THE LEDGER OF BENEVOLENT ASCENSION

Part One: Opening Balance

Independent Preliminary Review

Prepared by: H. B. Carrow, FCA, CFE
Engagement Type: Independent forensic accounting review
Client: Counsel acting for the Trustees of an unnamed charitable religious organisation
Matter: Federal civil action alleging tax evasion, misclassification of revenue, unlawful benefit extraction, and “non-standard human asset disposition”
Period under review: 1929–1934
Status: Draft, privileged, not for circulation, not for chanting

I was retained because the Church had, in the words of its senior trustee, “nothing to hide except certain mysteries unsuitable for secular daylight.”

This is not, in my experience, a comforting phrase.

The United States federal government had brought proceedings against the organisation for tax evasion, notwithstanding its charitable status, on the basis that its declared benevolent works appeared to consist principally of receiving donations from impoverished congregants, transferring those donations through a number of devotional trusts, purchasing real estate through shell entities, and issuing internal promissory instruments redeemable only in “higher recognition.”

The Church denied all wrongdoing.

It further denied being a church, except for tax purposes.

It described itself as “an esoteric ethical fellowship devoted to the elevation of consciousness through voluntary offering, disciplined humility, and liquidity.”

The last word was underlined three times in the founding charter.

I began, as one does, with the accounts.

The first anomaly was not the absence of records but their abundance. There were ledgers, sub-ledgers, devotional ledgers, donor ledgers, witness ledgers, salt ledgers, and one green-bound volume titled Schedule of Necessary Diminishments. The bookkeeper, a woman of impressive composure and no visible eyelashes, informed me this was “not strictly financial.”

This proved accurate in the narrowest possible sense.

The second anomaly concerned revenue recognition. Donations were recorded not when received, but when “spiritually matured.” In practice, this meant that a dollar contributed by a novice member might remain deferred income for several years, while a chair, watch, wedding ring, parcel of land, or adult daughter could be recognised immediately as unrestricted revenue.

I asked the treasurer to explain this policy.

He replied, “Cash is slow to awaken.”

He then looked at my shoes and added, “Leather is quicker.”

I marked this under Accounting Judgement: Aggressive.

The Church’s formal hierarchy resembled a devotional society. Its financial structure resembled a pyramid scheme which had been designed by a mortgage broker during a fever, revised by a confidence man, and audited by something that had learned double-entry bookkeeping from funeral inscriptions.

At the base were the First Listeners. These were ordinary members: widows, labourers, clerks, farmhands, disappointed schoolteachers, men with lung trouble, women with nowhere else to go. Each was required to raise a monthly “light subscription.” Failure to do so resulted in spiritual remediation, loss of sleeping privileges, and reassignment to “external witness recruitment.”

Above them were the Gatherers, who managed groups of First Listeners and retained a percentage of all offerings raised. Above the Gatherers were the Stewards of Veil, who received stipends, housing, and access to restricted teachings. Above them were the Nine Trustees, whose compensation was described as “symbolic” and included motorcars, lake houses, bearer bonds, and exemption from ordinary mortality where administratively feasible.

The First Listeners were not beneficiaries of the charity.

They were its raw material.

The organisation’s public accounts showed extensive charitable expenditure: food relief, burial assistance, educational outreach, poorhouse support, maritime rescue, widows’ stipends. Supporting documentation existed for each category, though closer inspection revealed certain limitations.

Food relief consisted largely of meals served to members immediately before recruitment ceremonies.

Burial assistance was indeed provided, but often before death and sometimes before the beneficiary had been informed.

Educational outreach consisted of lectures entitled “Debt as Prayer,” “The Tax Advantages of Surrender,” and “The Body: A Depreciating Asset.”

Maritime rescue had no identifiable maritime component, unless one accepted the treasurer’s assertion that “all flesh is ultimately coastal.”

I requested bank statements.

There was a silence.

Then the trustee responsible for finance, Mr. Phineas Glaive, asked whether I meant “ordinary banks” or “the lower institutions.”

I said ordinary banks would suffice for the moment.

He appeared relieved.


Report Summary Output — Preliminary Findings

Subject to further review, I identify the following matters requiring immediate legal and regulatory attention:

  1. Revenue Misclassification
    The Church records coerced donations, property transfers, labour obligations, and apparent custodial transfers of persons as voluntary charitable contributions.
  2. Circular Donation Structure
    Lower-tier members are required to fundraise to maintain membership status. These funds flow upward through rank-based devotional units, with senior officers receiving disproportionate economic benefit.
  3. Questionable Charitable Purpose
    Declared charitable expenditure frequently benefits the organisation itself, its officers, or unidentified ritual programmes coded as “community transition services.”
  4. Undisclosed Related-Party Transactions
    Multiple vendors, landholding companies, mortuary suppliers, maritime warehouses, and “pilgrim transport agencies” appear to be controlled by trustees or their immediate families.
  5. Human Capital Irregularities
    The accounts contain repeated references to “living pledges,” “convertible witnesses,” “consumable attendance,” and “non-returning volunteers.” These are not recognised accounting categories under any standard known to me.
  6. Going Concern Risk
    The Church is financially solvent, socially predatory, legally exposed, morally void, and possibly not operating under a conventional understanding of time.
  7. Audit Qualification
    I cannot confirm that all assets exist. I can confirm that some assets objected.

Interview 1: Mr. Phineas Glaive, Trustee for Finance

Mr. Glaive received me in a mahogany office containing three safes, two portraits of blindfolded saints, and a brass speaking tube that descended through the floor. He was a cheerful man of about sixty, dressed in the style of a prosperous undertaker attending a yacht club.

I asked him to describe the Church’s investment strategy.

“Simple,” he said. “We invest in people.”

“In what sense?”

“In the complete sense.”

He showed me a chart. At first glance it resembled a standard member-growth model: recruitment, retention, contribution uplift, rank advancement, renewal. On closer inspection, the final column was headed Yield After Silence.

