
|
beyond question. Each show is rated for its financial productivity, and
|
||
|
Ministry accountants generate a dizzying array of donor statistics. Pledges are
|
||
|
categorized by day, week, donor, and station; full histories are kept on
|
||
|
stations, donors, and appeal letters. Even the daily deposits were compared to
|
||
|
previous year figures. And everything that has anything to do with Ministry
|
||
|
finances is routed to Bob.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A certain measure of exaggeration is tolerated -- and to some degree expected
|
||
|
-- in the typical fundraising letter. Yet, there are limits; Bob Larson's
|
||
|
fundraising regime appears to have crossed into the realm of outright mail
|
||
|
fraud.
|
||
|
In one of those indecipherable 175-word sentences for which our federal
|
||
|
government is rightly famed, 18 U.S.C. =1341 sets out the offense in
|
||
|
excruciating detail:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Whoever, having devised or intending to devise any scheme
|
||
|
or artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or property
|
||
|
by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations,
|
||
|
or promises ... for the purpose of executing such scheme or
|
||
|
artifice or attempting to do so, places in any post office
|
||
|
or authorized depository for mail matter...."36
|
||
|
|
||
|
Roughly translated, any fundraising scheme which uses the U.S. mail, and is
|
||
|
reasonably calculated to deceive persons of ordinary prudence and comprehension
|
||
|
constitutes federal mail fraud. It is not necessary to prove that a fact was
|
||
|
misrepresented, or a donor, misled. Rather, all that needs to be shown is the
|
||
|
intent to deceive' -- which may be inferred by the modus operandi of a scheme --
|
||
|
and the use of the U.S. mails in furtherance of that intent.37
|
||
|
That Bob Larson used the U.S. mail is beyond question; that he knew that the
|
||
|
Ministry was in far better financial condition than he represented in his appeal
|
||
|
letters appears equally clear. In fact, his own fundraising analysis, conducted
|
||
|
in June of 1992, clearly suggests that his literary wails of financial
|
||
|
desperation' in the December 1991 and February 1992 appeal letters were part of
|
||
|
a curious experiment:
|
||
|
|
||
|
GENERAL FACTS AND INFORMATION
|
||
|
6. Not using premiums doesn't hurt letters and helps profit.
|
||
|
|
||
|
7. Unique enclosures help response considerably.
|
||
|
|
||
|
QUARTERLY APPEAL LETTER ANALYSIS
|
||
|
1. Not offering premiums doesn't affect giving.
|
||
|
|
||
|
2. Special enclosures (e.g. Deicide artwork, Sharon's poem)
|
||
|
helps response."38
|
||
|
|
||
|
At any rate, Larson's immaculate deception appears to have been successful.
|
||
|
Thus we are left with the question of whether the scheme was reasonably
|
||
|
calculated to deceive. One of the more persuasive ways of proving that prudent
|
||
|
individuals were likely to be deceived is to demonstrate that one had been
|
||
|
deceived. The pertinent excerpts from a letter to Compassion Connection
|
||
|
director Margo Hamilton, from California attorney Michael Harvey, dated Dec. 12,
|
||
|
1991, speak for themselves:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"RE: WHITE CITY OREGON SATANIC RITUAL ABUSE CASE
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dear Margo and Bob:
|
||
|
|
||
|
This is some kind of battle, isn't it? The financial
|
||
|
constraints and losses occurring at your ministry....
|
||
|
|
||
|
I just need transportation costs and an Oregon associate
|
||
|
attorney's costs, at this time, to go after these Satanists.
|
||
|
I know you folks are in a major financial bind...."39
|
||
|
|
||
|
Like many others who came to Bob Larson Ministries with hat in hand, Harvey
|
||
|
"didn't receive a dime,"40 but that is beside the point. As an attorney, Harvey
|
||
|
presumably qualifies as a person of ordinary prudence and comprehension; the
|
||
|
letter clearly shows that he believed that Bob Larson Ministries was in woeful
|
||
|
financial condition. And if a man of his caliber was fooled ... then, heaven
|
||
|
help the little old lady from Dubuque.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Making of a Best-Selling Author:
|
||
|
Behind the microphone, Bob Larson triumphantly proclaims that he is the author
|
||
|
of twenty-two books, including an encyclopedic reference on cults, Larson's New
|
||
|
Book of Cults. But as is often the case with Larson, reality just doesn't quite
|
||
|
measure up to his press releases. As the following couple of internal memos
|
||
|
suggests, it would be stretching the truth for him to even call himself an
|
||
|
editor:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"DEADLINE TO PUBLISHER: APRIL 1, 1989
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tim's Role: Check for theological accuracy in ERRORS, APPEAL,
|
||
|
and PURPOSE sections. Watch his timing. Can't take too long.
|
||
|
He'll have to assume that factually, we're correct....
|
||
|
|
||
|
PROCEDURES
|
||
|
|
||
|
1. Outline/Scripts
|
||
|
2. Writing (MO will assign)
|
||
|
3. Internal editing -- MO
|
||
|
4. Review -- TP = watch turn-around time
|
||
|
5. Corrections -- MO
|
||
|
6. BL
|
||
|
7. Corrections/Remove footnotes -- MO
|
||
|
8. Publisher"41
|
||
|
_______________________
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTERS WRITTEN BY MS, PE, MO
|
||
|
DATE
|
||
|
CHAPTER AUTHOR FINISHED
|
||
|
Charles Manson MS 2-16-89
|
||
|
Free Masonry MS 2-22-89
|
||
|
Crowleyism (beef up) MS 2-27-89
|
||
|
|
||
|
Life Training PE 2-22-89
|
||
|
Findhorn PE 2-24-89"42
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bob Larson is noticeable only by his absence from the project. Ministry
|
||
|
staffers Mary Stone (now, Kilgannon), Paula Ehresman, Pat Dunn, and Muriel
|
||
|
Olson, along with freelance writer Kari Martin, wrote chapters based on old
|
||
|
Talk-Back scripts (again written by staffers). Once Olson edited them, they
|
||
|
were submitted to Tim Philibosian for theological review. Larson only gave
|
||
|
their final product a quick once-over.
|
||
|
The writing of a book is a laborious task, and, like many celebrity authors',
|
||
|
Bob Larson's "hectic schedule" simply doesn't permit him the time to invest in
|
||
|
such drudgery. After all, skiing, golfing, jogging, mountain-climbing, and
|
||
|
sporadic Bible studies demand major commitments of time and energy ... and, let
|
||
|
us not forget that he has a young wife to attend to, and a multi-million dollar
|
||
|
ministry to run. As the following memo indicates, he can't even be bothered
|
||
|
with the mundane task of coming up with the ideas for "his" books:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"TO: BOB
|
||
|
FROM: BONNIE
|
||
|
RE: DAILY ITEMS
|
||
|
DATE: 7/20/92
|
||
|
CC: MARGO, ANGELO, PAM
|
||
|
__________
|
||
|
|
||
|
9. TYNDALE BOOK SUGGESTIONS -- SIMPLY RESENDING SINCE I HAVEN'T
|
||
|
HEARD FROM YOU YET.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Per your instructions we met and discussed possible topics for
|
||
|
a Tyndale book. Our favorite centers around Exorcism/Demons.
|
||
|
This is the stuff your audience wants to hear from you about.
|
||
|
We suggest the following:
|
||
|
|
||
|
A. Draw from your past experiences in Haiti
|
||
|
B. Adrian, Shirley, and other stories you have shared
|
||
|
with us when you were on the road....
|
||
|
|
||
|
As a side note we also came up with and idea of a book on
|
||
|
blood. Kind of "The Blood of Christ vs. the blood of Satan."
|
||
|
You could discuss how Satan has misrepresented the "Blood" and
|
||
|
made a sacrilege of it. You could also cover:
|
||
|
|
||
|
A. Vampirism
|
||
|
B. Self-mutilation
|
||
|
C. Animal Sacrifice
|
||
|
D. Blood rituals
|
||
|
E. Menstrual fascination."43
|
||
|
|
||
|
Against this curious backdrop, one wouldn't have anticipated him to have even
|
||
|
tried to write a novel. Yet, try it he did; unfortunately, as the following
|
||
|
excerpts from one of the earliest drafts of Dead Air (then, entitled
|
||
|
"Underground") shows, the flesh may have been willing, but the talent was weak:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The words of a small child may ring with more clarity and
|
||
|
truth than the uncertain cacophony of many adult voices if we
|
||
|
listen with our hearts.
|
||
|
Wes Bryant should have known that years ago.
|
||
|
Unfortunately, like many of us, he learned to hear what he
|
||
|
wanted to hear. Only those utterances which enforced his
|
||
|
prejudices or enhanced his predilections were heeded. Anything
|
||
|
confronting his selfish ego or threatening his comfort zone in
|
||
|
life was ignored. Wes thought he had life all figured out, or
|
||
|
at least reduced to workable options. Until the day a child's
|
||
|
voice softly shattered his insulated little world of unrequited
|
||
|
dreams and compromised convictions."
