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A Friendly Letter
Since 1981, an independent journal
of news and issues of concern to related to the Religious Society of Friends
(Quakers), and like-minded persons. Now online. |
Rogues and Heroes -- Photos from
the Quaker Fraud Scandals
Photos from Wichita and the Trial
click on an image to see a larger picture
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Exclusive:
the first photo of church fraud defendant Priscilla Deters
Deters on trial
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Productions Plus nerve centre: when searched on
December 14, 1994, this house revealed papers stacked in all corners of
a bedroom, and ringing answering machines, with callers demanding their
money back. |
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Leatha Hein, whose
extensive research helped expose Productions Plus
more about Leatha Hein
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Maurice Roberts,
former superintendent of Mid-America YM, and Productions Plus victim
more about Maurice Roberts
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United States Courthouse, Wichita, Kansas |
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George Crawford, attorney with the California Department
of Corporations. He issued the 1991 Desist and Refrain Order, and sought
the injunction and receivership in 1995. |
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George Brown, a member of Deters' "Board of
Directors". He loaned her over $200,000, attended her trial, and after
the verdict offered to co-sign for her bail; the offer was rejected by
the judge. |
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Headquarters, Mid-America Yearly Meeting, Wichita.
The building in the rear was built with the expectation that Deters' matching
gifts would cover most of the cost. When the "gifts" failed to
materialize, the yearly meeting was thrown into financial crisis. |
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Randy Littlefield -- One of Deters' strongest remaining
supporters. He put $10,000 of his own into Productions Plus, and recruited
both his mother and mother-in-law to invest as well. When he was pastor
at League City Friends Church in Texas, he persuaded them to send (and
lose) $139,000. As pastor of the Cherokee Friends Church, he was the main
booster of the "faith covenant" that sent Deters over $400,000.
He later worked for Deters in California, lobbying Quaker leaders there
to get their Kansas brethren to call off the state investigation. After
the trial, the judge called him a "candidate for indictment." |
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Three from Cherokee: left to right are Jeff Fellers, Mary Washburn
and Bob wilson, all from Cherokee, Oklahoma. Among the three of them and
their families, they lost over $178,000 to the Productions Plus scam. |
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A modest hero: Will Haworth, pastor of the Hays
Church of the Nazarene in Hays, Kansas. After his church lost all of its
$44,000 investment, Haworth came under intense pressure from Deters and
her cronies to refuse cooperation with the investigation. "I didn't
sleep much," he said of that period. But he didn't cave, and testified
for the prosecution. |
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R.J. Wegner District Superintendent of the Nazarene
Church in North and South Dakota. He collected $600,000 from his churches
for Deters' "Dakota Project", and helped funnel money through
a California church to evade the scrutiny of regulators. Losses to his
churches exceed $500,000. |
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Deters' government-appointed defense attorney, Steve
Gradert: he did a good job with what he had, which wasn't much. |
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Lead federal prosecutor Annette Gurney. "I
never had a case like Priscilla Deters before," she said. But she
and colleague Allen Metzger won it. |
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Gary Fulton, Investigator for the Kansas Securities
Commission, and a small part of his documentary evidence. He led the search
of Deters' house, and painstakingly sorted and collated the six boxes of
papers taken from it. |
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Lois Hutson, a transitional figure between the Deters
and Harmon cases: A widow, she is Randy Littlefield's mother-in law, and
at his behest she put several thousand dollars of her savings into the
Cherokee project. She got it back early, however, in order to take advantage
of another investment opportunity, with Phil Harmon. She sent him her entire
nest egg of $95,000, and lost it all. She attended the Deters trial, and
rooted for Priscilla all the way. |
[This post is part of a detailed report on the activities of Productions
Plus, particularly among Quaker groups. Watch for additional excerpts on
this site. The full report is available now, by snailmail. To order the
complete report, send $10.00 (postpaid) to: A Friendly Letter, P.O.
Box 82, Bellefonte PA 16823.]
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Copyright © 1998 by Chuck Fager. All rights reserved.
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