I asked whether “yield” referred to financial yield.

“Not exclusively.”

“Does it include labour?”

“Among other forms of participation.”

“Does it include property?”

“Yes.”

“Does it include persons?”

He frowned, not with guilt, but with the mild irritation of a man correcting terminology.

“Mr. Carrow, a person is a temporary wrapper around a commitment.”

I wrote this down.

He leaned forward.

“The government insists that charity must relieve suffering. We disagree. Suffering is often an inefficiently managed surplus. We collect it, refine it, and apply it toward higher obligations.”

“To whom are those obligations owed?”

He smiled.

“The senior creditor.”

“Is that God?”

Mr. Glaive laughed so hard he had to remove his spectacles.

“No, no. Nothing so sentimental.”

At this point the speaking tube beneath the floor emitted a wet cough. Mr. Glaive excused himself, bent to the tube, and listened.

“Yes,” he said into it. “The accountant is still here.”

Another pause.

“No, not yet.”

He replaced the cap and turned back to me.

“Tea?”

I declined.


Interview 2: Mr. Lowell Brace, External Investment Advisor

Mr. Brace was not a member of the Church. He was very keen that I understand this.

“I provide neutral financial advice,” he said. “Portfolio balancing, tax planning, liquidity events, moral insulation. Standard work.”

His office was in New York and contained all the normal comforts of respectability: carpet, radiator, secretary, cigar smoke, framed rowing print, and no obvious sacrificial apparatus. I found this almost disappointing.

Mr. Brace had advised the Church on bond holdings, land acquisition, and the conversion of member contributions into secured notes issued by a Delaware entity called Beneficent Ascension Holdings.

“Did you understand the source of the funds?” I asked.

“Religious donations.”

“From wealthy patrons?”

He adjusted his tie.

“Some wealthy. Some aspirationally wealthy.”

“Poor, then.”

“Poor is a balance-sheet condition, Mr. Carrow, not a destiny.”

“What did they receive in exchange?”

“Recognition units.”

“What are those?”

“Internal instruments representing advancement toward illumination.”

“Can they be redeemed?”

“In a metaphysical sense.”

“In a financial sense?”

“No.”

“Can they be sold?”

“No.”

“Can they be inherited?”

He checked his notes.

“Only by the Church.”

I asked whether he regarded this as exploitative.

He looked wounded.

“Exploitation is such an ugly word. I prefer asymmetric devotion.”

Mr. Brace then explained the model with the professional calm of a man who had never once wondered why his client’s remittance advices smelled faintly of seawater.

First Listeners raised funds from family, neighbours, employers, and strangers. Gatherers supervised them and received advancement credits. Stewards received stipends funded from pooled donations. Trustees controlled the reserves. New members were required to contribute more than existing members. Advancement depended on recruitment and monthly giving. Failure pushed members into debt to the Church, which they discharged through labour, property surrender, or “personal undertaking.”

I said this sounded like a pyramid.

Mr. Brace objected.

“A pyramid is crude. This is more of a devotional cone.”

“With the trustees at the top.”

“Naturally. A cone requires a point.”

“And the base?”

He made a small disposable gesture with his cigar.

“The base is always the most replaceable part of any structure.”

It was the first wholly honest thing anyone had said to me.


Interview 3: Mrs. Ada Pellam, First Listener

Mrs. Pellam was not an investor or advisor. I include her interview here because the accounts include her as both donor and beneficiary, which is a technical impossibility unless one is either a charitable institution or being consumed by one.

She lived in a boarding house behind a laundry. Her room contained a bed, a basin, a cracked photograph of a young man in uniform, and seventeen Church receipt books tied with string.

She had joined after her husband died.

“They said grief was a kind of capital,” she told me. “Said I could make it useful.”

Her monthly obligation began at fifty cents. Then one dollar. Then three. Then five. She sold her wedding silver, then her husband’s tools, then the watch he had carried in France. When that was gone she was instructed to bring in others.

“What happened if you failed?”

She looked toward the door.

“They said I was eating more mercy than I produced.”

The phrase was recorded in the Church manual under Member Efficiency.

Mrs. Pellam had recruited four people. Two remained active. One had fled. One was listed in the Church accounts as Transferred to Deep Programme.

I asked what that meant.

She began to cry without making any noise.

This, I should add, is not good audit evidence. It is, however, difficult to forget.

Before I left, she pressed a receipt into my hand. It was for twelve dollars and one winter coat. The printed line read:

Received with gratitude toward the settlement of all lesser fleshly arrears.

On the reverse, in pencil, someone had written:

Do not let them promote you.


Field Note: On Humour in the Accounts

Accountancy is often accused of being dry. This is unjust. I have never encountered anything wetter than these accounts.

The Church’s humour, where it exists, is largely administrative. One internal memorandum complains that “recent volunteer attrition has exceeded chant capacity.” Another notes that “the screaming room should not be booked concurrently with donor teas.” A third advises regional Gatherers that members may not claim tax deductions for children “offered in kind” unless a receipt has been issued in triplicate.

The treasurer marked this last note with a handwritten comment:

Excellent discipline, poor optics.

I am beginning to understand why the federal government is annoyed.


Closing Note to Counsel

At this stage I do not recommend relying solely on tax irregularity. The tax position is severe but secondary. The Church’s financial model appears to be a coercive rank-based contribution system in which lower-tier members are induced into escalating obligations, isolated from external support, and converted into financial, labour, and possibly corporeal resources.

The senior officers are enriched.

The members are indebted.

The missing are reclassified.

The accounts balance.

This last fact troubles me most.

Fraudulent books usually conceal disorder. These books conceal order. An appalling order, certainly, and one hostile to the ordinary assumptions of law, dignity, and arithmetic, but order nonetheless.

Every dollar has a destination.

Every donor has a status.

Every absence has a ledger code.