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Can I talk to Mr. Wes?'
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sure honey. How old are you and what's your name?'
|
||
|
|
||
|
Jennifer. I'm nine.'
|
||
|
|
||
|
What do you want to say to Mr. Bryant?'
|
||
|
|
||
|
Well, it's kind of personal. I thought if I dialed this number I could talk to
|
||
|
Mr. Wes'."44
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rough drafts are precisely that; a certain measure of coarseness can be
|
||
|
expected. But some of the passages were sheer literary atrocities:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The sight of the Windy City was blowing her way an ill zephyr
|
||
|
of sobering truth no disbelief could escape....
|
||
|
|
||
|
Manley Harris cocked his head sideways in a gesture that half
|
||
|
wanted to pursue the subject further and press Wes about what
|
||
|
he knew and half resigning himself to respecting the obvious
|
||
|
sincerity of Wes's refusal to say what he might be able to
|
||
|
reveal that would confirm his concerns."45
|
||
|
|
||
|
As the months wore on, it became increasingly apparent that Larson's dreams of
|
||
|
literary stardom were precisely that. Yet, where there is a will -- and, a
|
||
|
staff of forty -- there is a way.
|
||
|
A procession of Larson staffers were commissioned to work on his new endeavor,
|
||
|
including Olson, Boespflug, and the current Mrs. Bob Larson, Laura Anderson.
|
||
|
For instance, in an Aug. 18, 1992 memo to Bob, writ ten by International
|
||
|
Broadcasting Network director Pam Koczman, it was acknowledged that "Laura A.'s
|
||
|
time with the book is 50% and more until Dec."46
|
||
|
|
||
|
As Lori Boespflug, World's star whistle-blower, confided to me many months
|
||
|
ago, "Bob Larson can't write by himself."47 Muriel Olson, a former BLM copy
|
||
|
editor with a lifetime of editing experience, seconded Boespflug's thought in a
|
||
|
lawsuit, claiming that Larson was "an inadequate writer."48 And while Larson
|
||
|
may, in some circles, be compared with Larry King, no one will ever mistake him
|
||
|
for Stephen King.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And Bob Larson knows it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is not so much the fact that Larson does not, in any meaningful sense of
|
||
|
the word, "write" his books which raises eyebrows; rather, it is the reckless
|
||
|
abandon with which he uses sacrificially-given Ministry resources to subsidize
|
||
|
his career as an author. As numerous court documents, former Larson employees,
|
||
|
knowledgeable third parties (e.g., Larson's attorneys), and internal BLM memos
|
||
|
attest, Ministry employees do the work -- while on the Ministry payroll. All
|
||
|
Larson does is collect the royalties.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The following letter, submitted to the Jefferson County (Colo.) District Court
|
||
|
in connection with a recent lawsuit by former BLM employee Muriel Olson, further
|
||
|
evidences Larson's misuse of Ministry resources:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"June 20, 1990
|
||
|
|
||
|
PERSONAL AND CONFIDENTIAL
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ms. Muriel Olson
|
||
|
[address deleted]
|
||
|
|
||
|
This will confirm our agreement regarding the work you have
|
||
|
performed or will perform as an employee of Bob Larson Minis
|
||
|
tries in connection with my novel involving Satanism.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is specifically understood that you expect no credit
|
||
|
whatsoever in my novel as published or in any related or
|
||
|
derivative work, but grant me the right without obligation,
|
||
|
to use your name or likeness in credits or otherwise....
|
||
|
|
||
|
Finally, you understand that you shall receive no additional
|
||
|
compensation for your work in connection with my novel except
|
||
|
payment for overtime work, specifically approved in advance by
|
||
|
me."49
|
||
|
|
||
|
As indicated in Olson's complaint, it wasn't much of an "agreement"; Larson
|
||
|
reportedly told her, in essence, that she had to sign that let ter ... or
|
||
|
else.50 Larson won the lawsuit, on the ground that Olson's efforts were "within
|
||
|
the scope of her employment."51 However, as both parties conceded in their
|
||
|
briefs, Olson "was never an employee of Bob Larson personally."52 Yet, as a
|
||
|
federal hearing officer determined in a related case, even though Olson's salary
|
||
|
came from the Ministry, her only job was "to rewrite and edit chapters of a
|
||
|
book" -- for the sole and exclusive benefit of Bob Larson.53 The thousands of
|
||
|
hours she and others have spent writing works like Abaddon, Dead Air, Satanism:
|
||
|
The Seduction of America's Youth, and Straight Answers on the New Age were paid
|
||
|
for by faithful "Heroes," "Champions," and "Communicator Club" members.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thomas Nelson Publications, the world's foremost publisher of Christian
|
||
|
materials, evidently was aware of Larson's literary shortcomings. As the
|
||
|
following excerpts from this internal BLM memo indicate, Nelson management aided
|
||
|
and abetted him in his efforts to pass himself off as a legitimate author:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"TO: Bonnie
|
||
|
RE: Thomas Nelson Meeting
|
||
|
CC: Margo/Angelo
|
||
|
DATE: 07/03 [1992]
|
||
|
FROM: Bob Larson
|
||
|
|
||
|
1. They have a work for hire contract they are sending me to
|
||
|
avoid any problems in the future....
|
||
|
|
||
|
6. Insist me next manuscript be seen by a lot of people to make
|
||
|
sure it's OK this time....
|
||
|
|
||
|
9. If don't get book out on spring list 93 will want to wait
|
||
|
until 94! ...
|
||
|
|
||
|
11. In marketing the sequel, he doesn't want any move "waves"
|
||
|
like we did last time, e.g. several pushes on certain dates. He
|
||
|
wants to "go for the gusto" all at once when the book comes
|
||
|
out. [All sentences in context]"54
|
||
|
|
||
|
While "work for hire" arrangements are perfectly legal55 -- and surprisingly
|
||
|
common in the Christian publishing industry56 -- the ethical implications of the
|
||
|
practice are profound. It appears that, in their private dealings, these
|
||
|
self-appointed mavens of "mainstream morality" can't even abide by the ethical
|
||
|
standards established by that supposed object lesson in moral decay known as
|
||
|
Hollywood.
|
||
|
That Larson continues to make liberal use of Ministry-paid staffers for his
|
||
|
personal gain is evidenced by a second memo to Bonnie -- this time, written and
|
||
|
initialed by BLM secretary Becky Prien:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Bob's been pulling me as soon as the show is over until I go
|
||
|
home to do book edits. Therefore, I can't get to the front
|
||
|
desk from 4:30 to 6:00. Lisa, Chris and Tammy have been taking
|
||
|
my shifts, but today no one could stay late. Angelo, however,
|
||
|
finally found Debbi to stay for me."57
|
||
|
|
||
|
It almost seems as if everyone at BLM works on "Bob's" books -- except Bob!
