Showing posts with label Pathways International Kingdom Restoration Ministries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pathways International Kingdom Restoration Ministries. Show all posts

Apr 30, 2025

“Is Your Blood Clean?”: The Paranoid Pastor Who Turned His Church into a Violent Cult

Rachel Browne
The Walrus 
April 30, 2025

On the evening of October 17, 2021, a thirty-nine-year-old woman named Taneka Gardner pulled a suitcase through the gates of a church in Montego Bay, Jamaica. She had been introduced to Pathways International Kingdom Restoration Ministries years earlier by her aunt, and Gardner had been attending often—captivated by the sermons of the church’s charismatic founder and pastor, Kevin Smith.

Smith was a self-proclaimed prophet, sharing a preaching style with popular American megachurch and Baptist leaders. He was adored for his gregarious energy. But Smith’s behaviour that day was unrecognizable. For months, he had become obsessed with online conspiracy theories, his social media full of disinformation about the “plandemic,” the impending collapse of the global economy, and health problems associated with 5G networks. He had become paranoid about how other countries, including Canada, where he had grown up and trained as a pastor, were responding to COVID-19.

Hours before Gardner arrived, Smith, also thirty-nine, had posted on Facebook, commanding people to dress in white, leave their cellphones at home, and rush to the church. “THE ARK is Loading now!” he wrote, using the nickname of his church. “The Flood is coming. Go Now RUN,” he wrote again. Dozens of loyal parishioners, including children, took heed of Smith’s call and hurried toward the church compound on Albion Road, a suburban area of the city, in the parish of St. James.

As congregants entered the church, Smith wrote the names of each person in a book. When Gardner walked through the doors, Smith turned to her. “Is your blood clean?” he asked. “Do you believe that I am the resurrection and the life?” Gardner replied yes. Smith then said that her blood had to be cleansed in order for her to be resurrected. “I will have to cut your throat,” he told her. She allegedly again replied, “Yes.”

Smith then handed a knife to a seventeen-year-old follower named Billy, whom he instructed to cut Gardner’s throat. But Billy hesitated, later saying that he remembered that one of the Ten Commandments states “thou shalt not kill.” Smith’s right-hand man, Andre Ruddock, stepped forward and, at Smith’s urging, allegedly cut Gardner’s throat. She died shortly thereafter.

Before the sun rose the next morning, three parishioners would be dead—a tragedy with echoes of Waco and Jonestown. That night turned into one of the Caribbean’s most notorious criminal cases: a cult pastor whose embrace of pandemic conspiracy theories ended in a bizarre and horrendous act of human sacrifice.

Kevin Smith was born in 1982 and raised in Glengoffe, Jamaica, an agricultural town north of the capital, Kingston. He turned to religion as a young child and was baptized at age nine. Rhone Charlton, one of Smith’s childhood friends and classmates, remembers Smith as competitive, studious, and eloquent. “Let’s say we were given a line to read in class; you best believe that he was going to give it 100 percent,” Charlton recalls.

Court records suggest that Smith was sexually abused by a male relative when he was a child, and physically abused by his father, who has since passed away. When he was twelve, Smith immigrated to Canada with his family, settling in the Greater Toronto Area. For many Jamaicans, migration overseas was the ultimate dream, for educational and vocational opportunities not available or attainable on the island. Shortly after arriving in Canada, Smith claimed, he received a divine calling to preach. At eighteen, he became ordained as a minister by a Pentecostal denomination that doesn’t require a seminary degree to become a minister. Instead, he once said, qualification came from the “call of God on your life.”

From there, Smith joined Exodus Deliverance Temple, an evangelical church in Mississauga, Ontario, founded in 1999. He also launched his own ministry, called KOS Deliverance International (the initials stand for his full name: Kevin Ontoniel Smith). Smith eventually travelled throughout Africa, Asia, and South America, spreading his word during what he called “Awakenings,” which included lively sermons and music. “This young man of God has been blessed with a prophetic ministry that represents a ‘Church without Borders,’” KOS’s now-deleted website stated. “He is determined to settle for nothing less than excellence in ministry.”

As the years went by, Smith claimed to have attended Tyndale University, an esteemed private evangelical Christian university in Toronto, where he studied humanities and theology. He also claimed to have earned a doctor of ministry degree from Mount Olivet Bible Institute and Seminary, also in Toronto. While he has referred to himself as a registered clinical counsellor and “sought-after holistic psychotherapist,” he has never been registered with the College of Registered Psychotherapists of Ontario. He also claimed to have obtained a doctorate in divinity from Vision International University, a private distance-learning Christian seminary based in Ramona, California, and to be a sitting member of the International Council of Pentecostal Bishops of Canada.

