Skip to main content.
Religion News Blog is a non-profit service providing academics, religion professionals and other researchers with religion & cult news
ReligionNewsBlog

Religion news articles about religious cults, sects, world religions, and related issues

Navigation:
A Random Image


Related

More news articles & news archive on Frederick K.C. Price


Translate



Advertisements *

What is a cult: Cult Definition
Simple steps to financial health and a good credit score


Elsewhere

What is deprogramming?


Frederick K.C. Price:

Preacher sues 20/20, alleging defamation

Los Angeles Times, USA
July 25, 2007
Alana Semuels
www.latimes.com

ReligionNewsBlog.com • Item 18835 • Posted: Thursday July 26, 2007  

  • Google Bookmarks
  • Google Reader
  • Gmail
  • Yahoo Mail
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Digg
  • Delicious
  • Blogger Post
  • Evernote
  • Facebook
  • Share/Bookmark
Click here... More articles on this topic: Frederick K.C. Price

The Rev. Frederick K.C. Price may have two Bentleys, but a spokesman for his 22,000-member church says his Palos Verdes house doesn’t boast 25 rooms and he definitely doesn’t own a helicopter. A lawsuit Price filed Tuesday claims that ABC’s “20/20″ defamed him when it suggested otherwise, portraying him as a “hypocrite and thief” who financed an extravagant lifestyle with church funds.

Price, founder of the Crenshaw Christian Center, was featured in a “20/20″ segment about well-heeled televangelists titled “Enough!” that the suit says “devastated, embarrassed and greatly humiliated” the 75-year-old. The suit also names Walt Disney Co., which owns ABC, and “20/20″ co-anchor John Stossel.

The 20/20 segment in question.

In the March 23 segment, “20/20″ ran a clip from a sermon Price delivered 10 years ago and displayed a still photo of the preacher as Stossel interviewed an activist who keeps tabs on how ministries spend congregants’ donations. The suit calls the use of the clip “one of the most outrageous instances of ‘out of context’ editing in the history of television.”

In the clip, Price declares, “I live in a 25-room mansion, I have my own $6-million yacht, I have my own private jet and I have my own helicopter and I have seven luxury automobiles.”

In the full sermon, according to an excerpt provided by a spokesman for Price, he prefaced that by saying, “I was pointing out that there is such a thing as bad success. I said bad success is….” The sermon, which the suit says aired on Disney’s Lifetime network, was about the importance of being a good Christian, and Price was quoting a hypothetical person with great material wealth who failed to follow a righteous path.

Price wasn’t interviewed for the “20/20″ segment. The suit says the defendants “never approached Dr. Price or the church to check their facts.”

The suit, filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court, seeks unspecified damages and accuses ABC of breaching “fundamental journalist guidelines” and acting “in reckless disregard” for the truth.

You can talk about me…

“You can talk about me all you want while I’m driving by in my Rolls Royce that’s paid for, and I got the pink slip on it. Talk all you want. Bad mouth all you want. Don’t hurt me in the least. Doesn’t bother me. It’s a whole lot easier to be persecuted when I’m riding in my car and I got the pink slip than it is when I’m riding in a car and owe my soul to the company store.” — Frederick K.C. Price, Ever Increasing Faith program, March 29, 1992

 

ABC spokesman Jeffrey Schneider said he couldn’t comment on the suit but noted that the network had run two retractions, one on “Good Morning America” and the other on “20/20.” ABC also posted a retraction on its website.

“We did make a full retraction and apology on the air and certainly regretted the error and made that very clear to Rev. Price,” Schneider said.

In the retraction, Stossel said “20/20″ had thought Price was talking about himself in the sermon. “We used his quote out of context, and for that we apologize to Dr. Price and to the Crenshaw Christian Center and to you if we misled you,” Stossel said.

Price’s lawyer, Anthony Glassman, said the retraction was insufficient.

