Movie/review

Florida pastor, son arrested for allegedly using church’s COVID loan for $3.7M mansion

[ad_1]

A Florida pastor and his son were arrested Wednesday for allegedly fraudulently obtaining $8.4 million in COVID relief funds — much of which went towards the purchase of a luxury mansion on Disney World property.

Evan Edwards and his son Josh — the respective president and vice president of the so-called ASLAN International Ministry — were taken into federal custody from their family home in New Smyrna Beach, a city about 15 miles south of Daytona Beach, NBC News reported.

Wednesday’s arrest came after the Edwards’ Paycheck Protection Program funds were seized by the Secret Service way back in April 2020 after the feds suspected their family ministry was bogus.

“I’m glad they got arrested,” a neighbor, who requested anonymity, told NBC. “It’s a long time coming.”

Josh applied for the loan in April 2020, claiming his family’s religious nonprofit ASLAN had 486 employees and a $2.7 million monthly payroll, according to a federal forfeiture complaint.

ASLAN’s actual number of employees and payroll expenses were “significantly lower, or entirely nonexistent,” the indictment states.

Josh and Evan Edwards
Evan Edwards, center, and son Josh were arrested two years after allegedly filing a false PPP loan application.
Facebook

Though they asked for $6 million, the family ministry — which also appointed Evan’s daughter, Joy Edwards, as secretary — was approved for a whopping $8,417,261.38 the following month.

The Edwards then allegedly moved the funds across various bank accounts linked to members of their family, feds said.

About $868,250 was sent to a Royal Bank of Canada account in Evan’s wife Mary Janes Edward’s name before it was used to purchase a $3.7 million 4,700-square-foot house on Orlando’s Symphony Grove Drive, a property that is part of Disney World’s Golden Oak development, according to the feds.

Federal officials visited the New Smyrna Beach home in September 2020 to find the house cleared out. The next day, Florida police stopped a car for speeding to find all four Edwards members inside with luggage and apparent evidence of their schemes, though they claimed they were going to a conference in Texas, according to past federal court filing.

The family, originally from Canada, was taken into custody on an immigration charge but was released the next day.

Following orders from a judge, the Edwards returned the $8.4 million in its entirety in April 2021.

Evan and Josh were hit with six charges, including conspiracy to commit bank fraud and visa fraud.

[ad_2]

Share this news on your Fb,Twitter and Whatsapp

File source

Times News Network:Latest News Headlines
Times News Network||Health||New York||USA News||Technology||World News

Tags
Show More

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button
Close