{"id":4094,"date":"2023-08-09T22:58:37","date_gmt":"2023-08-09T22:58:37","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/newsbuzz24x7.com\/former-georgia-resident-wanted-for-alleged-misuse-of-30m-donated-for-christian-ministry-in-china\/"},"modified":"2023-08-09T22:58:37","modified_gmt":"2023-08-09T22:58:37","slug":"former-georgia-resident-wanted-for-alleged-misuse-of-30m-donated-for-christian-ministry-in-china","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/newsbuzz24x7.com\/former-georgia-resident-wanted-for-alleged-misuse-of-30m-donated-for-christian-ministry-in-china\/","title":{"rendered":"Former Georgia resident wanted for alleged misuse of $30M donated for Christian ministry in China"},"content":{"rendered":"
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A former Georgia man is being sought on charges of having misused more than $30 million donated by religious groups and individuals for Christian ministry in China, including an Ohio-based group receiving donations from Amish and Mennonite communities.<\/p>\n
Jason Gerald Shenk, 45, formerly of Dublin, Georgia, is charged in a recently unsealed federal indictment in Georgia with wire fraud, money laundering and failure to file a report of a foreign bank account.<\/p>\n
Prosecutors said Shenk got more than $30 million from faith-based charities and individual donors, primarily from religious communities in Ohio and North Carolina, promising to use the money to produce and distribute Bibles and other Christian literature in China.<\/p>\n
Instead, prosecutors allege, he used a lot of it for his own purposes, such as payments to the company running his family farm, buying diamonds and precious metals, buying life insurance policies in various people’s names, online sports gambling, Chile real estate, shares in a nuclear energy company, and credit card and stock purchases.<\/p>\n
Shenk remains at large, and Paschal said Wednesday he is believed to be out of the country. Court documents don\u2019t list an attorney representing him.<\/p>\n
GEORGIA MAN ARRESTED FOR KIDNAPPING, KILLING 19-YEAR-OLD EX-GIRLFRIEND; SUSPECTED IN PREVIOUS KIDNAPPING<\/strong><\/p>\n The indictment states Shenk obtained about $22 million from one charitable group and its donors and about $10 million from another, along with donations from individuals. The scheme began as early as April 2010 and ran until July 2019, with Shenk renouncing U.S. citizenship in 2016 to evade financial reporting requirements, prosecutors said.<\/p>\n Christian Aid Ministries, which says it works with “Amish, Mennonite, and other conservative Anabaptist groups and individuals to minister to physical and spiritual needs around the world,” has acknowledged having been one of the victims but hasn’t said how much money was involved.<\/p>\n