|
||
|
Ministry funds are used to pay for direct-mail campaigns, Ministry air time is
|
||
|
used to run slick promotional spots, and Ministry studios have been used to
|
||
|
create those ads. And even though the Ministry squanders so much of its
|
||
|
"limited" resources in order to turn his literary fantasies into lucrative
|
||
|
reality, Bob has the audacity to charge an author's royalty for the books it
|
||
|
"gives" to contributors.58
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
For Whom the Bell Tolls...:
|
||
|
Unlike his celebrated counterpart, Jim Bakker, Bob Larson knows that his
|
||
|
actions over the last few years are without question immoral -- if not patently
|
||
|
illegal. Several callers have asked him on the air about the controversy, but
|
||
|
their voices were quickly squelched by his panic button'. When the Evangelical
|
||
|
Council for Financial Accountability (ECFA) raised questions of their own,
|
||
|
Larson indignantly withdrew his membership application.59 And all the while,
|
||
|
his hand-picked board of directors sat in blissful acquiescence.
|
||
|
Larson has gone to extraordinary lengths to evade such outside scrutiny. When
|
||
|
leaving BLM, key employees are required to sign confidentiality agreements'
|
||
|
which, in essence, are intended to deter them from revealing evidence of
|
||
|
wrongdoing.60 Nor is he subject to peer review: The organization which
|
||
|
provided him his ordination credentials -- Dave Ford's Evangelistic Messengers,
|
||
|
of Cleveland, TN -- was not even aware of his divorce from ex-wife Kathy, some
|
||
|
two years after the fact.61 And, as this excerpt from an August, 1992 memo,
|
||
|
initialed by BLM vice president Angelo Diasparra suggests, the Ministry's
|
||
|
financial information is regarded as a state secret':
|
||
|
|
||
|
"All other written requests for financial information
|
||
|
regarding the ministry or Bob personally will be referred to
|
||
|
Angelo for disposition.... If a phone request is for anything
|
||
|
other than the Stewardship Report, the caller is told to put
|
||
|
the request in writing, giving reasons, and send it to the
|
||
|
attention of the Chief Financial Officer."62
|
||
|
|
||
|
By sharp contrast, legitimate ministries (e.g., James Dobson's Focus on the
|
||
|
Family) give out copies of their financial statements to anyone who asks.63 And
|
||
|
even the LDS Church starts out its' annual televised meeting with a presentation
|
||
|
of the audit report. But Larson acts like a man who has something to hide.
|
||
|
Tax fraud, mail fraud, wire fraud, embezzlement -- these are matters best left
|
||
|
to the proper authorities. But stewardship begins at home.
|
||
|
|
||
|
______________________________________________________________________
|
||
|
|
||
|
ENDNOTES:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Secrets of Freemasonry Revealed:
|
||
|
1 Kelly Hafey, "Evil Addiction (radio script)," 1 Jul. 1992, p. 1.
|
||
|
2 Mary Kilgannon, "Bob Backers (radio script)," 20 Oct. 1992, p. 1.
|
||
|
3 E.g., see Mary Kilgannon, "Teens Tormenting Teens (radio script),"
|
||
|
31 Aug. 1992, pp. 2-3.
|
||
|
4 Mary Kilgannon, Memorandum (to Bob Larson), 28 Aug. 1992, pp. 1-3.
|
||
|
5 Linda [Felde?] per Margo [Hamilton], Memorandum (to Bob Larson), 27
|
||
|
Jul. 1992, p. 1.
|
||
|
6 Michael Roberts, "The Evil That Men Do," Westword, May 27-Jun 2,
|
||
|
1992, p. 18 (I confirmed this report with "Marjorie" -- who has known
|
||
|
the Larsons socially for some time, and has been a valuable source of
|
||
|
background information).
|
||
|
7 Lori Boespflug, Interview, 17 Jun. 1992.
|
||
|
8 Margo Hamilton, Memorandum (to Bob Larson), 10 Jul. 1992, p. 1.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Prophet Motive:
|
||
|
9 Bob Larson, Fund Raising Analysis (attachment to a memorandum to
|
||
|
Bonnie Bell), 26 Jun. 1992, pp. 1-2.
|
||
|
10 Jay Grelen and Doug LeBlanc, "This is Me, This is Real," World,
|
||
|
Vol. 7, No. 32, 23 Jan. 1993, p. 8.
|
||
|
11 Karolyn Merriman, Letter (to Bob Larson), 11 May 1992, p. 1.
|
||
|
12 Anonymous, Letter, Colorado Christian News, April 1993, p. 8 (CCN
|
||
|
editor Joann Bruso advised me in an April telephone conversation that
|
||
|
she spoke to the author of that letter, and believes the story to be
|
||
|
genuine).
|
||
|
13 Margo Hamilton, Memorandum (to Bob Larson), 20 Oct. 1992, p. 2.
|
||
|
14 Margo Hamilton, Memorandum (to Bob Larson), 26 Nov. 1991, pp. 1-2.
|
||
|
15 Lori Boespflug, Interview, 17 Jun. 1992 (corroborated by memoranda
|
||
|
from former Larson staffer Alan Hergert re: technical aspects of studio set-up
|
||
|
-- obtained from an independent source -- and verified by
|
||
|
a technical glitch in the Sept. 29, 1993 broadcast of Talk-Back).
|
||
|
|
||
|
I Love Myself...
|
||
|
16 Bob Larson, "Talk-Back With Bob Larson," Radio broadcast, 29 Jan.
|
||
|
1993.
|
||
|
17 Kathy Hendricks, Memorandum (to Bob Larson/Bonnie Bell), 10 Nov.
|
||
|
1992.
|
||
|
18 Kathy Hendricks, Memorandum (to Bob Larson/Bonnie Bell), 14 Oct.
|
||
|
1992.
|
||
|
19 Unidentified, Memorandum, 9 Nov. 1992.
|
||
|
20 Lori Boespflug, Telephone interview, Jun. 1992 (author made call to
|
||
|
Phonecian Resort to determine 1993-94 high-season room rate).
|
||
|
21 Computerized personal telephone directory, Undated.
|
||
|
22 "In Search of Satan," Television broadcast, Home Box Office, 1993.
|
||
|
23 Author's personal observation (see, Bob Larson, "Talk-Back With Bob
|
||
|
Larson," Radio broadcast, 19 Oct. 1992, for an oblique confirmation
|
||
|
of the encounter).
|
||
|
24 Timothy Morgan, "Bob on the Block," Christianity Today, 17 May
|
||
|
1993, p. 74.
|
||
|
25 Lori Boespflug, Interview, 17 Jun. 1992 (Mesplay is listed in the
|
||
|
Denver telephone directory as a psychotherapist; he likewise appears
|
||
|
on Larson's computerized rolodex).
|
||
|
26 Ibid., ibid. (key BLM managers were encouraged to receive treatment
|
||
|
from Mesplay; Boespflug attended six sessions before refusing to continue).
|
||
|
27 Anonymous, Letter (to Edward Atsinger, President of Salem Communications),
|
||
|
1991. (The authenticity of the letter was confirmed by former Salem employee,
|
||
|
attorney, and Christian talk-show host John Stewart.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Jailhouse Rock?:
|
||
|
28 Bob Larson, Appeal Letter, 4 Jan. 1991, p. 2.
|
||
|
29 Bob Larson, Appeal Letter, 4 Feb. 1991, p. 2.
|
||
|
30 Bob Larson Ministries, 1990 Form 990, pp. 1-2 (copy on file).
|
||
|
31 Bob Larson Ministries, 1990 Stewardship Report, inside of folder.
|
||
|
32 Interview, Name withheld by request, 1993 (corroborated by the
|
||
|
Ministry's 1990 federal form 990).