“He was wrongly and falsely portrayed,” Glassman said.

Price owns the Palos Verdes mansion that appeared in the “20/20″ segment, as well as two Bentleys, but not a helicopter, a yacht or a private jet, a spokesman for the church said. Price bought the house in 1989, and one of the Bentleys was a gift from two parishioners, the spokesman said.

The suit says Price’s salary is “commensurate with his duties,” and the spokesman declined to disclose it.

Over three decades, Price built his ministry in part on the idea that followers can reach economic prosperity by living a faith-based life. His Sunday services in the 10,000-seat FaithDome in South L.A. are popular, but he is perhaps best known for his “Ever Increasing Faith” television show, paid programming on the Lifetime network.

The Crenshaw Christian Center opened in Inglewood in 1973, with 300 parishioners. The center purchased the former Pepperdine University Los Angeles campus in 1984 and built the current complex.

According to Nielsen, the “20/20″ segment was seen by 7.5 million viewers.

The suit also cites a teaser for the segment that ran during “Good Morning America” and showed Price preaching at Crenshaw Christian Center. After the teaser, Diane Sawyer and anchors expressed shock that preachers owned private jets and multimillion-dollar yachts.

The “20/20″ segment angered many of Price’s parishioners and has been a subject of discussion at Sunday services for several weeks.

On Sunday, Angela Evans, one of Price’s daughters and the president of the church, said in a speech during the regular service that the program was “dishonest, defamatory and simply filled with blatant lies,” and that her father “feels like he’s been raped.” She received a standing ovation.

Congregants expressed their support for Price and disdain for “20/20.”

“It’s obviously so outlandish,” said Ed McMahon, Johnny Carson’s former sidekick, who has attended the church for 15 years. “I know the man quite well, and there’s no possible way” that Price would ever dip into church coffers.

After listening to Price’s sermon — which began, “Why do so many Christians fail to enjoy the abundant life?” — parishioner Mary Grimes said that Price deserved to live well.

“In the regular world, if he was a CEO, he’d get a penthouse and airplanes,” she said. “I give abundantly because I want him to be pampered.”

  • Google Bookmarks
  • Google Reader
  • Gmail
  • Yahoo Mail
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Digg
  • Delicious
  • Blogger Post
  • Evernote
  • Facebook
  • Share/Bookmark


What You Can Do From Here

Read More Articles On These Topics
more religion news aboutmore Religion News Blog articles about
Share, Blog About, Bookmark, or Email This Article
Subscribe
Follow Religion News Blog on Twitter


Read Another Article
Find Related Information
cult research search enginecountercult information Use our custom search engines to find additional research resources on religions and cults
Find Related Books


Most Popular Today


Share This Article

To share this page simply copy and paste one of these URL's:





Counter Cult Search

Search for information about (religious) cults, cult-like organizations, -- as well as paranormal-, New Age, and pseudoscientific claims -- across 260+ websites, blogs and forums dedicated to cult research, spiritual abuse, ex-cult counseling & support.


Note: results are listed on another domain -- CounterCultSearch.com -- from which you can easily return here.


Apologetics Search

Search for apologetics articles, books, videos, and other research resources across 135 Christian apologetics websites and blogs.


Note: results are listed on another domain -- ApologeticsSearch.com -- from which you can easily return here.

About Religion News Blog
Religion News Blog (RNB), published by Apologetics Index, highlights news items and other resources on world religions, cults, religious sects, alternative religions and related issues. RNB's non-profit news clipping service is used by - among others - Christian apologists, countercult professionals, anticult organizations, cult experts, teachers, religion professionals, reporters and other researchers.

Home
Latest Headlines
RSS news feed [?]
Headlines by Email
News Trackers
Free content for your site
About RNB
Privacy Policy
Contact RNB
Link to RNB
Advertise on RNB
Apologetics Index
Cult FAQ
Apologetics Search Engine
CounterCult Search Engine