And behind the coded transfers, beyond the shell companies and devotional trusts, I have identified a recurring payment reference attached to no bank account, no known vendor, and no earthly jurisdiction:

FINAL BENEFICIARY — NOT YET RISEN.

I have asked for the supporting documentation.

The treasurer says it will be delivered after sunset.


Part Two: Working Papers

Supplementary Review Note

Prepared by: H. B. Carrow, FCA, CFE
Subject: Funds flow, beneficiary classification, related-party exposure, and certain matters that should not be filed under “miscellaneous”

The promised documentation was delivered after sunset in six crates, one hatbox, and a locked japanned case which hummed faintly when placed near silver.

The crates contained invoices.

The hatbox contained teeth.

The japanned case contained a ledger made from a material I have decided, for my own professional stability, to classify as non-standard vellum.

I have worked in insolvency, insurance fraud, municipal corruption, mining syndicates, theatrical partnerships, and the accounts of a private zoo whose proprietor had attempted to depreciate a rhinoceros over three accounting periods. I therefore do not consider myself easily surprised. Nevertheless, the Church’s books display a conceptual boldness rarely found outside either serious crime or theology.

The primary funds flow can now be stated with some confidence.

First Listeners raise donations under spiritual pressure. Those donations are divided into three streams.

The first stream covers local chapter operating costs: rent, pamphlets, cheap coffee, devotional candles, recruitment dinners, transport, printing, and what are described as “member softening expenses.”

The second stream passes upward through regional Gatherers, who retain percentages in the form of advancement credits, cash stipends, and rights to future offerings from their own recruits. This creates the familiar pyramid effect: survival depends not upon charity delivered, but upon new money entering beneath old obligations.

The third stream is transferred through a chain of trusts, land companies, mortuary suppliers, shipping agents, and advisory partnerships to a central reserve known internally as the Deep Fund.

The Deep Fund does not appear in the public accounts.

This omission is significant.

I asked Mr. Glaive whether the Deep Fund had been intentionally excluded from the charitable return.

He said, “Excluded is a hard word.”

“Was it included?”

“No.”

“Then excluded is the available word.”

He considered this.

“Submerged,” he suggested.

I have used excluded.


Interim Report Summary Output — Part Two Findings

  1. The Church operates a rank-based contribution structure.
    Lower-tier members are compelled to make recurring payments and recruit others. Failure results in debt assignment, status degradation, unpaid labour, or transfer into undefined internal programmes.
  2. The stated charitable purpose is materially misleading.
    Most declared welfare expenditure either supports recruitment, controls existing members, or prepares selected individuals for “final beneficiary conversion.”
  3. Investment products sold to members lack economic substance.
    Recognition Units, Ascension Notes, Mercy Certificates, and Deferred Illumination Bonds have no fair market value, no redemption mechanism, and no investor protection. They function primarily as psychological retention devices.
  4. Third-party advisors appear wilfully incurious.
    Several external banks, brokers, attorneys, and insurance intermediaries accepted unusual client explanations without adequate due diligence. In one case, a banker appears to have approved a loan secured against “anticipated obedience.”
  5. Evidence suggests trafficking under religious-administrative cover.
    Persons are moved between chapters, properties, retreat houses, and maritime warehouses under classifications such as “pilgrim transfer,” “volunteer consolidation,” “living pledge custody,” and “human inventory in trust.”
  6. Evidence suggests ritualised killing concealed as asset closure.
    Repeated ledger entries refer to “final distribution,” “consumption of pledge,” “red settlement,” and “full bodily satisfaction of arrears.” These correlate with member disappearance, not death certificates.
  7. The lower-tier members are principal victims.
    They are financially exploited, socially isolated, pressured into recruitment, and eventually treated as expendable assets if they fail to produce sufficient income.
  8. Professional Recommendation.
    Freeze accounts immediately. Preserve ledgers. Interview surviving First Listeners outside Church premises. Arrest the trustees before they complete whatever they mean by “year-end reconciliation.”

Interview 4: Mr. Cecil Vane, Private Banker

Mr. Vane received me in a bank whose lobby contained marble columns, brass grilles, and the suffocating odour of institutional confidence. His moustache was exact. His moral instincts were less so.

He had handled several accounts connected to the Church’s property vehicles.

“Our client presented as unconventional,” he said, “but high-net-worth religious bodies often do.”

“What net worth did they evidence?”

He opened a file.

“Deposits, bonds, land, pledged assets, member undertakings, and several letters of comfort.”

“From whom?”

He checked.

“One is signed by the Ninth Celebrant.”

“Is that a person?”

“I assumed so.”

“Did you meet him?”

“No.”

“Did you perform identity verification?”

Mr. Vane looked pained.

“This was before the current fashion for suspicion.”

The bank had issued credit facilities to three Church-controlled entities secured against expected future donations. The projections assumed annual membership growth of thirty-seven percent, attrition of fifteen percent, and “deep conversion” of five percent.

I asked what deep conversion meant in a banking context.

“A maturity event.”

“For the member?”

“For the facility.”

I asked whether the bank had raised concerns that a religious charity was borrowing against the future extraction capacity of its poorest adherents.

Mr. Vane tapped ash into a tray shaped like a duck.

“Mr. Carrow, poverty is not in itself a credit defect. Properly organised, it can be remarkably predictable.”

A junior clerk entered with tea and biscuits. Mr. Vane offered me one.

It had the texture of compressed plaster and the flavour of an unfiled complaint.

I asked about a recurring transfer memo: “custodial uplift, marine channel.”

Mr. Vane closed the file.

“Our role was administrative.”

“You moved the money.”

“Yes.”

“You saw the memos.”

“We see many memos.”

“One read: ‘six girls delivered, three recognised, one spoiled, two held for tide.’”

He stared at me.

“Religious language can be metaphorical.”

“And the transfer to a warehouse company?”

“Metaphors require premises.”

This is the kind of sentence that makes prosecution feel briefly insufficient.