|
||
|
33 Bob Larson, Appeal Letter, 2 Dec. 1991, p. 2.
|
||
|
34 Bob Larson, Appeal Letter, 19 Feb. 1992, p. 2.
|
||
|
35 Bob Larson Ministries, Independent Auditors' Report, 18 Feb. 1992,
|
||
|
cover letter.
|
||
|
36 18 U.S.C. 1341 (1988).
|
||
|
37 The scope of =1341 is nicely summarized in a 1965 case involving an
|
||
|
employment agency scam perpetrated in Denver:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The crime of mail fraud is broad in its scope, and may
|
||
|
ordinarily be shown by proof of the intentional devising of a
|
||
|
scheme to defraud and that the mail was used in furtherance of
|
||
|
it. The scheme is one to defraud if it is reasonably
|
||
|
calculated to deceive persons of ordinary prudence and
|
||
|
comprehension. Direct proof of willful intent is not necessary.
|
||
|
Not only are the patently false statements prohibited, but also
|
||
|
those made with a reckless indifference as to whether they are
|
||
|
true or false. Similarly, the deceitful concealment of material
|
||
|
facts may also constitute actual fraud. Moreover, the
|
||
|
deception need not be premised upon the verbalized words alone.
|
||
|
The arrangement of the words, or the circumstances in which
|
||
|
they are used may convey the false and deceptive appearance
|
||
|
[citations omitted]."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Gusow v. United States, 347 F.2d 755 (10th Cir. 1965), cert. den 382
|
||
|
US 906 (parallel citations omitted).
|
||
|
38 Larson (Fund Raising Analysis), supra note 9, p. 2.
|
||
|
39 Michael Harvey, Letter (to Bob Larson Ministries), 12 Dec. 1991
|
||
|
(copy on file).
|
||
|
40 Michael Harvey, Telephone interview, 8 Sept. 1993.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Making of a Best-Selling Author:
|
||
|
41 Muriel Olson, Memorandum (to Bob Larson), 2 Feb. 1989, pp. 1-2.
|
||
|
42 Memorandum (to Bob Larson(?)), 1 Mar. 1989, p. 2(?) (the document
|
||
|
itself is unattributed, but it is in substance supported by two other
|
||
|
memos -- and one has Larson's handwriting on it).
|
||
|
43 Bonita ("Bonnie") Bell, Memorandum (to Bob Larson), 20 Aug. 1992,
|
||
|
p. 2.
|
||
|
44 Bob Larson, "Underground (title ascertained from other sources),"
|
||
|
(unpublished manuscript; copy on file), Undated, Chapter One, p. 1.
|
||
|
45 Ibid (the source has requested confidentiality).
|
||
|
46 Lori Boespflug, Interview, 17 Jun. 1992.
|
||
|
47 Affidavit of Muriel S. Olson at 6, Olson v. Larson, No. 92 CV 2058
|
||
|
(Jefferson County (Colo.) Dist. Ct., Dec. 18, 1992).
|
||
|
48 Pam Koczman, Memorandum (to Bob Larson), 18 Aug. 1992 (copy on file
|
||
|
includes Larson's handwriting, and FYI to Bonnie Bell).
|
||
|
49 Bob Larson, Letter (to Muriel Olson), 20 Jun. 1990.
|
||
|
50 Plaintiff's Brief in Response to Defendants' Motion to Dismiss or
|
||
|
in the Alternative Motion for Summary Judgment at 6, Olson v. Larson.
|
||
|
51 Defendants' Reply Brief at 3, Id.
|
||
|
52 Order at 10, Id.
|
||
|
53 Francisco J. Flores, Jr. (Dist. Dir. of the U. S. Equal Employment
|
||
|
Opportunity Commission), Determination Letter, Charge No. 3209211626,
|
||
|
31 Dec. 1992, p. 1.
|
||
|
54 Bob Larson, Memorandum (to Bonnie Bell), 7 July 1992 (year deter
|
||
|
mined in context).
|
||
|
55 17 U.S.C. =201(b) (1988).
|
||
|
56 See, e.g., Edward Plowman, "Haunted Houses" World, Vol. 8, No. 3,
|
||
|
10 Apr. 1993, pp. 10-14.
|
||
|
57 Becky Prien, Memorandum (to Bonnie Bell), 20 Jul. 1992 (copy on
|
||
|
file).
|
||
|
58 Bob Larson, Interview, 17 Oct. 1992 (see also, e.g., BLM's 1990
|
||
|
Form 990 (related party transactions are to be disclosed therein) and
|
||
|
Note 6 to BLM's 1991 audited financial statements ("During 1991, the
|
||
|
Ministry purchased books and materials totaling $67,982 from an officer of the
|
||
|
Ministry. The officer's cost in the books and materials
|
||
|
sold was $45,215"). Conclusion: another $22,000 falls into Larson's
|
||
|
pocket.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For Whom the Bell Tolls:
|
||
|
59 See, Pat Mahoney, Fax (to Ken Smith), 22 Sept. 1993; Gary Massaro,
|
||
|
"Ministry Quits Audit Group over Finances," Rocky Mountain News, 24
|
||
|
Sept. 1993, p. 12A, col. 5, and a similar article by Joyce Mucci in
|
||
|
the Kansas City Christian (cite unavailable at this time).
|
||
|
60 Larson tried to enforce just such an
|
||
|
agreement' in Bob Larson Ministries v. Boespflug, No. 93 CV 442 (Jefferson
|
||
|
County (Colo.) Dist. Ct., filed 8 Mar. 1993).
|
||
|
61 David Ford, Telephone interview, 27 Sept. 1993. According to Ford,
|
||
|
the Association requires prospective ministers to engage in course
|
||
|
work prior to ordination. But twenty years ago, theirs was strictly
|
||
|
an apprenticeship program.
|
||
|
The Association's disciplinary procedures are ad hoc; evidence of a
|
||
|
minister's malfeasance is brought to their attention on an informal
|
||
|
basis.
|
||
|
62 Angelo Diasparra, Memorandum (to staff), 14 Aug. 1992.
|
||
|
63 Teresa Aggen (Focus on the Family), Telephone interview, 27 Sept.
|
||
|
1993.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
PART 4
|
||
|
|
||
|
Date: Thu, 21 Oct 93 16:11 EDT
|
||
|
From: "Scott.Mikusko" <21922SM@msu.edu>
|
||
|
Subject: Bob Larson ( sort of ) Talks-Back
|
||
|
|
||
|
Here's is the latest article on the Bob Larson scandal. This article also
|
||
|
appears in last month's _Christian Press Report_, and was given to me personally
|
||
|
by Ken Smith for posting to the newsgroups. This may be distributed throughout
|
||
|
the NET.
|
||
|
|
||
|
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>Bob Larson (sort of) Talks-Back<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
|
||
|
|
||
|
" You deserve to die, Bob Larson ... I'll brand Satan's cross on YOUR
|
||
|
forehead!"{1} Such are the threats of Glen Benton, lead singer ( and I use that
|
||
|
term advisedly ) of the Tampa-based death-metal band, Deicide. Even in his
|
||
|
photographs, the burly 25-year-old rocker looks as sinister as his music sounds,
|
||
|
right down to the inverted cross - his 'trademark'- burned into his forehead. A
|
||
|
challenge like that, from a self-professing Satanist, would frighten any sane
|
||
|
man.
|
||
|
But the object of Benton's attention, veteran Christian talk-show host Bob
|
||
|
Larson, shows no fear. In a fund raising letter, he boasted that he will face
|
||
|
Benton anywhere - "with the armor of the Lord and the power of God's word."{2}
|
||
|
Benton reiterated his threats while in Denver on a recent concert tour, but
|
||
|
Larson was so confident that, to the best of our knowledge, he never even
|
||
|
bothered to press charges.