On April 28, 2007, Smith married a woman in Canada, though they quickly became estranged. Smith’s ex-wife described him as verbally abusive and someone who lied about his private life. “He is not living an honest life,” she would later recall, according to court records.

After spending years growing his ministry and theological credentials from Toronto through his twenties, Smith began spending more time going back and forth from Jamaica. Eventually he put down roots and attracted parishioners through a more formalized ministry in downtown Montego Bay, a popular tourist destination renowned for its pristine beaches and resorts.

By 2012, when he was thirty, Smith had become beloved by his followers. One former attendee, Shereece, happened to pass by the church one day and heard Smith’s voice. “That voice sounds powerful,” she remembers thinking. She went inside. Shereece immediately felt that Smith wasn’t a typical pastor. He insisted on being referred to as His Excellency. He spoke eagerly about the gospel of prosperity, a fast-growing conservative ideology that holds that believers can transcend hardship and poverty through devotion and tithing—donations—to the church. The modern “health and wealth” gospel, as it’s also known, originated with Pentecostalist leaders in the United States and has spread to Latin America, Africa, and Asia. The ideology has been criticized as predatory and manipulative, especially when pastors operating in disenfranchised communities emphasize heavy tithing.

Shereece and former members say Smith regularly brought up the fact that he was a Canadian citizen, a point of privilege he leveraged to suggest that he could help others get visas to work or study in Canada—for a fee. Smith charged for consultations or prayers, attendance at workshops, and other events. One event in 2013, a “wealth transformation summit” entitled “Money Come to Me Now!” promised “explosive prophecies” to help participants “break the cycle of poverty forever.” Shereece eventually stopped attending the church. “I didn’t see my life was improving,” she says. “What he was doing there wasn’t scriptural and based upon what the Bible says, [which is to] freely give and freely receive.”

Christianity was brought to Jamaica in the sixteenth century by Spanish colonizers. The British followed in the mid-seventeenth century, establishing the first Anglican church. Today, there are hundreds of churches across Jamaica; approximately 67 percent of the population identify with various Christian denominations, predominantly Protestantism.

For many Jamaicans, church serves as more than a place for community, recreation, and worship. In a country where social infrastructure is fractured and mistrust of government and law enforcement is high, the church is a forum for everything from spiritual guidance to financial assistance and even justice. Some people experiencing violence and crime will turn to the church before they turn to the police or the courts. Mary Wildish, a pastor in Montego Bay who leads Trumpet Call Ministries International, deals with this often. “Our society here does not have an expedient response to domestic violence. If you’re in the United States of America and you have a situation where a woman is experiencing abuse from her husband, you call 9-1-1, the police are going to be there,” Wildish says. “[Here] many times the call doesn’t go to the police; it comes to the pastor.”

Smith appeared to embrace this role and power. The prosecution’s report describes how if church members wanted to do something like go on vacation, they would have to get Smith’s permission to do so. Without his blessing, Smith would tell them, members and their families would not be able to clear immigration. He also began surrounding himself with a cohort of young men from the church who served as security guards and assistants. Some of them would hold an umbrella over Smith’s head in public to protect his skin from the sun.

Around 2007, Smith and Charlton, his childhood friend, reconnected after they’d lost touch when Smith moved to Canada. They’d stayed in touch sporadically over the years, keeping each other updated on their parallel paths in ministry. Charlton was an emerging pastor in Montego Bay as well, and he was happy to know about Smith’s growing résumé and international experiences. Smith told him he was ministering to high-ranking government officials in Jamaica, including Portia Simpson Miller, the prime minister at the time. “And then he would just say ‘other government officials’ and just leave it at that,” Charlton recalls.

Smith invited Charlton to come minister at his church from time to time. But Charlton declined. Eventually, rumours surfaced about the misappropriation of church funds and what Wildish calls a “very controlling spiritual idolatry.” Both Charlton and Wildish felt uneasy about Smith’s rise and obsession with power and control. “It was almost as if he was walking with powers that were not of God,” Wildish recalls. Though Wildish sensed something greater was amiss, neither she nor Smith’s congregants were aware of the man’s troubling past that went more than ten years back and was more than 1,700 miles away, in Toronto.

On August 22, 2006, after returning home to Richmond Hill, north of Toronto, from a trip in England, Smith was jet lagged and lonely, craving to spend time with someone besides his brother. “I wanted, you know, emotional company,” Smith would later recall, as per court documents. So he perused online ads for escorts and reached out to a man for his services. Matt, whose real name is under a court-ordered publication ban, arrived at Smith’s home around 10:30 one evening. “I would need him [Matt] to be as inconspicuous as possible because I live straight and I’m a Christian,” Smith would recall, “. . . there was a conflict happening inside of me in essence to what I was going to do or not do.”