Interview 5: Miss Honoria Spake, Insurance Broker

Miss Spake was brisk, powdered, and practical. She had insured several Church premises, vehicles, storage facilities, retreat houses, and one travelling tent described as “liturgical entertainment equipment.”

She spoke of the Church with open irritation.

“Dreadful client. Always underinsuring the perishable stock.”

“What stock?”

“That was precisely the problem. They would never say. Boxes, trunks, barrels, devotional furnishings, ceremonial instruments. Once they wanted coverage for ‘breathing assets in transit.’ Try placing that with Hartford.”

“Did you?”

“I am an insurance broker, Mr. Carrow, not a miracle worker.”

The Church had attempted to buy policies against fire, flood, theft, spoilage, federal seizure, and “failure of emergence.” Miss Spake had declined the last.

“No actuarial table,” she said. “Also, the wording was impertinent.”

“What did it cover?”

“If the senior beneficiary failed to rise after specified offerings, the Church wished to recover expenses.”

“Expenses being?”

“Transport, robes, legal, refreshments, selected anatomical disbursements, and brass hire.”

“Brass hire?”

“Band, I assume. Though with this lot one hates to assume.”

Her files proved useful. Insurance schedules listed properties absent from the Church’s own books: three farms, two dockside warehouses, a sanatorium, a children’s retreat, a disused theatre, and a cold-storage facility leased under the name Mercy Fisheries.

I asked whether she had ever visited Mercy Fisheries.

“Once.”

“And?”

She removed her spectacles.

“There were no fish.”

“What was there?”

“Receipts.”

“For what?”

She looked annoyed.

“Mr. Carrow, if I understood the answer, I should have charged a higher commission.”


Interview 6: Mr. Roderick Pelt, Devotional Investment Lecturer

Mr. Pelt conducted financial education seminars for Church members. He was not ordained, though he wore a collar when addressing widows.

His pamphlets had titles of unusual frankness:

Your Purse Is Afraid of Salvation
Compound Interest and the Coming Shape
Why Your Children Are Not Truly Yours
The Lazy Donor and His Damp Reward

He described himself as a “liberation economist.”

I described him, in my notes, as a paid parasite with a chalkboard.

His seminars taught First Listeners to liquidate savings, pledge wages, borrow from relatives, sell household goods, and recruit new donors under the rubric of “expanding the mercy base.” Members who failed to meet targets were not expelled. Expulsion would have ended their value. Instead, they were placed in arrears.

“What happens when someone cannot pay?” I asked.

“They deepen.”

“What does that mean?”

“They become less attached to superficial property.”

“Such as money?”

“Initially.”

“And later?”

“Names, rooms, choices, skin. These categories are surprisingly negotiable under pressure.”

He smiled at his own cleverness.

I asked how he justified placing poor members into permanent debt.

Mr. Pelt objected.

“Permanent is unfair. Some debts are extinguished.”

“How?”

“Completely.”

He then delivered, unprompted, a ten-minute lecture on the spiritual inadequacy of cash accounting. According to Mr. Pelt, ordinary finance recognises revenue too late because it waits for payment. The Church, being more advanced, recognises revenue at the point of surrender.

“If a woman has already accepted inwardly that she belongs to the work, why should we wait for paperwork?”

“Because the law distinguishes intention from transfer.”

“The law is young.”

“So are several of the people in your transfer schedules.”

This ended the interview.

He billed me for it.


Working Paper: Revenue Recognition of Persons

The Church’s internal model treats members as progressively realisable assets.

The stages appear to be:

Applicant — no recognised value.
First Listener — recurring donation value.
Gathered Listener — donation plus recruitment value.
Pledged Member — donation, recruitment, labour, and property value.
Living Pledge — custodial value.
Silent Witness — full restricted value.
Final Distribution — closed asset.

This is not accountancy.

It is accountancy-shaped predation.

The horror lies not in the existence of victims. Fraud always has victims. The horror lies in the perfect administrative courtesy with which the Church converts sympathy into subscription, subscription into debt, debt into custody, and custody into disappearance.

Each step is minuted.

Each minute is signed.

Each signature is countersigned by someone who writes in red ink and presses too hard.


Interview 7: Mr. Abner Quill, Attorney to the Outer Trusts

Mr. Quill was technically not the Church’s lawyer. He represented several independent entities that happened to share trustees, premises, donors, beneficiaries, stationery, and a fondness for locked cellars.

He objected to the phrase shell company.

“I prefer devotional wrapper.”

He objected to related-party transaction.

“I prefer spiritually adjacent dealing.”

He objected to sham.

“Sham is a word used by men who lack imagination.”

I asked him to explain the Outer Trusts.

“They hold assets at a remove.”

“From tax?”

“From misunderstanding.”

“From creditors?”

“From premature claimants.”

“From law enforcement?”

“From weather, principally.”

Mr. Quill’s legal structures were ingenious and foul. Properties were held by land companies. Land companies leased to welfare auxiliaries. Welfare auxiliaries contracted with retreat societies. Retreat societies billed instructional missions. Instructional missions transferred surplus to burial foundations. Burial foundations purchased annuities from an insurer whose directors included Mr. Quill’s brother, cousin, and a woman he described as “my late aunt in an advisory capacity.”

“Your late aunt?”

“Yes.”

“Dead?”

“Not always relevant.”

I asked whether he knew people were being moved through these properties.

He folded his hands.

“People move through many properties, Mr. Carrow. Hotels depend on it.”

“Against their will?”

“That is a philosophical question.”

“No, it is a legal one.”

“Only in jurisdictions with limited imagination.”

I begin to suspect lawyers are why civilisation requires periodic flooding.


Ledger Extract: Deep Fund Disbursements

The Deep Fund ledger uses ordinary columns: date, reference, debit, credit, counterparty, purpose. This makes its contents worse, not better.