|
||
|
|
||
|
July 15, 1993. Larson appears as a guest on Ft. Lauderdale radio station
|
||
|
WFTL, denouncing death-metal bands like Slayer and others as "posers" who are
|
||
|
merely in it for the money. But when host Pat Stevens asked him whether he was
|
||
|
in the ministry for money, he indignantly said that he was "insulted" that she
|
||
|
would even ask that question. And that's where I come in.
|
||
|
My opening salvo was familiar to CPR readers: "The primary mission of Bob
|
||
|
Larson Ministries is to minister to the extravagant needs of Bob Larson; the
|
||
|
kids are just an alibi."{3} I followed by reiterating three basic charges: (1)
|
||
|
although he tells his audience that his ministry was on the edge of financial
|
||
|
disaster, it was sitting on nearly $2 million in cash;{4} (2) even though he
|
||
|
supposedly earned a modest $69,000 salary from the Ministry, his total
|
||
|
compensation package from the Ministry sources was somewhere in the neighborhood
|
||
|
of $500,000 per year.{5} and (3) while we had a copy of a letter from his
|
||
|
attorney {6} clearly indicating that he did not - in any meaningful sense of the
|
||
|
word - write his best selling novel, _Dead Air_, he still claimed authorship. I
|
||
|
further outlined the documentation we have at our disposal, which includes
|
||
|
contracts, the Ministry's audited financial statements, and other documents
|
||
|
signed under penalty of perjury.
|
||
|
As a guest, Larson didn't have his 'panic button' handy; he became almost
|
||
|
apoplectic. His calm, self-assured facade gave way; his voice betrayed a
|
||
|
chilling sense of desperation. You see, it is quite easy to refute the ravings
|
||
|
of a madman ... but facing up to several pounds of hard documentation is quite
|
||
|
another matter.
|
||
|
Unable to respond intelligently to my charges, Larson resorted to to a
|
||
|
ferocious ad hominum assault - accusing me of complicity in a litany of criminal
|
||
|
acts, and labeling me a "stalker" who has hounded him for years. And then, he
|
||
|
adroitly tried to change the subject:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You want to talk about my novel. If you want to talk
|
||
|
about that I'd be happy to discuss it; if you want to
|
||
|
talk about the personal private affairs or the personal
|
||
|
marital affairs of the other gentleman in the room - and
|
||
|
let's bring all those issues out into the open - and we
|
||
|
want to make that the subject ..."{7}
|
||
|
|
||
|
Stevens saw through Bob's blatant diversionary tactic, and would have none
|
||
|
of it:
|
||
|
|
||
|
PS: "Well, what we want to talk about, Bob, is Bob Larson
|
||
|
Ministries, and Bob LArson Ministries is what you had, and
|
||
|
that's - that seems to be what's being taken into issue here."
|
||
|
BL: "We're not here to talk about Bob LArson Ministries."
|
||
|
PS: "Well, I'M here to talk about Bob Larson Ministries.
|
||
|
are you ASHAMED of your involvement with the Ministries? Are
|
||
|
you not willing to confront this individual?"
|
||
|
BL [interrupting]: " I, er ..."
|
||
|
PS: "If he's actually a liar, then you should be really
|
||
|
anxious to point it out on the air, and PROVE he's a liar !"
|
||
|
BL: "Pat, if you know anything about pathological stalkers,
|
||
|
you know the most dangerous thing you can do is to allow
|
||
|
these people any further opportunity, and I will not threaten
|
||
|
the lives of my family ..."
|
||
|
PS: "Sounds to me like you're a chicken, Bob. Sounds to me
|
||
|
like you're too darned afraid to bring this up ... and I
|
||
|
think you'd better pray to God, and have a little bit of
|
||
|
strength and courage and confront this issue."{8}
|
||
|
|
||
|
The phone fell silent. Bob Larson, that proud spiritual warrior, a grizzled
|
||
|
veteran of hundreds of exorcisms, simply hung up. And, when the people of WFTL
|
||
|
tried to get him back, he evidently refused: "He's afraid of your long distance
|
||
|
caller. He won't go back on the air."{9}
|
||
|
|
||
|
Let's put this incident in it's proper perspective. Bob Larson can look the
|
||
|
Devil in the eye - and, make him blink. He can face avowed Satanists like Glen
|
||
|
Benton and Vince Crowley (of the death-metal band Asheron) without fear - for he
|
||
|
knows the armor of the Lord will protect him. But yet, he flees in stark terror
|
||
|
from the inquiries of a certified public accountant ?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Res ipsa loquitur (the thing speaks for itself).
|
||
|
|
||
|
_Judge not, lest ye be judged_ ...
|
||
|
As _world_ editor Joel Belz pointed out,{10} Bob Larson's teachings are the
|
||
|
picture of orthodoxy. Thus it is not that he doesn't believe the Scriptures, but
|
||
|
rather, that he believes that they apply only to mere mortals - best selling
|
||
|
authors and commentators are, of course, exempt. For little gods like Bob, do
|
||
|
what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law.
|
||
|
For instance, in a letter to Christian talk-show host John Stewart, Larson
|
||
|
chastises him for his supposed "efforts to publicly bring harm to the Lord's
|
||
|
work" and invokes Matthew 7:1 "... in the same way you judge others, you will
|
||
|
be judged (NIV)."{11} Further, he has vilified his other critics, charging them
|
||
|
with perpetrating "vicious attacks" and engaging in "unethical" conduct on
|
||
|
occasions too numerous to mention. {12} Therefore, if he is to have the right
|
||
|
to judge us, his conduct in this affair must be itself reasonably ethical, and
|
||
|
devoid of vindictiveness. In that light, let us consider how Bob Larson has
|
||
|
conducted his affairs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the winter of 1988, a Larson employee leaked internal BLM memos to
|
||
|
_Christianity Today_ outlining a scheme where Bob would feign illness, so that
|
||
|
he could make his annual vacation in Maui without suffering a drop in donations.
|
||
|
Of course, the memo mysteriously disappeared ... and just three weeks later,
|
||
|
that "extremely mentally unstable" employee, as Larson put it, was fired.{13}
|
||
|
The employee, Yvonne Morgan, sued Larson shortly thereafter; some of the
|
||
|
allegations made in her pleadings are decidedly intriguing:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"7. After her probationary period, Plaintiff became aware of
|
||
|
unusual, and improper practices, including practices which she
|
||
|
believed to be unlawful.
|
||
|
|
||
|
8. Upon realizing that unlawful practices were occurring,
|
||
|
including but not limited to donors being provided false
|
||
|
information concerning financial needs/expenditures of BOb
|
||
|
Larson Ministries, ...
|
||
|
|
||
|
9. In response to a request for feedback from Defendant,
|
||
|
Bob Larson, Plaintiff provided written memoranda, as well as
|
||
|
provided verbal input concerning what she believed to be impr-
|
||
|
oper practices, including the hiring of an individual, and the
|
||
|
ministry paying her a substantial sum of money when it was
|
||
|
obvious to Plaintiff, and others, that the primary purpose in
|
||
|
her hired to work for the ministry was a personal one of
|
||
|
Defendant, Bob Larson.
|
||
|
|
||
|
10. A great deal of undue stress, and other intentional
|
||
|
conduct was perpetrated against Plaintiff, including but not
|
||
|
limited to her receiving a memo shortly before she was term-
|
||
|
inated, to the effect that 'your body is going to be found
|
||
|
floating face down in a river ...'
|
||
|
|
||
|
28. From the time that Plaintiff began opposing the unlawful
|
||
|
practices of Defendants, she has been receiving, and continues
|
||
|
to receive harassing phone calls at home" {14}
|
||
|
|
||
|
Larson quietly settled this case out of court for $30,000,{15} and if the
|
||
|
allegations Morgan made had any grounding in fact, advisedly so. In defense of
|
||
|
Larson, the line separating illegal from unethical conduct is not always a clear
|
||
|
one. However, the Morgan incident is evidence of Larson's modus operandi: the
|
||
|
strategy he employs is to neutralize his critics.