By morning, Matt had gone to the police. Smith was arrested at his house and charged with sexual assault. Smith says the officers brought up Jamaica in their questioning and used it against him, “saying that because I’m from Jamaica, and it’s taboo in Jamaica to be gay,” Smith would recall. He told the police that “gays are just people who need redirection.”

The following year, Smith stood trial in Newmarket, Ontario, and pleaded not guilty. Smith’s lawyer argued that the non-consensual act didn’t happen. When Smith took the stand, he was asked about his professional background, and he described himself as an “international minister of religion” from the Pentecostal denomination who had travelled to 300 cities to minister. “We do crusades all around the world in churches and open fields and stadiums and things to that magnitude to preach the gospel,” Smith explained. In cross examination, he admitted that when he spoke with the police, he told them that Matt had tried to extort money from him during a religious counselling session; he did not mention the sexual nature of the visit or the altercation that ensued. “I was very ashamed for what had happened,” Smith said.

The prosecutor, in her closing argument, shredded Smith’s testimony. “His life or his platform . . . is a facade,” she said. “Mr. Smith’s reputation and his public persona are his primary concern . . . [and he] will go to any extent to preserve that facade.” In the end, the judge found Smith guilty of sexual assault, sentencing him to six months in jail followed by two years of probation. “Mr. Smith, it seems to me,” the judge said, “to quote a parable, might be viewed as a wolf in sheep’s clothing.”

Smith would go on to breach his probation for failure to attend counselling but avoid arrest for six years by remaining in Jamaica. In 2017, he finally turned himself in to Toronto Police Service. He pleaded guilty but was allowed to return to Jamaica on the condition that if he returned to Canada in the following eighteen months, he would have to report for probation, make a charitable donation of $500 to a rape crisis centre, and complete sexual behaviour counselling if he stayed for more than a month.

“Does he have an ongoing [sexual behavioural] problem?” the judge asked Smith’s lawyer during the sentencing—to which his lawyer replied, “He advises me he does not.”

Several months later, in April 2018, Smith’s followers marched down the streets of Montego Bay in celebration of his thirty-sixth birthday. With a police escort and a marching band leading the way, he rode behind in a silver stretch limousine. If anyone in town didn’t know who Smith was, they knew now.

There was no indication that he had recently been criminally sentenced, again, for offences in Canada. His cash-based ministering allowed him a lavish lifestyle in Jamaica; he bought luxury villas, expensive cars, and other assets. Through donation drives, Smith began building his new church, called the Ark, which included stables for livestock and coops for chickens.

Then the COVID-19 pandemic hit—and evangelical Christians globally, particularly in North America, became some of the most polarizing and contrary voices on restrictions, mask mandates, and vaccines. Together with right-wing news outlets and influencers, they were some of the most jubilant proponents of COVID-19 denialism. Jamaica was not immune to any of it and, with its shrinking economy and high corruption rates, was especially fertile ground for conspiracy theories and anti-government sentiment.

Local news coverage picked up on this in 2020, with an editorial in the Jamaica Gleaner stating that “believers think they can do whatever they want, once it is pleasing to their god and they believe they are protected.” A doctor wrote an op-ed arguing “the inconvenient truth is that during this pandemic, many who claimed to be covered with the blood of Jesus are now covered with six feet of dirt and a concrete slab after contracting COVID-19. The virus is no respecter of age, gender, ethnicity, or religious belief.” Today, less than half the population has received a COVID-19 vaccine, among the lowest rates in the Caribbean.

Smith became consumed with COVID-19 conspiracy theories put forward by right-wing outlets in North America. In February 2021, the Washington Post released an investigation into the mass proliferation of anti-vaccine content by Christian ministries and influencers across social media. They were spreading false claims that vaccines contained microchips and ingredients linked to the devil. Many spoke about how vaccines and masks heralded the “mark of the beast,” an apocalyptic phrase from the Book of Revelation that suggests that the Antichrist will require people to put a mark on their bodies in order to participate in commerce. TikTok eventually banned the popular hashtags #MarkOfTheBeastIsTheCovid19Vaccine and #VaccineIsTheMarkofTheBeast.

Smith was obsessed. He became convinced of the harmful impacts of the vaccine—colloquially known in Jamaica as “the juk”—and claimed it would be a form of population control. In May, Smith shared a news article by The Blaze, founded by Glenn Beck and now part of an American conservative media company, about the arrest of Canadian pastor Artur Pawlowski, who held a church service in violation of Alberta’s public health restrictions. “This is abomination persecution of the church in Canada! The world is watching and mouths are closed,” Smith wrote on Facebook. “We must know its coming to Jamaica.” Beginning that summer, Smith posted anti-vaccine rants and news articles daily, sometimes multiple times a day. By October, he was encouraging his followers to pull their money from the banks over fears of global financial collapse.

