Three Ghanaian pastors in London paid themselves half a million pounds out of church’s charity account
Three former trustees of a north London Christian charity have been found to have paid themselves more than £450,000 ($591,000) of unauthorized sums.
When the Charity Commission sought to find out organizations which
had failed to file their annual returns and reason for the failure, it
focused attention on the Kingdom Life Ministries in June 2017.
It emerged the charity had been late in filing its last five
sets of accounts, ranging from 681 days late to 38 days late, the commission’s
website shows.
The three trustees at the opening of the inquiry were Emmanuel Owusu
Ansah, his wife Olivia Ansah and Anthony Osei-Dankwa, an associate
pastor.
At an October 2017 meeting with the commission, the trustees
said they had decided to pay themselves weekly remuneration of either £200 or
£90 to cover costs incurred on behalf of the charity.
The regulator said invoices for construction work, international
flights and video production were finally sent to the commission earlier
this month but the amounts included did not match the actual
withdrawals made.
“When the commission issued an order restricting financial
transactions by the charity in June 2018, investigators then noticed a
significant reduction in deposits into the charity’s bank account. The
former trustees were ordered to pay all charitable funds into the
charity’s bank account. They resigned 12 days later on October 30, 2018.”
The regulator had informed the trustees that under the charity’s
constitution, it was illegal to pay salaries to trustees yet payments
continued even after the Charity Commission had told the charity on
April 3, 2018, they must cease, with the trio receiving £28,972 after
that date.
Cash withdrawals worth £719,466 were also made, the charity’s bank statements showed.
The commission said it was “not possible to establish how the cash
withdrawals were used in furtherance of the charity’s objects due to a
lack of record keeping.”
People connected to the former trustees also received payments of
£38,216 (50,000 dollars) between December 2015 and May 2018, the
commission said. A new board has been appointed to the charity.
A report by the Charity Commission said nearly £720,000 (about
945,000 dollars) in cash was withdrawn from the charity’s bank account
in three years.
Bishop Ansah, 55, is the founder of Kingdom Life Ministries. The church’s website describes his wife as “first lady” and Osei-Dankwa as an “associate pastor.”
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