|
||
|
Lori Boespflug, _World_'s 'star witness', reported that Larson hurled
|
||
|
personal threats at her as well. In my July 1992 interview with her, she related
|
||
|
her firing ( on a Saturday night, at her daughter's dance recital ) in lurid
|
||
|
detail - among the myriad vulgarities he unleashed during his tirade, he pledged
|
||
|
to "make her life a living hell."{16} It is, ironically, one of the precious few
|
||
|
promises that he has, on some level, been able to KEEP.
|
||
|
Larson's penchant for defaming his opponents is, if anything, even more
|
||
|
pronounced. However, the shameless methods he will resort to in order to get his
|
||
|
'mud' are so far beyond the pale of ethical behavior as to speak for themselves.
|
||
|
You can imagine my shock when I received a copy of this internal Bob Larson
|
||
|
Ministries memo from one of my BLM sources:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"TO: Angelo [Diasparra, BLM vice-president]
|
||
|
RE: Rummerfield [Golden, CO-based private investigator David]
|
||
|
CC: None
|
||
|
DATE: 12/28/92
|
||
|
FROM: Bob Larson
|
||
|
|
||
|
I think you need to talk it over with Chris J. [Chris Johnson,
|
||
|
the Ministry's general counsel] the options he has indicated.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I am not impressed with this report. Is this all we get for the
|
||
|
money spent? He hasn't reached any conclusions that we didn't
|
||
|
already know. I thought we'd get some serious info about Ken
|
||
|
Smith that couldn't be obtained by any reasonable person by just
|
||
|
reading his letters. I hesitate to go forward unless he does
|
||
|
some serious detective work ... Smith's finances, employment
|
||
|
situation, comings and goings, relationships ... anything we
|
||
|
can do to put some heat on him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Also, by now you should have checked up on the Susan Miller
|
||
|
situation and returned her call. (Be careful for a set up.)
|
||
|
We don't need Rummerfield for that. You call and find out
|
||
|
what you can." {17}
|
||
|
|
||
|
Larson has never disputed the authenticity of this memo - instead, he has
|
||
|
claimed that it was the product of computer theft.{18} But even if it was
|
||
|
obtained from the Ministry via gunpoint, it still wouldn't change the fact that
|
||
|
Larson was intent upon gathering on me that can have only two conceivable
|
||
|
purposes: blackmail or revenge. [Incidently, upon receiving said memo, I
|
||
|
immediately turned it over to the custody of the Lakewood (CO) Police
|
||
|
Department;{19} my copy was obtained from John Trott of _Cornerstone_ magazine.]
|
||
|
In an interview on Wichita radio station KNSS, Larson explained the memo in
|
||
|
the following manner:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It was a private communication with regards to threats upon
|
||
|
my life ... with regards to arson threats upon my property."{20}
|
||
|
|
||
|
If there is any nexus between that memo and supposed arson threats, it is
|
||
|
tenuous in the extreme. The Lakewood P.D. did report one incident, but it was
|
||
|
more the flavor of a high-school prank than anything else. As the reporting
|
||
|
officer described it, this purported "threat" consisted of a photograph of two
|
||
|
unidentifiable individuals - wearing hooded robes and apparently "holding a
|
||
|
flaming bottle of beer" - allegedly standing outside his house. The message on
|
||
|
the back of the photograph read, "This Bud's for you, Sh**head ! Happy Halloween
|
||
|
P.S. Love your house $441,000."{21} As one might have expected, Larson fingered
|
||
|
me as a suspect, if for no other reason than I was getting a tad close too close
|
||
|
to uncovering the skeletons in his Ministry's closet.
|
||
|
|
||
|
None of Larson's opponents have been spared from his naked and vindictive
|
||
|
'verbal muggings'. His latest victim (aside from myself) was Chicago-based
|
||
|
_Cornerstone_ magazine:
|
||
|
|
||
|
[in response to a caller] "No, _Cornerstone_ is not a
|
||
|
reputable magazine. They've been on a 'kick' for the last
|
||
|
two years to destroy anyone who speaks out against Satanism,
|
||
|
and they will stoop to any tactic, they will lie, they will
|
||
|
misrepresent any fact, and they will twist anything ...
|
||
|
And what they did to me - the lies they were willing to
|
||
|
distribute and the things they were willing to tell that
|
||
|
were flat out lies ... and they know that they were lies ...
|
||
|
and the kind of, uh, uh, I wouldn't expect out of the
|
||
|
_National Enquirer_ what they did behind the scenes in the
|
||
|
most ugly - the most incredible, ugly kinds of ways to
|
||
|
destroy me ..."{22}
|
||
|
|
||
|
[re: a follow up question on Mike Warnke] "It isn't just an
|
||
|
issue of what they said about Mike that was true or not true,
|
||
|
it's how they went about it ... the tactics - the unethical
|
||
|
illegal tactics they used to bring Mike down. It was vicious
|
||
|
and it was ugly. I know went on behind the scenes, and it's
|
||
|
some of the same kind of junk they tried to pull against me."{23}
|
||
|
|
||
|
What Larson unquestionably objected to the most is that _Cornerstone_
|
||
|
reprinted the most damning evidence against him, a letter from attorney William
|
||
|
T. Abbott - which clearly indicates that Larson did not, in fact, write _Dead
|
||
|
Air_, "his" best selling novel. And, although he evidently lacks the courage to
|
||
|
address these issues in a neutral site against a knowledgeable opponent, he has
|
||
|
seen fit to respond to the charge in the comparative safety of his own studio
|
||
|
(the caller raising the question was heavily censored, and was not afforded a
|
||
|
chance to comment). His explanation is as follows:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What they (_Cornerstone_) printed was plain and simple:
|
||
|
An attorney, that represented this ministry a couple of years
|
||
|
ago, became concerned about an employee who might try to
|
||
|
assert unreasonable rights, claiming contributions to the
|
||
|
book that were lies, and he was warning me in advance about
|
||
|
that. In fact, that very employee was fired for immoral
|
||
|
reasons [sic], turned around and did make the allegations
|
||
|
I was warned about in that idiotic letter that was a stolen
|
||
|
document of confidential private information between attorney-
|
||
|
client privilege [sic], had to do with an attempt by this
|
||
|
very individual, and all the attorney was trying to warn me
|
||
|
that that might happen. That's all !"{24}
|
||
|
|
||
|
While Larson is a master of making it look as if he is the victim, the
|
||
|
letter he is referring to paints a drastically different picture. Phrases like
|
||
|
"knowing the role Lori has played,","I know how I would advise her in this
|
||
|
regard," and "You will be required to write more," make it self-evident that
|
||
|
Larson's attorney knew full well that Lori Boespflug could lay legitimate claim
|
||
|
to the authorship of _Dead Air_. Standing alone, that letter (and Larson's
|
||
|
misrepresentation of it) is highly incriminating. However, in light of the
|
||
|
wealth of corroborating evidence (e.g., signed contracts, letters from Thomas
|
||
|
Nelson editor Janet Thoma to Boespflug, a Form 1099-MISC, authentication of the
|
||
|
letter by Bill Abbott himself, et al.), it becomes the proverbial 'smoking gun'.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Larson's other contentions are either ad hominum or non sequiturs. Ms.
|
||
|
Boespflug was in fact fired for living with her fiance, but there is fairly
|
||
|
convincing evidence that there was a lot more to the story than meets the eye.
|
||
|
But regardless of the moral judgment you pass on her conduct (do keep in mind
|
||
|
that LARSON divorced his wife - not the other way around - and recently married
|
||
|
a divorcee nearly 20 years his junior){25}, it should not lessen her credibility
|
||
|
in the slightest. If anything, it adds to her credence to her testimony - she
|
||
|
didn't even try to deny it, despite the fact that she "was certain" that she
|
||
|
would be fired for admitting it.{26}
|
||
|
Along similar lines, Larson's claim that the Abbott letter was subject to
|
||
|
the "attorney-client privilege" is equally ludicrous. If, as Larson states, Bill
|
||
|
Abbott was in the employ of Bob Larson Ministries - as opposed to Bob Larson
|
||
|
individually - then that document was in fact Ministry property. Hence,
|
||
|
Boespflug, a corporate officer,{27} had a clear right to possession, and
|
||
|
arguably, a fiduciary obligation to disclose Larson's ultra vires activities.