Selected entries:

12 Feb 1931 — Transfer to Mercy Fisheries — $740 — “winter holding, fourteen units”
03 Mar 1931 — Cash withdrawal — $96 — “quieting expenses, west dormitory”
17 Apr 1931 — Payment to Pelt Instructional Bureau — $211 — “arrears sermon series”
30 May 1931 — Transfer to Glaive Family Holdings — $1,400 — “trustee hardship allowance”
09 Jun 1931 — Payment to Spake Brokerage — $83 — “policy rider, spoilage query”
21 Jul 1931 — Transfer to Pilgrim Rail Agency — $318 — “three widows, two sons, one unsatisfactory”
01 Aug 1931 — Cash withdrawal — $50 — “refund to donor family, less handling”
12 Oct 1931 — Transfer to Unnamed Maritime Beneficiary — $2,300 — “first descent instalment”
31 Dec 1931 — Closing adjustment — $0 — “all voices reconciled”

A zero-dollar entry should not make a man afraid.

This one did.


Visit to Mercy Fisheries

Mercy Fisheries stood on a pier behind three derelict warehouses and a sign advertising oysters that had not been sold within living memory. The manager, Mr. Jobson, denied all knowledge of the Church while standing beneath a wall calendar bearing its emblem.

He described the facility as cold storage.

“For fish?”

“Among other perishables.”

The main room contained hooks, crates, ice, salt, and ledgers. The hooks were too low for cattle. The crates were too narrow for furniture. The ledgers were too careful for honest business.

In a rear office I found a posting schedule correlating incoming “pilgrims” with outgoing “settlements.” Names were sometimes crossed through and replaced by categories: Widow, Boy, Singer, Strong Back, Red-Haired, Accountant Pending.

The last category was circled.

I chose not to enquire.

In the loading bay, the floor had been scrubbed with professional diligence and moral failure. The drains were new. The walls were old. From behind one locked door came a sound like several people trying very hard not to be people.

Mr. Jobson said it was machinery.

I said machinery usually has rhythm.

He said, “This does when it learns.”

We left that door unopened, because I had no warrant, no constable, and no wish to become a footnote in my own appendix.


Humorous Relief, Such As It Is

I found one genuinely comic item among the papers: a trustees’ meeting minute from March 1932.

Agenda Item 6: Refreshments at recruitment lectures.

Mrs. Glaive complained that the current biscuits were “too penitential” and discouraged new members from remaining after the first hymn. Mr. Pelt argued that poor biscuits created humility. Miss Rusk, the bookkeeper, noted that biscuit expenditure had risen by seventeen percent while conversions had fallen by nine percent, suggesting either biscuit inefficiency or insufficient dread.

Resolution: Tea to remain weak. Biscuits to be improved only for prospects with property.

This is the Church in miniature.

Even the biscuits are hierarchical.


Supplemental Interview 8: Mr. Solomon Reed, Retired Commodities Speculator

Mr. Reed had invested personal funds in one of the Church’s affiliated ventures, Ascension Agricultural Improvement Co., which purported to reclaim swamp land for settlement.

No land was reclaimed.

No crops were planted.

Yet investors received handsome early distributions.

“Where did you think the returns came from?” I asked.

“New acreage subscriptions,” he said.

“From members?”

“From believers.”

“Mostly poor believers.”

He shrugged.

“Poor people are often the most liquid. They have nothing fixed.”

Mr. Reed withdrew his investment after attending a donor banquet.

“What happened?”

“There was a hymn.”

“That disturbed you?”

“I have heard hymns.”

“What then?”

“The soup answered.”

His distribution payments had come not from farming revenue but from subsequent member contributions routed through the Deep Fund. Early outside investors were paid to create credibility. Later members funded the payments. The structure was not original. Only the destination was.

“Did you report it?”

“To whom?”

“The authorities.”

“And say what? That a church paid me promptly and served insolent soup?”

He had a point, though not a good one.


Closing Note to Counsel — Part Two

The Church’s financial architecture can now be summarised as follows.

It recruits vulnerable persons into a paid hierarchy disguised as spiritual advancement. It imposes escalating contribution obligations. It converts inability to pay into debt. It converts debt into labour, property surrender, recruitment duty, custodial transfer, and eventual disappearance. It pays early investors, advisors, and senior members from lower-tier inflows, thereby maintaining the appearance of growth and legitimacy. It uses charitable status as a tax shield, related entities as concealment, and religious language as a solvent for ordinary legal categories.

The lower-tier members are not co-conspirators in any meaningful sense. They are the consumed base of the structure.

They fund the trustees.

They recruit their replacements.

They pay for the rooms in which they are broken.

They purchase the paper upon which their own reclassification is recorded.

From a forensic standpoint, the most damning evidence is not the missing money. It is the accounted-for money.

Every abuse has a cost centre.

Every disappearance has a journal entry.

Every scream, I fear, has been depreciated.

I recommend immediate coordination with federal investigators, banking regulators, local police, and, if available, a priest of practical temperament.

I further recommend that no representative of counsel attend Church premises alone, after sunset, during rain, near water, or in response to any invitation described as “an informal reconciliation supper.”

The trustees have requested a meeting tomorrow.

They say they wish to discuss settlement.

I have asked whether they mean legal settlement.

They have not answered.


Part Three: Final Reconciliation

Final Review Memorandum

Prepared by: H. B. Carrow, FCA, CFE
Subject: Settlement meeting, final funds tracing, member harm assessment, and certain disclosures which I would prefer not to make twice

The trustees’ settlement meeting was held in the Church’s principal administrative building, a grey stone house on the edge of a respectable town, close enough to the courthouse to suggest innocence and far enough from the railway station to discourage escape.

I attended with counsel, Mr. Barrowcliff; two federal agents; a stenographer; and a junior solicitor who had been instructed to carry duplicate exhibits, smelling salts, and a loaded revolver. This last measure was not recorded in the attendance note, but I considered it prudent governance.

The trustees were punctual.

This is common among predatory organisations. Their respect for time compensates for their indifference to persons.

