LOS ANGELES
– Federal authorities this morning arrested three top administrators of a
Philippines-based church on federal charges of participating in an immigration
fraud scheme that brought church members to the United States to work as
fundraisers, and then arranged sham marriages and other illegal mechanisms to
keep high-performing workers in the country.
A federal
criminal complaint alleges that representatives of the church the Kingdom of
Jesus Christ, The Name Above Every Name (KOJC) obtained visas for church
members to enter the U.S. by claiming, for example, they would be performing at
musical events. But, once the church members arrived in the United States, they
were required to surrender their passports and work long hours as “FTWs”
(full-time workers, who were also called “miracle workers”), who solicited
donations for a church non-profit called the Children’s Joy Foundation USA
(CJF). While the workers raised funds by telling donors their money would
benefit impoverished children in the Philippines, the complaint alleges that
most or all of the money raised was used to finance KOJC operations and the
church leader’s lavish lifestyle.
The criminal
complaint charges three defendants who are described as the main administrators
of KOJC in the United States. They are:
Guia Cabactulan,
59, the top KOJC official in the United States who maintained direct
communication with KOJC leadership in the Philippines;
Marissa Duenas,
41, who allegedly handled fraudulent immigration documents for KOJC workers and
secured the passports immediately after workers entered the U.S.; and
Amanda Estopare,
48, who allegedly handled the financial aspects of the KOJC enterprise,
including enforcing fundraising quotas for KOJC workers.
Cabactulan
and Duenas were arrested this morning at a KOJC compound in Van Nuys, where
they lived. They are expected to make their initial court appearances this
afternoon in United States District Court in Santa Ana. Estopare was arrested
in Virginia.
In
conjunction with this morning’s arrests, federal agents executed search
warrants at the KOJC compound in Van Nuys, the CJF office in Glendale, and
three other locations in the Los Angeles area. Searches were also conducted at
two locations linked to KOJC in Hawaii, and agents fanned out across the United
States to interview witnesses as part of a larger investigation into the
organization.
The criminal
complaint that led to this morning’s arrests charges the three defendants with
conspiracy to commit immigration fraud. A 42-page affidavit in support of the
complaint outlines a years-long scheme to bring FTWs to the United States under
false pretenses and to make arrangements for productive fundraisers – known as
“Assets” – to remain in the country by forcing them to marry other KOJC members
who were U.S. citizens, or to obtain student visas and enroll FTWs in schools
with lenient attendance policies. Over the past 20 years, according to
immigration records summarized in the affidavit, there were 82 marriages
involving KOJC administrators and FTWs.
The
affidavit alleges that the immigration fraud scheme provided KOJC with workers
to participate in widespread efforts to solicit donations with false claims
that donors’ money would be used for the benefit of poor children in the
Philippines. KOJC allegedly established daily cash solicitation quotas for
FTWs, and if these quotas were not met, workers suffered abuse, according to
victims who have fled KOJC and provided information to the FBI.
“[B]ank
records show that KOJC accounts received approximately $20 million in cash
deposits from 2014 through mid-2019,…[and] most of these funds appear to derive
from street-level solicitation,” according to the affidavit, which notes that
“little to no money solicited appears to benefit impoverished or in-need
children.”
The
affidavit summarizes the experiences of a series of victims who fled KOJC and
provided information to the FBI over the past several years. Some of the
victims described being sent across the U.S. to solicit donations, working long
hours to reach their daily quotas, receiving little to no pay for their
efforts, and participating in sending large sums of cash back to the
Philippines on commercial and private flights.
A criminal
complaint contains allegations that a defendant has committed a crime. Every
defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty beyond a
reasonable doubt.
The charge
of conspiracy to commit immigration fraud carries a statutory maximum penalty
of five years in federal prison.
The FBI has
established a toll-free phone number for potential victims or anyone with
information about KOJC activities to provide information. The information line
is 1-800-CALL FBI (1-800-225-5324), and it will be staffed by English- and
Tagalog-speaking personnel. Individuals may also contact the FBI through its
website at https://www.fbi.gov/tips.
The ongoing
investigation into KOJC is being led by the FBI, which is receiving substantial
assistance from Homeland Security Investigations, U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Service’s Fraud Detection and National Security Unit, the U.S.
Department of State’s Diplomatic Security Service, and IRS Criminal Investigation.
This matter
is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Daniel Ahn and Jake
Nare of the Santa Ana Branch Office.
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