These types of posts increased markedly through the fall of 2021, as COVID-19 cases soared in Canada and the border with the US remained closed. “Prophecy fulfilled in Canada,” Smith wrote on September 2. “Canada is going to intern dissenters in Concentration Camps. . . . Those who refuse vaccination starting in October will be arrested and force to live in Quarantine Camps.” He frequently posted on Facebook news articles and updates from Canada as evidence that governments were seeking to control the movements of their citizens. “In every province they are putting in place for military checkpoints,” Smith claimed in one Facebook video. “You’re hearing it from me. You need to understand [what’s happening in] Canada.” He spouted other falsehoods, including that the police would be called to arrest those who entered restaurants without proof of vaccination, which he called “the Image of the beast.” Smith wrote in another post that day that anyone who took the vaccine would die. “If you give up your life for Christ Jesus you will save it.”

In mid-September, Smith posted that he believed by October 22, the Jamaican government would “create fictitious legislation that makes mandatory injection lawful. . . . The end game will be to try and deceive us or force us into quarantine concentration camps. . . . Prepare to stand your ground.” Other posts from around this time further suggest that Smith believed all sorts of catastrophes—food shortages, volcanic eruptions—would unfold in the coming weeks.

In the prosecution’s report, one witness states that Smith’s behaviour in person became noticeably stranger over time. He became more adamant that his congregants donate as much money as possible, telling them that if those who had money resisted giving, the member would crash and die, and that Smith would send his wrath out to the member’s family.

On October 12, Smith declared that anyone from the church who took the COVID-19 vaccine would be ejected from membership. Anyone who was vaccinated had no link to God and would be cut off from the light, he said. In a video sermon posted on Facebook on October 14, Smith looked straight into the camera and declared: “My job is the apocalypse. It is the unveiling. It is removing the lid and showing you all things.” The next day, Smith posted instructions for church members to come to the Ark with their photo IDs and membership cards.

On October 16, church members began to gather, dressed in white, as Smith had directed. A service extended until 1 a.m. Smith arrived the following afternoon, after having commanded people to throw away canned food and to fill soda bottles with water. He came alongside church member Kevaughn Plummer and a police officer, who was also a member of the church. Shortly thereafter, Taneka Gardner arrived, too, with her suitcase in tow.

Outside the church, Smith made congregants bow down on their knees before entering, giving them judgment, and writing their names in the “Lamb’s Book of Life,” a Biblical register of those chosen for salvation.

Inside, according to the prosecution’s report, things quickly escalated into a frenzy of action and terror as members lay down on the ground and covered themselves. Smith shouted, “God in the flesh, come in the ark before it closes!” Smith told the members to throw away all tissues, wipes, and soap. While they were disposing of these items, a wine bottle smashed on the floor. Smith told Plummer that he should cut the throat of whoever was in front of the bottle so that they could enter the kingdom of heaven. Smith told another young man, Jordan, that in order for him to make it to heaven, Plummer would have to cut his throat. Jordan (a pseudonym) knelt down in front of Smith and handed the knife to Plummer. But Jordan changed his mind and ran outside the church along with another person. Plummer chased them down and stabbed them both in the back.

Back inside, Smith found Michael Brown, a follower who had been hospitalized for kidney issues. His mother told reporters that he had discharged himself from the hospital after receiving a call to come to the church. “You have to die,” Smith told him, according to the prosecution’s report, “but you will rise again because I am the resurrection and the light.” Smith proceeded to pull the medical tubes from Brown’s body, and he bled to death. Shortly thereafter, Gardner would be dead as well.

Outside, police officers arrived on scene after a church member alerted them to the situation, calling for backup after shots were fired in their direction. After more officers arrived, along with backup from the military, a shootout ensued between them and Smith. Plummer stormed toward the police officers with a knife, and they shot and killed him. Many parishioners tried to run; some were injured. Billy was hospitalized, and survived, after he was shot in the chest by police. Police entered the building and found the deceased bodies of Gardener, Brown, and Plummer. Smith and Ruddock were arrested.

In the days after the incident, police searched Smith’s luxury villas for clues that might explain what happened. On October 25, nearly ten days later, Smith and Ruddock were transported in separate vehicles, with police escorts, from Montego Bay to Kingston, where they were to be each formally charged with murder in the deaths of Gardner and Brown. But instead of taking the highway, the officers took an odd detour through the back roads that would have made the journey considerably longer. As the procession neared Kingston, the driver of Smith’s vehicle collided into two other oncoming vehicles. Smith was pronounced dead at the hospital. One of the police escorts, a twenty-six-year-old constable named Orlando Irons, also died, while two other officers suffered serious injuries.