They received us in a boardroom whose walls were lined with framed certificates, charity proclamations, tax exemptions, devotional charters, and photographs of smiling donors standing beside men who later disappeared into office.

At the far end of the table sat Mr. Glaive, Miss Rusk the bookkeeper, Mr. Pelt the devotional lecturer, Mr. Quill the attorney, and four trustees I had not previously met. Their names had appeared in the accounts as signatories, beneficiaries, vendors, and, in one case, a charitable programme.

There were nine chairs on their side.

Eight were occupied.

One was not.

Counsel began with the federal position. The Church had misrepresented income, diverted charitable donations, concealed assets, operated unlawful related-party structures, and improperly claimed exemption on revenue generated by coercive subscription schemes.

Mr. Glaive nodded throughout, like a man listening to a disappointing but not unexpected weather report.

When counsel finished, he said, “We dispute the tone.”

“The tone?” said Mr. Barrowcliff.

“Entirely. The figures are broadly correct.”

This produced a silence of some professional value.

Miss Rusk then distributed a document titled Proposal for Global Settlement, Temporal and Otherwise. It offered repayment of certain taxes, surrender of selected properties, dissolution of three outer trusts, and sacrifice of Mr. Pelt.

Mr. Pelt appeared startled.

“I had not approved that,” he said.

Miss Rusk did not look at him.

“Your approval was recognised in advance.”

This was the first point in the meeting at which I felt optimistic.


Final Report Summary Output

Following review of ledgers, bank records, trustee minutes, external advisory files, insurance schedules, warehouse documents, member interviews, and direct observation, I conclude as follows:

  1. The Church is a fraudulent charitable enterprise.
    Its charitable status was used to shelter revenue, conceal private enrichment, and legitimise coercive fundraising.
  2. The financial structure is a pyramid scheme with religious controls.
    Lower-tier members are required to fundraise continuously. Advancement depends on recruiting new members and extracting donations from them. Senior officers benefit disproportionately from inflows generated at the base.
  3. The lower-tier members are the primary victims.
    First Listeners and junior Gatherers are financially stripped, socially isolated, psychologically coerced, and pushed into debt obligations they cannot discharge. They are not meaningful beneficiaries of the charity.
  4. The Church uses accounting language to conceal trafficking and killing.
    Terms such as “living pledge,” “custodial uplift,” “deep conversion,” “final distribution,” and “red settlement” correspond to movement, confinement, disappearance, and probable ritual murder.
  5. External professionals enabled the structure.
    Bankers, investment advisors, lawyers, brokers, and lecturers accepted implausible explanations in exchange for fees, deposits, commissions, and plausible deniability.
  6. Tax evasion is provable but incomplete.
    The government can establish concealed income, improper deductions, private benefit, false charitable reporting, and undeclared related-party transactions. These charges should be pursued, but they do not capture the full criminality.
  7. Immediate actions recommended.
    Freeze accounts. Seize records. Detain trustees. Protect lower-tier members. Audit related entities. Search identified properties. Preserve cold-storage sites. Do not permit Church representatives to conduct any ceremony described as “closing the year.”
  8. Residual risk.
    The organisation’s financial records indicate obligations to an entity described only as Final Beneficiary. This may be metaphor, delusion, code, or creditor. I recommend treating it as a material uncertainty.

Interview 9: Mr. Harold Bexley, Philanthropic Fund Consultant

Mr. Bexley had helped the Church improve donor messaging.

He was a small, nervous man whose chief skill was replacing clear wickedness with phrases acceptable at luncheon.

“I was retained for communications strategy,” he said. “Not theology.”

“You created the campaign ‘Give Until You Are Lighter.’”

“A successful line.”

“You also drafted the pledge card stating, ‘I surrender all burdens, present and future, visible and bodily.’”

He winced.

“In retrospect, bodily may have been over-specific.”

Mr. Bexley’s advice had helped shift the Church from crude fear-based fundraising to aspirational exploitation. Poor members were told they were not donating money; they were “participating in ascent.” Widows were not surrendering pensions; they were “transferring grief into permanent work.” Children were not being separated from families; they were “released from hereditary limitation.”

I asked whether he had ever met the people targeted by these campaigns.

“Not directly. We used profiles.”

“Profiles of vulnerable persons?”

“Profiles of spiritually receptive households.”

“Households with recent bereavement, debt, unemployment, illness, or no male wage earner.”

“That is one way to say receptive.”

His invoice file contained a handwritten note beside the widow recruitment campaign:

Excellent response. Grief converts efficiently.

I showed it to him.

He stared at the page.

“That is not my finest sentence.”

“No.”

“I have done better work for hospitals.”

This was intended as mitigation.

It was not.


Interview 10: Mrs. Verity Cross, Social Investment Syndicate Member

Mrs. Cross had invested in one of the Church’s social improvement bonds, marketed as a charitable instrument supporting poor families.

She was wealthy, scented, and extremely annoyed that crime had inconvenienced her.

“I was assured the bond had a moral yield,” she said.

“What did you understand that to mean?”

“Lower cash return, higher social benefit.”

“The cash return was twelve percent.”

“Yes, but one endured lectures.”

The bond proceeds were supposedly used to house destitute families in Church-run accommodation. In fact, rents were charged back to members, maintenance was deducted from member accounts, and eviction was used as leverage to force recruitment.

“You received distributions from these rents and donations,” I said.

She looked uncomfortable.

“I received quarterly acknowledgements of gratitude.”

“With cheques.”

“Gratitude is often enclosed.”

I asked whether she had questioned how a charity serving the poor could generate such stable returns.

“Mr. Carrow, one is encouraged to trust charitable people. Otherwise charity becomes impossible.”

“Your trust paid twelve percent.”

“Which, I admit, was reassuring.”

She had attended one Church gala. Her chief recollection was disappointment.

“The soup was dreadful. Also, there was a young man in the cloakroom who kept asking if I had ever dreamed of a red staircase. I assumed he was theatrical.”

“Was he?”

