Paighten Harkins of of The Salt Lake Tribune reports federal judge Stephen Wilson dismissing Huntsman tithing lawsuit.

Date
Sep 14, 2021
Type
News (traditional)
Source
Paighten Harkins
Hearsay
2nd Hand
Journalism
Reference

Paighten Harkins, "Judge tosses out James Huntsman’s tithing lawsuit against LDS Church," The Salt Lake Tribune, September 14, 2021, accessed September 14, 2021

Scribe/Publisher
The Salt Lake Tribune
People
Eric Hawkins, Stephen Wilson, Gordon B. Hinckley, Ensign Peak Advisors, Inc., Jon Huntsman Sr., David Nielsen, Paighten Harkins, Jon Huntsman, Jr., James Huntsman
Audience
Reading Public
PDF
Transcription

Judge tosses out James Huntsman’s tithing lawsuit against LDS Church

He rules that no reasonable jury would believe Latter-day Saint leaders lied about how donations were spent.

By Paighten Harkins | Sep. 14, 2021, 3:05 p.m. | Updated: 4:16 p.m.

A federal judge has thrown out a fraud lawsuit brought in March by James Huntsman, who accused top leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints of lying about how they spent members’ tithing donations.

Huntsman, a California resident and a brother of former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr., sought millions of dollars back from the church, which he alleged misrepresented how his tithing funds were used.

Devout Latter-day Saints pay a tenth of their annual income in tithing.

Church spokesperson Eric Hawkins said Tuesday in a statement that the church is “grateful” the judge granted its motion for summary judgment.

Huntsman declined to comment, steering questions to his attorneys.

The owner of the Los Angeles film distributing company Blue Fox Entertainment and son of the late Utah industrialist-philanthropist Jon Huntsman Sr., he was seeking to recover at least $5 million in his own tithing, interest and penalties. He resigned his church membership in 2020.

While leaders told members otherwise, Huntsman alleged that they diverted up to $2 billion in tithing funds to two of its private businesses, including City Creek Center, an upscale mall in downtown Salt Lake City, and Beneficial Life Insurance Co.

U.S. District Judge Stephen V. Wilson struck down Huntsman’s claims Tuesday. He wrote that no reasonable jury would believe church leaders had misrepresented how tithing funds would be used.

Huntsman’s lawsuit relied, in part, on statements by church leaders, including then-President Gordon B. Hinckley.

In 2003, Hinckley spoke directly to Latter-day Saints who might have been uncomfortable with the faith using their donations to build a shopping center and repeatedly assured them that “tithing funds have not and will not be used” to acquire and develop this property.

He said the money instead would come from church-owned “commercial entities” and “earnings of invested reserve funds.”

Those “earnings” for the $1.5 billion mall in the heart of downtown, however, did come from the interest on tithing.

In his lawsuit, Huntsman argued that was a “distinction without a difference,” alleging that Hinckley and the church misled the faithful about money for the mall.

Huntsman’s case was clearly built on allegations made by whistleblower David Nielsen, a former portfolio manager at Ensign Peak Advisors, the church’s Salt Lake City-based investment arm.

In December 2019, Nielsen filed papers with the IRS accusing church officials of amassing a $100 billion reserve fund intended for — but never spent on — charity in potential violation of tax laws. He said the Utah-based faith secretly funneled up to $2 billion in tithing toward City Creek Center and Beneficial Life, while publicly assuring church members otherwise.

In a subsequent sworn statement filed in support of Huntsman’s lawsuit, Nielsen asserted that tithing and earnings from it were commingled at Ensign Peak, while top leaders over the fund referred to “every penny” as tithing — allegations echoed by Huntsman.

Church leaders have called the Ensign Peak account a “rainy day” fund to help pay for, among other things, operations in poorer parts of the world — such as Africa, where the faith is booming — and where member donations can’t keep up.

The have said the money is less about stashing cash for the Second Coming, as was initially widely reported, and more about providing safeguards against more earthly events — like credit crunches, stock slides and recessions.

In his ruling, Wilson wrote that Huntsman’s lawsuit “does not properly consider the full statement made by Hinckley.” The judge said that Hinckley told members that day that returns from invested tithing funds would be used.

Wilson did not hand the church a total victory. He rejected its lawyers’ assertions that the First Amendment barred Huntsman from filing his lawsuit at all, writing the case “presents a purely secular dispute.”

The church made that argument when it responded to the lawsuit in May, asking the judge to dismiss the case.

In his statement Tuesday, Hawkins, the church spokesperson, said, “We are further grateful that the court agreed that the statements made by President Gordon B. Hinckley and other Church leaders are accurate as to the source of funding for the City Creek project.”

Editor’s note • James Huntsman is a brother of Paul Huntsman, chairman of the nonprofit Salt Lake Tribune’s board of directors.

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