|
||
|
Conversely, even if Abbott was in the employ at the time the letter was written,
|
||
|
the attorney-client privilege can be lost through client negligence. Besides, if
|
||
|
Bill Abbott was representing both the corporation and Bob Larson personally,
|
||
|
all sorts of conflict-of-interest problems come up. Thus it would seems that
|
||
|
Boespflug obtained the letter legally and ethically. Consequently, so did
|
||
|
_Cornerstone_'s John Trott.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I respectfully submit that Bob Larson does not have the requisite standing
|
||
|
to complain that he is the victim of unethical conduct. The common law has an
|
||
|
old saying: "He who asks equity must DO equity."
|
||
|
|
||
|
I could go on (and have in my earlier article, _The Two Faces of Bob_), but
|
||
|
I trust that I have made my point. Bob Larson is a liar and a rogue - a man with
|
||
|
the conscience of Jeffrey Dahmer, the grace of Sean Penn, and the COURAGE of
|
||
|
Roberto Duran. His holy grail is naked power; he cares not about those he would
|
||
|
use and destroy in order to attain it. I've seen the evidence, spoken to the
|
||
|
victims ....
|
||
|
|
||
|
AND BOB KNOWS IT. THAT'S WHY HE FEARS ME.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
_For Whom the Bell Tolls ..._
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is perhaps fitting that, by his own words, Bob Larson has sealed his
|
||
|
fate. Responding to a caller who criticized him for his penchant for attacking
|
||
|
cults like the Mormons and Masons, he said:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Sir, when people claim to be Christian, or Christ-like,
|
||
|
and they are lying to the public, I consider it my Biblical
|
||
|
responsibility - MY BIBLICAL RESPONSIBILITY - to take a stand."{28}
|
||
|
|
||
|
And all across the country, good Christians are beginning to take a stand.
|
||
|
One former 'Bob-backer' went so far as to pass out copies of _The Two Faces of
|
||
|
Bob_ at his appearance in Dallas - and was quickly escorted from the premises by
|
||
|
Larson's security people. A gentleman in Wichita, after hearing the Larson
|
||
|
interview there, took it upon himself to offer us a donation (we don't accept
|
||
|
them). Still others are joining this fight in more subtle ways: not contributing
|
||
|
to BLM, boycotting Thomas Nelson (Bob's publishers), and making their own
|
||
|
opinion known on the nation's bulletin boards.
|
||
|
But the real heroes of this story are where you'd least expect to find them:
|
||
|
inside the walls of Bob Larson's own fortress. Even at the risk of their
|
||
|
careers, they provided a steady stream of essential intelligence. When Bob
|
||
|
strutted his stuff on the town with his latest lovely, we knew about it. When
|
||
|
Bob prepared to launch his counter-attack, we were ready for it. And when Bob
|
||
|
threw his world-class hissy fit, storming out of his office after our little
|
||
|
confrontation in Wichita, we heard about it. Sad fact is, these people might
|
||
|
never be able to take their well-deserved bows. They are willing to place the
|
||
|
truth above even their own livelihood; that demands courage.
|
||
|
|
||
|
WHERE PEOPLE DARE TO LEAD, THEIR LEADERS CARE TO FOLLOW.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Regrettably, the record of the Christian journalistic community had not been
|
||
|
quite as exemplary; the word "abysmal" would be rather kind. Still, there are
|
||
|
indications that even these self-serving sycophants will see the train before it
|
||
|
hits them. Even David Neff - who bears the responsibility for the whitewash job
|
||
|
in _Christianity Today_, "Bob on the Block" - candidly acknowledged that I
|
||
|
provided him "with materials which suggest that indeed something is rotten in
|
||
|
Bob Larson's ministry."{29} (Of course, he was nowhere to be found when his
|
||
|
candor would have been useful, but that is another story, for another place and
|
||
|
time.) Who knows, maybe even Doug Trauten will "get religion,", as my Con Law
|
||
|
professor is wont to say. Folks like Anton Hein and the people at _Cornerstone_
|
||
|
deserve kudos for their courage ... but they are exceptions, not the rule.
|
||
|
Those station owners who carry Larson's programs could arguably be cited as
|
||
|
complicitors in this sordid affair. Bob Larson, despite his consistent claim of
|
||
|
poverty, is easily one of the best "pays" in the business. When considering
|
||
|
whether to pull "Talk-Back," CKER general manager Diana Parker observed that
|
||
|
they would be "lucky" to sell that time slot to another Christian broadcaster
|
||
|
for 50% of what Bob Larson paid.{30} Another station owner - who swapped
|
||
|
anonymity for candor - admitted that if he lost "Talk-Back," he might have to
|
||
|
close his station.{31} It is difficult to resist the allure of easy money - only
|
||
|
a handful of stations (including CKER, one of Canada's "ethnic" stations, and
|
||
|
WHLV (whose owner, Garyl Gibson, did the original work on Larson) found the
|
||
|
strength to resist. By contrast, Anchorage pastor Jerry Prevo, a BLM board
|
||
|
member that reputedly has an interest in one of Larson's most profitable
|
||
|
stations, has stood by in silence. But no one is more deserving of scorn than
|
||
|
Thomas Nelson president Sam Moore. Under his leadership, Nelson has fallen to a
|
||
|
standard of depravity which isn't even tolerated by that supposed 'object lesson
|
||
|
in moral decay' called Hollywood. When it was discovered that Milli Vanilli did
|
||
|
not record the vocals on one of their best-selling songs, the entire musical
|
||
|
world was outraged; when it was learned that Larson did not write "his"
|
||
|
best-selling novel, the mavens of 'mainstream morality' were strangely
|
||
|
quiescent. And now we know why: Jerry Falwell's ghostwriter is gay.{32}
|
||
|
|
||
|
Divine justice at work.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Maybe it has. Whether it is my will or Thine, the Bob Larson scandal has
|
||
|
brought together the unlikeliest band of confederates imaginable. But all for a
|
||
|
worthy cause.
|
||
|
During WFTL's Larson interview, Bob Sands, senior pastor of Griffin Road
|
||
|
Baptist Church, put the Larson scandal in proper perspective:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I have no trouble with them bringing up information about
|
||
|
him, because I think he's leading people astray, and the
|
||
|
danger is that he's mixing a little bit of truth with a little
|
||
|
bit of error. And then what happens is somebody like Bob
|
||
|
Larson gets on your particular radio program, and then all
|
||
|
the other people who are Christians - are out there doing
|
||
|
legitimate ministries trying to help people - look bad."{33}
|
||
|
|
||
|
An earlier caller poignantly pierces the veil of illusion and hypocrisy
|
||
|
which Bob Larson has so skillfully woven into the fabric of his life and
|
||
|
ministry:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fred: "I've listened to Bob for about ten years, when he first
|
||
|
went on KVTT in Dallas, and one of the things I think is rather
|
||
|
interesting about it is when we look at Bob, and what he says
|
||
|
about being a self-styled expert on satanism and the occult is:
|
||
|
what's his background? I.e., What church does he go to? Where is
|
||
|
he ordained? By what denomination? What is his educational back-
|
||
|
ground - does he have a college degree? What is is his military
|
||
|
experience? If you check this, it all adds up to zero."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Pat Stevens [ with raucous laughter in the background]: " He's ...
|
||
|
he's never been ordained? And he doesn't go to church?"
|
||
|
Fred: "If he's ordained, he won't tell us who it is!"