“I later saw him listed in a burial foundation prospectus.”

“Alive?”

“At the gala, yes.”

“Afterward?”

She rang for more tea.


Interview 11: Mr. Edwin Lumm, Actuarial Advisor

Mr. Lumm had been consulted on member persistence, expected giving duration, and attrition forecasting.

He had the air of a man who could reduce a plague to three columns and a confidence interval.

“I did not know it was a cult,” he said.

“What did you think it was?”

“A membership society with unusual lapse behaviour.”

The actuarial model estimated the lifetime value of a First Listener based on age, income, health, family network, bereavement status, property ownership, suggestibility proxy, and access to recruitable dependants.

“This variable,” I said, pointing to a column marked Quiet Compliance.

“Retention factor.”

“And this one: No External Advocate?”

“Risk adjustment.”

“For whom?”

“The organisation.”

“And Expected Final Yield?”

He took off his glasses.

“That was supplied by the client.”

“Did you not ask what it meant?”

“In actuarial work, one learns not to interrogate every management assumption.”

A memorable professional epitaph.

Mr. Lumm’s model showed that the Church deliberately targeted members who could not afford to contribute indefinitely. This was not a flaw. It was part of the model. Once members exhausted cash resources, the Church’s expected value calculation shifted to labour, property, recruitment, custody, or final distribution.

“You priced people past bankruptcy,” I said.

“I priced persistence.”

“You priced despair.”

He looked genuinely offended.

“Despair is not an actuarial term.”

This may be true. It should be.


The Settlement Meeting: Continued

After the trustees’ proposal, counsel demanded the surrender of all hidden ledgers, trust documents, property schedules, and member custody records.

Miss Rusk agreed.

Mr. Quill objected on privilege grounds.

Miss Rusk opened one of her files and removed a small card.

Mr. Quill read it, turned pale, and withdrew the objection.

Mr. Barrowcliff asked what was on the card.

“A prior undertaking,” said Miss Rusk.

“Legal?”

“Eventually.”

The federal agents then asked for the location of missing members.

Mr. Glaive folded his hands.

“Some are recoverable.”

“How many?”

“Define recoverable.”

“Alive,” said Agent Mercer.

The trustees conferred.

This, more than any scream or symbol, was the moment in which the room became truly terrible. They did not confer like murderers deciding whether to confess. They conferred like accountants debating stock condition after warehouse damage.

“Twenty-one,” said Miss Rusk.

“Where?”

“Mercy Fisheries, the lake retreat, the south dormitory, and the red barn.”

“And the rest?”

“Closed.”

Agent Mercer stood.

Mr. Glaive sighed.

“You must understand, Agent, closure is sacred to our practice.”

“So is hanging,” said Mercer.

For a moment Mr. Glaive looked personally wounded by the vulgarity.

Then the ninth chair scraped back.

No one had touched it.

The room chilled.

The polished table darkened as if wet from below.

The trustees lowered their heads. Mr. Pelt began to whisper an investment lecture under his breath, perhaps from fear, perhaps from habit.

I looked at the empty chair and understood the final balance.

The Church had not merely stolen from its members. It had borrowed against them. It had pledged them upward. Every subscription, every recruitment dinner, every widow’s ring, every child’s coat, every warehouse transfer, every cold-storage invoice had been an instalment on a debt the trustees believed was owed to something behind the religion.

The pyramid did not end with Glaive.

He was only the top visible stone.

Above him, or below him, depending on one’s cosmology, sat the real creditor.

The Final Beneficiary.

The chair remained empty.

The chair was occupied.

I dislike repeating myself, but accuracy requires it.

Miss Rusk began to read from the settlement proposal.

“In consideration of federal restraint, the Trustees offer partial satisfaction of temporal liabilities and request recognition of senior lienholder priority.”

“No,” said Agent Mercer.

Mr. Glaive looked up.

“I beg your pardon?”

“No senior lienholder. No religious offset. No sacrificial deduction. No metaphysical secured creditor. You are under arrest.”

It was a fine speech. Too fine, perhaps. The room did not appreciate it.

The lights failed.

The stenographer screamed once, then apologised automatically, which I considered excellent training.

Something moved behind the certificates on the wall. Not behind the wall. Behind the certificates. As if the paper surfaces were windows facing a depth of office corridors, salt water, and old stars.

The ninth chair turned toward Agent Mercer.

He raised his revolver.

I placed my hand on his arm.

“Do not address it in your professional capacity,” I said.

“What?”

“That is how it gets you.”

This was, I admit, speculative advice. But speculation is not always useless.

I stood, opened my final working paper, and began to read aloud.


Final Working Paper: Beneficiary Reclassification

The Church’s entire system depended on hierarchy.

First Listener below Gatherer.

Gatherer below Steward.

Steward below Trustee.

Trustee below Final Beneficiary.

Each lower rank fed the one above. Each debt climbed. Each victim was renamed until exploitation appeared as obligation. The horror was vertical.

But law, when properly sharpened, can sometimes cut sideways.

I read the reclassification I had prepared the previous night.

“For accounting, legal, and equitable purposes, the so-called Final Beneficiary is not recognised as creditor, owner, trustee, donor, religious superior, secured party, charitable object, or exempt entity.”

The room made a sound like a lung filling with mud.

I continued.

“All purported obligations to said beneficiary are unsupported by consideration, illegal in purpose, void for public policy, incapable of performance, and dependent upon proceeds of fraud, coercion, unlawful confinement, trafficking, and homicide.”

The table cracked lengthwise.

Mr. Glaive shouted, “You cannot audit Him!”

This was untrue.

One may audit anything with sufficient fear and paper.

I read the conclusion.

“Accordingly, the Final Beneficiary is reclassified as an undisclosed related party, non-compliant foreign influence, contingent reputational liability, and uncollectable bad debt.”

The ninth chair collapsed.

Not dramatically. Not with thunder. It simply gave way like cheap furniture under an overweight uncle at Christmas.

