Article 1:
Church
draws focus of activist
Posted
online June 14, 2019, 9:56 a.m.
Bobby Worthy apparently isn’t one to
keep quiet if he thinks civil liberties are being violated.
Worthy is the outspoken founder, president and chief executive officer of Justice League United, a non-profit organization based in his home town of Blackshear.
Worthy is the outspoken founder, president and chief executive officer of Justice League United, a non-profit organization based in his home town of Blackshear.
Worthy, an avid political
activist, has traveled across the nation as a civil rights activist. Recently
he’s been advocating on behalf of former members of the House of Prayer
Christian Church. He also said he’s looking after Liberty County taxpayers.
Worthy attended the May
19-21 protests when former members of the Airport Road church claimed its leaders
are running a cult.
Worthy plans to hold his
own public meeting June 22 with former HOPCC members who claim family members
still in the church are being distanced or cut-off from them. Let me ad some information here. Worthy made some unfounded claims about law enforcement being paid by the church. It was completely FALSE and untrue. Law Enforcement Officers routinely get hired to duty off-duty security at events and functions and are allowed by law to do so and be in uniform and even in their patrol cars. During the May protest the church had hired off-duty officers for security reasons. I've hired off-duty officers for Courier newspaper events. The Chamber hires off-duty officers for events. It is common practice and not illegal as he tried to claim. That made me suspicious of Bobby Worthy so I looked into his records and found that:
He was
convicted of felony forgery in Ware County.
The forgery charges covered Ware, Liberty and Wayne
County.
According to the Georgia Department of corrections Worthy
was in and out of jail between 1990 until 1998.
According to a news report on Douglas Now, Worthy was
convicted of theft by deception in October of 2015 in Ware County and was
sentenced to one year probation.
I promptly stayed away from him as any type of source. I
also warned former members about him. He states he is trying to help but he
also seems to ask for funds to cover his costs.
But he did hold that meeting which was reported on. Here
is article 2:
Tempers
flare during, after meeting
Posted online June 28, 2017, 8:33 a.m.
A June 21 meeting billed as a town hall
for former members of the House of Prayer Christian Church nearly led to
fistfights as tempers flared.
The contentious meeting
inside the Liberty County Recreation Department’s Stafford Pavilion was
organized by activist Bobby Worthy.
Former members used the
platform to attack the church and its leader, while current members of the
church interrupted speakers and defended the church.
The meeting quickly turned
confrontational and led Worthy to demand church members leave if they weren’t
respectful.
Once church members left
the meeting continued.
Among those who spoke out
against the church was the Rev. Ray Yorke, who said he and his wife came from
North Carolina to attend the meeting.
Yorke said he was a pastor at HOPCC for
12 years. He claims the church and its leader, Rony Denis, are frauds and has
created a website, hopcc.com to allow former members to tell their stories.
Yorke claims church
leaders are forging documents, manipulating the members of the congregation,
harassing former members with scare tactics and committing fraud.
As he spoke, current
church members continually interrupted Yorke, including Cesar Vargas and Mike
Patterson, both of whom stepped up to the podium to speak.
Vargas said he wanted
people to know that Yorke willingly took money Denis paid him during his 12
years at HOPCC.
Patterson repeatedly asked
whether God or the Devil started the House of Prayer.
Yorke replied that Denis
founded HOPCC and said, “God doesn’t start a lie to answer your question. (The
church) is a fraud and all of you know it is.”
Family dispute
Vargas and his mother, Gladys Jordan, a former church member, clashed at a public protest in May. Jordan, who was also at the June 21 meeting, noted both Vargas and Patterson were wearing blue tooth earpieces and said that others from the church had brought in cell phones.
Vargas and his mother, Gladys Jordan, a former church member, clashed at a public protest in May. Jordan, who was also at the June 21 meeting, noted both Vargas and Patterson were wearing blue tooth earpieces and said that others from the church had brought in cell phones.
Jordan said the church
doesn’t allow its members to own cell phones, computers, television or access
to the internet because they consider those a portal of the devil to spread
lies.
She claimed it likely that
Denis allowed them access to technology to video the event and tell Patterson
and Vargas what to say.
Jordan has been trying to
convince her older son to leave the church and said at the May protest that she
and her two sons joined HOPCC when it formed in 2004.
She claimed she was “cast out” when she
started questioning leadership and the church’s
unaccredited education program.
Jordan’s younger son was
also expelled from the church for the same reason, she said.
Jordan said children at the church will never receive a high
school diploma and will stay stuck in the corrupted system.
Worthy said he’s met three young men who are ex-church members
struggling to get higher education because they had no diploma and tested at an
eighth grade level.
“This is the kind of stuff that the House of Prayer is bringing
into our neighborhood,” Worthy said.
Serious allegation
An even more serious allegation was made when Jordan said Denis and the man who run the school have admitted, during church testimonies that they lust after young kids.
An even more serious allegation was made when Jordan said Denis and the man who run the school have admitted, during church testimonies that they lust after young kids.
In a Hinesville Police
Department incident report dated Dec. 15, 2016, a representative from the
Department of Family and Children Services was escorted by HPD officers to a
home owned by House of Prayer and allegedly occupied by Denis, his wife and
their daughter.
NOTE: The Courier obtained
a copy of the report which does show the address where Rony Denis lived at the
time. It does mention his wife Majorie Denis and daughter Mariah Denis but it
appears that the officer kept spelling their last names as Dennis and listed
the name Juan Denis instead of Rony. There is no Juan Denis. There will be more on this for sure!
Scuffle in parking lot
After the June 21 meeting broke up, another confrontation occurred in the parking lot as church goers waited for the people to exit the building.
After the June 21 meeting broke up, another confrontation occurred in the parking lot as church goers waited for the people to exit the building.
Tensions rose and two
people pushed each other before calmer heads prevailed.
Yorke said church
officials are trying to distance themselves from allegations and have changed
the name of the church to the Place of Help Prayer Force.
The church, located off
Airport Road, has placed up new signs with those names.
As you can see this second article started the
conversation about the school and its credibility. If you’ve heard the
recordings posted on my Bump Investigations Ministry Inc., page you know that
Lynette Rosario and Andrew Lawhon
found out the hard way that in fact the school stopped being accredited around
2013 when they changed their curriculum provider. Their "School transcripts" were WORTHLESS.
Tonight I’ll post that
education article and information on why I think
(my personal opinion) these kids are being denied proper education and why they
can continue running the school the way they do.
.




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