Social media lit up with speculation. Thousands of people questioned whether the crash was a set-up by the police, the government, or even one of Smith’s followers. In my conversations with observers, they suspected Smith was targeted because he was apparently a close adviser of government officials, who perhaps wanted any secret information he knew to be kept hidden and not be aired out at trial. On November 8, a post-mortem revealed that Smith had died from multiple blunt-force trauma injuries; he was cremated shortly thereafter. According to the coroner’s inquest, Smith had grabbed the shoulder of the driver, causing the accident; it was determined as suicide.

Many religious leaders condemned Smith, likening the incident to a demonic attack. James Saturday, a reverend with the St. Joseph Catholic Church in Jamaica, spoke about the need to help clergy who were struggling. “God had entrusted [Smith] with a ministry. . . . He had the trust of the people but now his actions did not reflect the ministry that God entrusted in him. And he betrayed the trust of the people. If a pastor struggles, the body of Christ, the church, has an obligation to that pastor with personal sins and struggles. The church needs to pray for him, and guide him and lead him.”

More than three years later, the Ark is still standing, abandoned, with debris and dirt throughout. Posters of Smith’s church events remained on the floor, showing him as a younger man alongside other religious leaders and guest speakers. Last year, the property was listed for sale for 37 million Jamaican dollars (around $330,000). The trial for Ruddock, who has been in prison since 2021 on charges for Gardner’s death, is scheduled for January 2026. He is likely to plead not guilty.

Charlton wonders whether he and Wildish could have stopped Smith from going down the path he did. “At least I know there were opportunities where truth was spoken and where he would’ve had an opportunity to decide differently,” Charlton says. “But at the same time, I also know that God never takes away free will . . . you still have to make a personal choice as to what the rest of your journey is going to be.”

Even after his death, misinformation swirls around Smith. Many people I spoke with in Jamaica doubt the events that transpired following his arrest, believing that he is alive and well on a beach somewhere, or even back home in Canada.

https://thewalrus.ca/author/rachel-browne/

Feb 23, 2022

CultNEWS101 Articles: 2/23/2022 (Scientology, UK, Pathways International Kingdom Restoration Ministries, Jamaica, Neo Nazis, Jehovah's Witnesses, Podcast)

Scientology, UK, Pathways International Kingdom Restoration Ministries, Jamaica, Neo Nazis, Jehovah's Witnesses, Podcast

"The Church of Scientology is facing calls to use or sell three historic buildings in the UK after buying them for more than £6m and leaving them undeveloped for more than decade.

An Australia-incorporated arm of the church – founded by American sci-fi author L Ron Hubbard and followed by celebrities including Tom Cruise and John Travolta – owns more than a dozen properties in the UK, including several purchased by Hubbard at Saint Hill in East Grinstead, West Sussex.

They are among 95,300 property titles which are identified as being owned by foreign entities – from car parks and industrial estates to luxury homes."
"Andre Ruddock, who has been implicated in the murder of a woman during a deadly church ritual in St James last year, is to return to court on March 4 when details of his forensic psychiatric evaluation are reportedly to be disclosed to the court.

Ruddock, a member of Pathways International Kingdom Restoration Ministries in St James, appeared remotely in the Home Circuit Court in downtown Kingston on Thursday when the case was mentioned.

The 32-year-old man is charged with the murder of Tanika Gardener, who was employed to Appliance Traders Limited (ATL).

One of Ruddock's attorneys indicated to presiding judge, Justice Ann-Marie Lawrence-Grainger, that while he is now in receipt of the evaluation that was ordered by the court, he needed more time to examine the report.

The more detailed evaluation is said to contain, among other things, the accused man's state of mind at the time of the controversial incident at the Montego Bay-based church in October.

Prosecutors told the judge that in relation to the case file, a ballistic report and a post-mortem report remain outstanding."
"A gruesome murder scene at the Freeman family's suburban Pennsylvania home led investigators to a dark, hate-filled subculture — and a horrifying conclusion about the parents' two eldest sons.

In interviews with the Freemans' extended family, they discovered that there was trouble at home with the two teen boys. Both parents had met in the local congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses and brought their sons up in their faith, but the two older boys had begun rejecting it in junior high when they were bullied for their differences. By 1991 — and the ages of 13 and 12 — Bryan and David had begun experimenting with drugs and alcohol, leading their parents to send them to a rehabilitation facility by 1993.

That, the extended family told police, is where Bryan and David Freeman met their first neo-Nazi skinhead and became enamored of the violent ideology and personal freedom they felt violence could bring them.

(Notably, Jehovah's Witnesses were among the non-Jewish groups severely persecuted by the Nazis during the Holocaust; estimates are that there were 30,000 Jehovah's Witnesses in Germany before the Nazis came to power, and about 10,000 were convicted of and jailed for practicing their faith, with another 10,000 renouncing it. Across the Nazi-controlled territories, an estimated 3,000 Jehovah's Witnesses were sent to Nazi concentration camps and the Nazis executed about 1,700 Jehovah's Witnesses during their time in power.)