|
||
|
Paul Castranova: "Can you back this up?"
|
||
|
Fred: "Yes, I can guarantee he will not tell you on the air or
|
||
|
anywhere else what church he goes to ... his college, he was
|
||
|
supposed to go to the University of Nebraska; he never graduated,
|
||
|
he was a dropout. [ PS makes a mostly futile attempt to hold back
|
||
|
her laughter.] And the fact is, what's his military background?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
PS: "Well, this - Was he ever in the military?"
|
||
|
Fred: "Where?"
|
||
|
PS: "I don't know. Did he claim ..."
|
||
|
PC: "You don't have to be in the military to be a preacher,
|
||
|
though, or talk on the radio."
|
||
|
Fred: "What I'm saying is that this is a man who has been
|
||
|
berating Bill Clinton on his program, week after week, and yet,
|
||
|
we find out that he doesn't even have the credentials that Bill
|
||
|
Clinton has!"{34}
|
||
|
|
||
|
Still, there are those in the Christian community who would defend Bob
|
||
|
Larson ... and that may be the most pernicious scandal of all.
|
||
|
___________________________________________________________________
|
||
|
|
||
|
ENDNOTES
|
||
|
|
||
|
1 Bob Larson, "Back me in the Battle," Fund-Raising Letter,
|
||
|
6 Apr. 1992.
|
||
|
|
||
|
2 Ibid., p. 2.
|
||
|
|
||
|
3 Ken Smith, "Hot Talk with Al Rantell," Radio broadcast, 15 Jul.
|
||
|
1993
|
||
|
|
||
|
4 Bob Larson Ministries, 1991 Consolidated Balance Sheet (obtained
|
||
|
from BLM, 12 Aug. 1992, balance sheet reprinted in summary form
|
||
|
in K. Smith, "The Two Faces of Bob," infra n. 5) p. 2.
|
||
|
|
||
|
5 Ken Smith, "The Two Faces of Bob," April, 1993 ( reprinted in
|
||
|
_Christian Press Report_ 15 Jun. 1993, currently on Abba II
|
||
|
bb under LARSON-0.zip.
|
||
|
|
||
|
6 William T. Abbott, Letter, 8 Jul. 1991 (Reprinted in J. Trott,
|
||
|
"Bob Larson Comes Under Scrutiny," _Cornerstone_, Vol. 21 Issue
|
||
|
100, Feb. 1993, p. 41.).
|
||
|
|
||
|
7 Bob Larson, "Hot Talk with Al Rantell," Radio broadcast, 15 Jul.
|
||
|
1993
|
||
|
|
||
|
8 "Hot Talk," ibid.
|
||
|
|
||
|
9 Ibid., ibid.
|
||
|
|
||
|
10 Joel Belz, "We Can't Be the Last to Tell," Editorial, _World_,
|
||
|
23 Jan. 1993, p. 3.
|
||
|
|
||
|
11 Bob Larson, Letter, 10 Feb. 1993, p. 2.
|
||
|
|
||
|
12 E.g., Bob Larson, "Talk Back with Bob Larson," Radio broadcast,
|
||
|
29 Jan 1993.
|
||
|
|
||
|
13 "Questions Raised About Bob Larson Campaign," _Christianity
|
||
|
Today_, 3 Mar. 1989, p. 48.
|
||
|
|
||
|
14 _Morgan v. Bob Larson Ministries_, Complaint and Jury Demand,
|
||
|
signed 6 Mar 1989 by attorney Andrew T. Brake, pp. 2-4
|
||
|
(according to Denver District Court clerks, the suit was never
|
||
|
filed).
|
||
|
|
||
|
15 Lori Boespflug, Interview, 16 Jan. 1992.
|
||
|
|
||
|
16 Ibid., ibid ( see also, Jay Grelen and Doug LeBlanc, "This
|
||
|
is Me, This is Real," _World_, Vol. 7, No. 32, 23 Jan 1993,
|
||
|
p. 9.
|
||
|
|
||
|
17 Bob Larson, Memo, 28 Dec 1992.
|
||
|
|
||
|
18 Bob Larson, "Prepare For War," Radio broadcast, 29 Jan. 1993.
|
||
|
|
||
|
19 Ken Smith, Certified Letter, 31 Dec 1992
|
||
|
|
||
|
20 Bob Larson, Radio broadcast (KNSS - Wichita), 15 Jul. 1993
|
||
|
|
||
|
21 Offense Report (Misdemeanor harassment), Lakewood (CO) Police
|
||
|
Dept. (Officer Ponczek, reporting), Case Report #92-105773, 3
|
||
|
Nov. 1992, p. 2 ( it is a closed case and thus part of the
|
||
|
public record).
|
||
|
The deed, obtained by the author from the Jefferson Co. Clerk
|
||
|
and Recorder, shows the actual sales price to be $440,000.
|
||
|
|
||
|
22 Bob Larson, "Talk Back with Bob Larson," Radio broadcast, 8
|
||
|
Jul 1993
|
||
|
|
||
|
23 Ibid., ibid.
|
||
|
|
||
|
24 Ibid., 28 Jul. 1993.
|
||
|
|
||
|
25 Application for Marriage License #E64338, filed 12 Feb 1993
|
||
|
( The former Laura Ann Harris Anderson was born on 10/29/61
|
||
|
Larson was born on 5/28/44 ).
|
||
|
|
||
|
26 Lori Boespflug, Interview, 16 Jan. 1992.
|
||
|
|
||
|
27 Bob Larson Ministries, 1991 Corporation Report, attachment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
28 Bob Larson, "Talk Back with Bob Larson," Radio broadcast, 24
|
||
|
Mar. 1993
|
||
|
|
||
|
29 David Neff, Letter, July 23, 1993
|
||
|
|
||
|
30 Diana Parker, Telephone interview, March, 1993
|
||
|
|
||
|
31 Name withheld by request, Interview (conducted by an associate),
|
||
|
July, 1993
|
||
|
|
||
|
32 "The Gay Ghost," _Newsweek_, 26 Jul. 1993, p. 4.
|
||
|
|
||
|
33 Bob Sands, "Hot Talk with Al Rantell," Radio broadcast, 15 July 1993
|
||
|
|
||
|
34 "Hot Talk," ibid.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Article written by Kenneth L. Smith, typed in laboriously for the Net by
|
||
|
21922sm@msu.edu. Copyright (c)1993.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Any question or comments may be sent to 21922sm@,msu.edu or to the
|
||
|
author:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Kenneth L. Smith
|
||
|
PO Box 280305
|
||
|
Lakewood CO 80228
|
||
|
|
||
|
______________________________________________________________________
|
||
|
Copyright 1993 Kenneth L. Smith. All rights reserved. Copying is
|
||
|
permitted for non-commercial use only. Please direct your questions
|
||
|
to the author at P.O. Box 280305, Lakewood, CO, 80228.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Copies of all unpublished documents cited or quoted in this article
|
||
|
have been provided to the Christian Press Report (and others who have
|
||
|
reproduced it in other media), except where the dissemination of such
|
||
|
information would create the risk of exposing confidential sources to
|
||
|
recrimination. These individuals have been instructed not to provide
|
||
|
copies to others without my express approval.
|
||
|
|
||
|
-----------------------------<GwD Command Centers>------------------------------
|
||
|
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|
||
|
GridPoint Durant (405)920-1347 | The Sprawl (806)797-0820
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||
|
Pirate's Cove (806)795-4926 | Static Line (806)747-0802
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PCI (806)794-1438 |
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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ftp =-= etext.archive.umich.edu /pub/Zines/Greeny
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ftp.fc.net /pub/deadkat/misc/GWD
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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/---------------\
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Published by GwD, Inc. September 1995 :FIGHT THE POWER:
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GREENY world Domination Task Force copyright (c) 1993 by Lobo : GwD :
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\---------------/
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GwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwDGwD43
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