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Author Topic: "Ordained" Minister Charged Criminally - is he annointed?  (Read 3843 times)

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Gailon Arthur Joy

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"Ordained" Minister Charged Criminally - is he annointed?
« on: April 14, 2012, 02:57:07 PM »



Massachusetts Adventist Pastor Arrested and Accused of Defrauding Seniors


 Submitted: Apr 6, 2012
By AT News Team

 Luther Raposo, an ordained minister in the Southern New England Conference assigned to pastor the Taunton and Foxboro churches in the suburbs of Boston, was arrested Tuesday and arraigned Thursday on charges of attempted larceny, identity fraud and document fraud. Detective Thomas Kirrane testified that bank officials at Foxboro Federal Savings had tipped the police to a scam in which at least four people in their 70s and 80s from Michigan, New Mexico and Arkansas gave Raposo their social security numbers and he made online arrangements with the Social Security Administration to have their checks deposited in an account he opened. The senior citizens were told by Raposo that they had won a lottery, according to reports in The Foxboro Reporter and The Sun Chronicle.
 
 Pastor Raposo claims that he is also a victim in the scam and sent $3,500 to a man in Florida, according to the Boston Herald. It is unclear the extent to which the police believe this to be true. “It’s certainly a conspiracy by two or more people,” Kirrane is quoted as stating in The Foxboro Reporter, but the Boston Herald  states the “cops don’t buy it” and quotes the detective saying Raposo’s claim is “not credible. He wants you to think he’s cooperating, but he’s really not. He thinks he’s a little smarter than everyone else.”
       
 Evidently Raposo did not use contacts he made through the denomination in the scam. He “allegedly telephoned the victims randomly,” stated the copyrighted story in The Sun Chronicle.  He is alleged to have told the victims that they had won a lottery in order to get them to give him information that he could use to divert their Social Security checks.
 
 The police presented evidence that indicates that Raposo has had severe financial difficulties. “He allegedly defaulted on $60,000 in loans he obtained from six different banks in 2010,” The Sun Chronicle reported from police testimony in court. “He has filed for bankruptcy. Raposo told police he sent the money to England to process an estate he inherited.”
 
 Raposo was released on bail and is due back in court on May 1. He is 51 and married, with three children. One child is in college, according to news reports.
 
 Frank Tochterman, president of the Southern New England Conference, told the Boston Herald yesterday that Pastor Raposo has been placed on indefinite paid leave until the charges are dealt with. The conference president also told the newspaper about an “unrelated unusual behavior” and a medical condition. “He’s unable to fulfill his pastoral responsibilities,” the president is quoted. “The family indicates that his medical condition has contributed to his behavior and what he’s being accused of.” Church administrators are routinely advised by legal counsel to be careful not to make direct accusations in situations such as this and not to violate the privacy of the employee involved. “Of course this is embarrassing to the churches in the area, and it’s embarrassing to the Seventh-day Adventist Church as a whole.”
 
 There is no indication that Raposo took money from church members or even approached them for funds, although he evidently has had some fund raising responsibilities in his role as a pastor. The home page of the Foxboro Seventh-day Adventist Church web site says, “We are currently launching another Stewardship Campaign! We are trying to pay the loan off in three years instead of twenty to save as much money as possible. … In total we have commitments of $282,000. This is enough to pay the loan off and start the new Sabbath School rooms we need.”
 
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Gailon Arthur Joy

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Re: "Ordained" Minister Charged Criminally - is he annointed?
« Reply #1 on: April 14, 2012, 03:00:24 PM »


 Foxboro SDA Church Member :

Reply

4 days ago

Do be careful in what you read. There have been some inaccuracies in the news reports, and because most of the news articles out there are directly quoting the inaccurate stories, you have widespread faulty information.
 
 
 
First of all, the last paragraph of the article above is false. Raposo has not had anything to do with fundraising at the church since he started there in fall of 2010. The website quoted is an old website that has very dated information about a previous building campaign that ended in 2008.

 While Christians are certainly not immune to the snare of the devil, we onlookers should be careful not to cast stones, however tiny of a pebble they may seem, before the full truth comes out. There is a lot that reports have not included. Pray for the reporters, investigators, police, etc in their dealings with this situation, and pray that truth is made clear. Also pray for the hurting families involved--the elderly victims as well as the Raposo family.

 
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Gailon Arthur Joy

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Re: "Ordained" Minister Charged Criminally - is he annointed?
« Reply #2 on: April 14, 2012, 03:01:37 PM »

I noticed a "Foxboro" church member has entered a "warning" to be careful for the truth and points to their own inaccurate websight information as an example of inaccuracy.
 
How much more satisfying to see a Foxboro "member" simply come forward with the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. And how much more satisfying to see the "Pastor" step out of the shadows and "confess" the truth, "repent" of the sin clearly "attempted" (yes, I have viewed the "information" and other evidence in the District Court criminal clerks office and it is indeed very incriminating, regardless of the various explanations I have heard perpetuated). Instead, we have a dire warning against the "casting of stones" by publicly airing what is clearly public.
 
I was asked by a "former" Foxboro member what I would do if I were President Frank Tochterman:
 1) It is clear the pastor is seriously morally challenged and his very soul is at stake, therefore, he should be removed from his pastoral role and returned to South Lancaster where the President and Ministerial Secretary can meet with, pray with, study with and call the formerly "annointed" pastor to confession and repentance;
 2) When he has been brought back to the Faith, send him back to court, confess his sin, show true repentance and revival and let the court consider it's criminal sentence.
 
Isn't that exactly what is expected with the recent emphasis from the General Conference on Revival and Reformation? And isn't that what we use to see between the covers of the Review and Herald when true revival and Reformation was seen within the church?
 
And SO IT MUST BE!!!
 
Gailon Arthur Joy
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