"In 10th grade, there's a very dramatic change where the Freeman brothers started dressing like neo-Nazis, wearing Doc Marten boots, Army fatigue pants," their classmate Joe Pochron told "Killer Siblings."

The brothers apparently openly wore swastika armbands, Nazi-style medals and, eventually, neo-Nazi tattoos. Bryan Freeman had the word "Berzerker" (a neo-Nazi band) tattooed along his then-hairline and a skull and bones swastika on his neck; David Freeman got "Sieg Heil" along his then-hairline.

The boys were also growing: By the time of the murders, both were over six feet tall and well over 200 pounds. The family told police they'd already come to blows with their father, Dennis, and both Erik and Brenda were afraid of them. Kids at the high school recounted other incidents, including an altercation with the driver's education teacher and one with the school principal the Friday before the murders in which Bryan referred to the man by an anti-Semitic slur and threatened him with violence, the AP reported."

Butterflies and Bravery: Voice of an Angel, Heart of a Warrior
"Susan Cagle was catapulted into fame after being discovered singing in the subway. In the next few years she would go on to release two albums, sing at the Video Music Awards, take part in an interview on the Oprah Winfrey show and even appear in an independent film. But what was happening inside her head and heart? Join us as we hear her story, her heart aches and heart breaks, laughter along the way and what's in store for her next."

News, Education, Intervention, Recovery


CultEducationEvents.com

CultMediation.com   

Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.

CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families make the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.

CultNEWS101.com news, links, resources.

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Cults101.org resources about cults, cultic groups, abusive relationships, movements, religions, political organizations and related topics.


Selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not mean that Patrick Ryan or Joseph Kelly agree with the content. We provide information from many points of view in order to promote dialogue.


Please forward articles that you think we should add to cultintervention@gmail.com.


Dec 4, 2021

CultNEWS101 Articles: 12/4-5/2021 (Conspiracy Theories, Scientology, Pathways International Kingdom Restoration Ministries, Jamaica)

Conspiracy Theories, Scientology, Pathways International Kingdom Restoration Ministries, Jamaica

"When does online disinformation cross a line from mostly innocuous to harmful to others? A Boston-based researcher who studies disinformation and misinformation sought to break it down in a chart that rocketed across the Internet last week, offering clarity to readers in an age when new conspiracy theories seem to pop up all the time.

The [researcher's] chart, which was retweeted more than 18,000 times, is organized to convey both an increasing detachment from reality and threat level, with the top grouping largely rooted in antisemitic views, its creator, Abbie Richards said. She emphasized that her design is "just one of many conspiracy theory frameworks."

In the time since Richards first designed her framework for understanding conspiracies and conspiracy theories, monumental events like the 2020 presidential election had not yet taken place nor had the coronavirus pandemic become as deeply intertwined with daily life."

Yahoo: Can former Scientologists take the church to court? Or are religious tribunals the only recourse?
"After Chrissie Bixler told the LAPD that Scientologist and actor Danny Masterson had raped her, strangers showed up at her home, filmed her family and peeked in her windows. Two of her dogs mysteriously died, one by eating meat laced with rat poison. Her security system was hacked. Someone posted ads in her name on Craigslist soliciting men for anal sex.

Bixler made these allegations in a lawsuit, charging that Scientology waged a campaign to terrorize her after failing to dissuade her from reporting Masterson to the Los Angeles Police Department. Other women joined the lawsuit after telling police that Masterson had sexually assaulted them — which he has denied — saying they too had been stalked and placed under surveillance.

But some of the women, including Bixler, formerly belonged to Scientology, and like other members signed agreements to submit any disputes to binding arbitration before a three-member board of practicing Scientologists. California courts are now trying to decide whether the agreements may be enforced and the lawsuit decided by a Scientology tribunal instead of a jury.

The case has brought attention to a practice known as "religious arbitration," in which Christians, Jews, Muslims and now Scientologists resolve disputes ranging from divorce to real estate to employment outside of a courtroom. The practice has long been upheld by secular courts, which by law cannot interfere with religious doctrinal matters.

In binding religious arbitration, disputes may be decided according to the tenets of a religion. Awards can be appealed to secular courts, which in most cases uphold them."

Tampa Bay Times: In Clearwater, no clear path for addressing Scientology-related land buys
"City officials express concern but say there's little they can do.

As companies tied to the Church of Scientology continue to buy more properties around downtown and keep them vacant, City Council member Mark Bunker on Monday proposed that city officials try to "understand what the hell is going on.'"

