El CENTRO – A dozen leaders of Imperial Valley Ministries,
including the former pastor, are charged in an indictment unsealed today with
subjecting dozens of mostly homeless people to forced labor, coercing them to
surrender welfare benefits and compelling them to panhandle up to nine hours a
day, six days a week, for the financial benefit of the church leaders.
The defendants were arrested today in El Centro, San Diego
and Brownsville, Texas and charged with conspiracy, forced labor, document
servitude and benefits fraud. The local defendants are scheduled to be
arraigned in federal court in El Centro today at 1:30 p.m. before U.S.
Magistrate Judge Ruth Bermudez Montenegro.
“The indictment alleges an appalling abuse of power by
church officials who preyed on vulnerable homeless people with promises of a
warm bed and meals,” said U.S. Attorney Robert Brewer. “These victims were held
captive, stripped of their humble financial means, their identification, their
freedom and their dignity.”
“Human trafficking robs victims of their most basic human
rights,” said FBI Special Agent-In-Charge Scott Brunner. “Victims of human trafficking are often
unseen by society, left pleading in silence. Today, the FBI is proud to break
up the labor trafficking alleged to have been committed by the leaders of
Imperial Valley Ministries in Imperial Valley and San Diego. This investigation
is an example of the tireless and dedicated work undertaken by FBI agents and
our partners at the El Centro Police Department in combating this heinous
crime.”
Imperial Valley Ministries, or IVM, operates a
non-denominational church headquartered in El Centro, and has opened
approximately 30 affiliate churches throughout the United States and Mexico,
including locations in Los Angeles, Santa Ana and San Jose in California; in
Las Vegas, Nevada; Phoenix, Arizona; and Brownsville, Texas. IVM’s stated purpose
is to “restore” drug addicts at faith-based rehabilitation group homes and
raise money to open churches in other cities to do the same.
In addition to the church and main office, IVM owned and
operated three group homes the El Centro area, plus one in Calexico and one in
Chula Vista. Many victims were recruited from outside of El Centro, including
San Diego, and as far away as Texas. IVM leaders allegedly induced many to
participate with offers of free food and shelter with the false promise that victims
would be provided with resources to eventually return home.
According to the indictment, defendants checked in the
victims at the IVM group homes, where they were required to sign agreements to
adhere to rules. Many victims, including many who did not require drug
rehabilitation services, claimed they were later held at IVM properties against
their will.
The indictment alleges that church leaders locked victims
inside group homes with deadbolt locks; confiscated identification documents
such as driver’s licenses, passports, immigration papers and identification
cards, in order to prevent victims from escaping; stole victims’ welfare
benefits; and required adherence to rules such as, “you are not to discuss
things of the world” and “the only thing to be read is the holy bible” and “if
any of the rules are broken there will be discipline.”
Windows were nailed shut at some group home locations,
leading a desperate 17-year-old victim to break a window, escape, and run to a
neighboring property to call police. The teen was brought to the El Centro
Medical Center for cuts sustained from the escape.
Defendants are alleged to have extorted the surrender of
participants’ Electronic Benefits Transfer (EBT) cards obtained through the
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), administered by the CalFresh
Program, by using actual and threatened fear of economic loss. The IVM leaders
allegedly then used the SNAP benefits for improper purposes, including
providing them to ineligible persons, and improperly instructing the intended
recipients to not seek or accept outside employment.
Leaders of IVM, including former Pastor Victor Gonzalez,
refused to return the confiscated EBT cards and personal property to
participants who asked to leave. IVM members also allegedly used various means
to coerce participants to stay and continue panhandling for IVM’s financial
benefit by saying their children would be taken away if they left, that they
would not receive transportation home, or that loved ones had rejected them and
they must stay because “only God” loved them. Punishments for violations of
home rules, including talking about the outside world, allegedly included the
withholding of food.
In another instance, church leaders allegedly refused to
allow a diabetic victim to obtain medicine, medical supplies and even food in
response to low blood sugar. She was able to escape and get help.
All of the identified victims are now free. Victim
specialists have been on standby to provide immediate assistance to any
additional victims we find in order to provide them with shelter,
transportation or any necessary support services.
“This is the most significant labor trafficking prosecution
in this district in many years,” Brewer said. “These cases are few and far
between because many victims live in captivity and fear, powerless to report
the crimes against them. My office wants victims to know that we are here to
help you.”
Brewer praised the FBI and prosecutor Christopher Tenorio
for their excellent work on the case. And he expressed appreciation for the
assistance of the Imperial County District Attorney’s Office, the El Centro
Police Department, the Imperial County Sheriff’s Office, the U.S. Marshals
Service, the U.S. Border Patrol and Imperial County Social Services, for their
assistance with this case.
To report suspicions of labor trafficking, please contact
the FBI at 1-800-CALLFBI (225-5324) or https://tips.fbi.gov/. If you know
someone who is a victim of human trafficking, resources can be found at
National Human Trafficking Hotline – 1-888-373-7888.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Christopher Tenorio is prosecuting
the case with assistance from the Department of Justice Civil Rights Division’s
Human Trafficking Prosecution Unit.
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