The Gleaner: Hush surrounds funeral plans for Kevin Smith
"Two weeks after an autopsy was performed and the body of deceased cult pastor Kevin Smith was handed over to relatives, there is an atmosphere of secrecy surrounding arrangements for his final rites. Smith, the late leader of the Pathways International Kingdom Restoration Ministries."

News, Education, Intervention, Recovery


CultEducationEvents.com

CultMediation.com   

Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.

CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families make the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.

CultNEWS101.com news, links, resources.

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Selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not mean that Patrick Ryan or Joseph Kelly agree with the content. We provide information from many points of view in order to promote dialogue.


Please forward articles that you think we should add to cultintervention@gmail.com.


Nov 2, 2021

FIRE at Pathways Church

FIRE at Pathways Church
YardHype
November 1, 2021

Law enforcers are currently investigating how the fire started at a section in the Pathways International Kingdom Restoration Ministries Church in Montego Bay, hours ago. According to sources, the fire started at the altar at 10:10 p.m Sunday night.

Drapes, an air conditioning unit and several documents were reportedly destroyed in the blaze while some items remains untouched.

The fire was put out by the St. James Fire Department. After the inferno, members of the church were seen looking at the property in astonishment at what took place.

Watch out, group tells funeral home storing Smith's body

Former head of Pathways International Kingdom Restoration Ministries, Kevin Smith
ROMARDO LYONS
Jamaica Observer
October 31, 2021

The Jamaica Association of Certified Embalmers and Funeral Directors wants the home that is storing deceased cult leader Kevin Smith's body to watch out.

The move by the organisation comes after word began circulating days ago that loyal and unswerving followers of Smith were planning to find, and snatch his body.

“When it comes to the rumour about these so-called followers and disciples of this man, who want to identify the funeral home where his body is being stored to do whatever, I can only say that we don't believe in what they believe in. And I will say that any member who is storing the remains of Kevin O Smith, 'Just protect your property from physical harm,' ” Calvin Lyn, president of the organisation told the Jamaica Observer in an interview days ago.

Lyn was adamant that Smith's obsequious flock who played church at Pathways International Kingdom Restoration Ministries would be disappointed by unsuccessful attempts if they try to retrieve his body using unorthodox practices that they may believe in.

“We don't believe in voodooism, so anything that they want to try won't affect us because we are protected by God Almighty who has been seeing us through rough times and smooth times. So, anything demonic won't affect us. There is a saying: 'Belief kills and belief cures.' We don't believe in demons, so if that is being planned by these insane people, it is not going to affect any one of us who is storing the remains of this cult leader,” he stated categorically.

Meanwhile, Valerie Neita-Robertson, the attorney-at-law representing Smith, had said that his family has not been told where his body is being kept.

On Monday, Smith, who was at the centre of controversy and public outrage for over a week, died in a motor vehicle crash while in transit from Montego Bay to Kingston to face charges connected to suspected ritual killings. The crash also claimed the life of police officer Constable Orlando Irons and left two other lawmen injured.

Smith was under investigation in connection with the slaughter, two Sundays ago, of two of his followers in a bizarre night that some have said involved human sacrifice.

A day later, the self-proclaimed 'His Excellency' was charged posthumously with two counts of murder, conspiracy to commit murder, illegal possession of firearm and ammunition, wounding with intent and shooting with intent.

Two ex-congregants of Pathways International told the Sunday Observer that they believe there are current members who are so brainwashed that they would still do anything for Smith.

“Mi wouldn't put it past them fi do anything in the name of that man… some a dem a diehard fans. Not matter what happened, yuh just can't turn them mind from him. If yuh shame the man, yuh shame them. If yuh hurt him, yuh hurt dem,” one woman said.

Another man said: “They worship the man. Dem still love him. Many of them even believed that he was going to resurrect on Thursday… three days after him dead. Them think highly of him so they will do anything. People a call dem idiot but it bigger. Dis reach mind control.”

A victim of the ritual said he was advised by investigators to no longer speak to the media.

Further, Lyn suggested to the Sunday Observer that those people who are still unfaltering in their support of Smith need help.

“As it is, I would call those followers of this man lunatics. How could one in their sober mind and in charge of their faculties follow somebody of that calibre?”, Lyn questioned.

To his knowledge, he said, no one has ever broken into a funeral home. He, however, shared one instance years ago when the organisation collaborated with the police to prevent such an incident.

“Over 15 years ago we had an experience where a notorious gangster was shot and killed by the police after he fled to another parish, and we were asked to quietly and privately store the remains until the time of autopsy. They took the remains out of the parish to have it protected in a private capacity to avoid the excitement,” Lyn recalled.

Lyn also assured that no certified embalmer or funeral director should be fazed by any unconventional or spiritual activity that could happen while storing Smith's body.

“There shouldn't be any concern. When a human being is dead and pronounced dead by the physician, the body is lifeless and there is no fear in us because we believe that deceased body has no power. The members of the Jamaica Association of Certified Embalmers and Funeral Directors have no fear. We are Christian people, we believe in the Bible. We know that death is inevitable, and whenever someone loses his or her life it is our opinion that the time has come for that person to die, regrettably.”

https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.jamaicaobserver.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article%3fAID=/20211031/ARTICLE/310319963

CultNEWS101 Articles: 11/2/2021 (Pathways International Kingdom Restoration Ministries, Jamaica, Legal, Abuse, Taipan)


Pathways International Kingdom Restoration Ministries, Jamaica, Legal, Abuse, Taipan
"American entity that specializes in helping people adversely affected by or interested in cultic and other high-control groups, is offering assistance to Pathways International Kingdom Restoration Ministries congregants who are still reeling from the deadly events at the church on October 17 and the death of their leader Kevin Smith.

According to the International Cultic Studies Association (ICSA), its Cult Recovery 101 team has "a network of experts, therapists, and other helping professionals who have studied the cult phenomenon and have responded to crises similar to the recent events in Jamaica".

"We would like to offer our services to those who have been affected by this unfortunate event. We understand the need for a trauma-informed approach and seek to provide a safe space for victims in need of support. There is hope and healing for survivors affected by destructive groups," the ICSA said in an e-mail sent to the Jamaica Observer late Tuesday night.

Reacting to the macabre series of events which began unfolding two Sundays ago after the police stormed the church where alleged human sacrifices were under way, the ICSA said the experiences highlighted in the media of those who escaped the violence demonstrate that many of the members whose need for belonging was "sinisterly turned against them as a means of control" are living in fear and need support.

Yesterday, Ashlen Hilliard, assistant to ICSA's director, told the Jamaica Observer that the entity, which has more than 40 years' experience in the field, was eager, despite the constraints of the novel coronavirus pandemic, to work with the survivors to help create a "safe space" in which they could unpack the trauma of their entire experience.

She said, while the ICSA does not have any partners on the ground in Jamaica at this time, it is not averse to striking up local partnerships with interest groups here to facilitate an interface with the victims.

Hilliard, who noted that it was unlikely that the remaining church members would be open to receiving aid from the religious community at this time, said the ICSA has no religious affiliation.

"We are a non-profit organization. We are not affiliated with any religious groups; that is not what they would need right now, they wouldn't be receptive," she said.

Hilliard said both virtual and in-person interactions are anticipated."

Jamaica Observer: Cult victim tells all
$100,000 fee to stay in Smith's 'ark', where congregants slept on the floor and were fed dumpling and mackerel gravy.

"For an entire month in March of last year, 70 congregants of Pathways International Kingdom Restoration Ministries, who were told to pay $100,000 each for entry into Kevin Smith's 'ark', slept on concrete floors and barely had enough to eat. That first boarding of the 'ark' ended badly, but without the loss of life seen during this week's bloody second attempt.

Yesterday, a victim of Sunday's ritual who had boarded the ark on both occasions, painted a picture of an organization heavily focused on feathering the nest of its leader, and followers who often blindly complied with the shepherd's wishes."

ABC: 'Cult' leader James Salerno found guilty, after retrial, of repeated sexual abuse of teenage girl
"A man who led a group committed to creating what he described as the "ideal human environment" has been convicted of sexually abusing a teenage girl at an Adelaide Hills mansion.

Key points:
• James Salerno pleaded not guilty to eight counts of unlawful sexual intercourse
• A jury found him guilty of six counts and not guilty of two
• The trial heard Salerno was the "revered leader" of a cult based in the Adelaide Hills

James Gino Salerno, 74, pleaded not guilty to eight counts of unlawful sexual intercourse, after last year being granted a retrial, which occurred in the District Court.

The jury took four hours to find him guilty on six counts, and not guilty of two.

During the trial, prosecutor Patrick Hill told the jury that Salerno — who was the "revered leader" of the group — sexually abused the girl hundreds of times over a five-year period.

"Throughout the entire period [the alleged victim] and the accused lived together as part of a communal living arrangement with a number of other people," Mr. Hill told the court.

"[The group] appears to have been about pooling resources and pursuing business ventures … in pursuit of financial gains.

"One of [the] main aims has been the attainment of something he called the 'ideal human environment' – or the IHE – which purports to be something to do with people living together harmoniously and free of conflict.

"It is from his position, as leader of this group, that we say the accused was able to commence and maintain this lengthy course of sexual abuse."

Salerno, who was known as "Taipan" to his followers, denied ever being the leader of the group — repeatedly referred to as a "cult" during the original trial — and denied all of the sexual offending."


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