For one beautiful second, the eldritch apparatus of the Church suffered the most deflationary event known to management: adverse classification.

Then the federal agents moved.


Enforcement Outcome

The raid that followed was broad, ugly, and imperfect.

Twenty-three living members were recovered from Church properties. Of these, seventeen were lower-tier members in arrears, four were children of members, one was a former Gatherer marked for penalty, and one was a bookkeeper from an affiliated chapter who had tried to correct a quarterly return.

Mercy Fisheries contained ledgers, restraints, forged consent forms, bloodstained clothing, transport manifests, and sufficient tax records to ruin men who had previously considered themselves pillars of society.

The lake retreat contained dormitories, locked rooms, recruitment scripts, punishment schedules, and a chapel with drainage far exceeding liturgical requirements.

The red barn contained no livestock.

I will not expand upon that finding except to note that the word red in the accounts was not metaphorical.

Mr. Glaive, Miss Rusk, Mr. Quill, Mr. Pelt, and five trustees were arrested. Several advisors later claimed ignorance. Some were believed. Most should not have been.

The Church’s charitable status was revoked.

Its assets were frozen.

Its surviving members were, with mixed success, separated from the organisation’s language. This proved difficult. Exploitation had been made grammatical to them. Some could not ask for food without calling it an advance against mercy. Some apologised for surviving because survival had placed them in arrears.

The federal case proceeded first on tax charges, because tax charges are easier to prove than cosmic conspiracy and less likely to distress a jury before lunch.

This was probably correct.

It was also indecently small.


Interview 12: Mr. Basil Orn, Receiver Appointed Over Church Assets

The court-appointed receiver was a grey, patient man who believed all evil eventually expressed itself as poor filing.

He took possession of the Church properties and began liquidation.

“How bad is it?” I asked.

“Bad.”

“In what sense?”

“In the sense that the ledgers are better than the buildings.”

He had found duplicate accounts, coded schedules, off-book reserves, hidden cash, bearer bonds, jewellery, deeds, and a surprisingly large inventory of spoons.

“Spoons?”

“Apparently symbolic.”

“Of what?”

“Membership level, I think. Or soup. I am trying not to overreach.”

The receiver’s greatest frustration was that much of the Church’s wealth had already been consumed by its own sustaining fraud. Money flowed upward, but not efficiently. Trustees stole. Advisors overcharged. Properties decayed. Recruiters inflated numbers. Ceremonies were expensive. Robes alone represented a scandalous cost.

“Fraudsters always disappoint me,” Mr. Orn said. “So much wickedness. So little margin discipline.”

He recovered enough assets to establish a victim fund, though not enough to restore what had been taken.

“What about the Final Beneficiary?” I asked.

He pointed to a file box.

“Disallowed.”

“On what basis?”

“No address.”

A sound like distant surf came from somewhere under the floor.

Mr. Orn frowned.

“Also late filing.”

I admired him very much.


Closing Statement to Counsel

The unnamed Church should not be understood as a religious aberration that happened to commit financial crime. It should be understood as financial crime that discovered religion was an excellent container.

Its genius lay in translating every human vulnerability into a balance-sheet opportunity.

Grief became capital.

Loneliness became retention.

Faith became recurring revenue.

Debt became custody.

Custody became disappearance.

Disappearance became settlement.

The charitable structure did not fail. It worked precisely as designed. It protected the trustees, impressed outsiders, reassured banks, attracted investors, pacified officials, and taught victims to describe their own exploitation as spiritual progress.

The pyramid was realistic in all essential respects. New money funded old promises. Advancement depended on recruitment. Early beneficiaries gave credibility to later abuse. External professionals saw fees where they should have seen warning signs. Poor members carried the structure until the structure required their bodies as collateral.

The occult element did not replace fraud.

It completed it.

Where ordinary pyramid schemes collapse when recruitment slows, this one had developed a terminal reserve policy. Members who could no longer raise funds were not released. They were reclassified. The lowest tier paid in cash until they had none, in labour until they failed, in family until they were alone, and finally in flesh when no other asset class remained.

This is not metaphor.

I regret this professionally.

I regret it personally.

I regret it in ways that do not fit the report template.


Appendix: Notes on Certain Accounting Terms Used by the Church

Ascension Note
Worthless internal instrument sold to members as proof of spiritual advancement. Non-transferable, non-redeemable, inheritable only by the Church.

Deep Fund
Off-book central reserve used for trustee enrichment, property acquisition, member transport, confinement costs, ritual expenditure, and payments to unidentified beneficiary.

Final Distribution
Member disappearance following exhaustion of cash, property, recruitment value, or labour value.

Living Pledge
Person treated as pledged collateral against spiritual or financial debt.

Mercy Arrears
Manufactured obligation imposed upon members who failed to meet fundraising quotas.

Recognition Unit
Psychological retention token masquerading as investment product.

Red Settlement
Ritual killing or disposal concealed as closure of member debt.

Senior Creditor / Final Beneficiary
Purported supernatural counterparty. Legally void. Spiritually persistent. Administratively annoying.


Personal Addendum, Not Submitted

Three weeks after the arrests, I received a parcel at my office.

Inside was the Church’s green ledger, though it had been seized by federal officers and locked in evidence. Attached to it was a note in Miss Rusk’s handwriting:

Books do not close merely because men do.

The ledger opened by itself to a fresh page.

At the top was written:

CARROW, H. B.
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES RENDERED
STATUS: PENDING RECOGNITION

Below this appeared a balance.

Not dollars.

Not pounds.

Not any currency recognised by decent civilisation.

A balance of names.

Mrs. Pellam’s name was there. So were the names of children recovered from the lake retreat, the bookkeeper from the affiliated chapter, the young man from the gala cloakroom, and several persons I had believed dead.

Beside each was a notation:

Recovered from Church.
Not yet recovered from debt.

That was when I understood the remaining work.

Freezing accounts is simple.

Freeing victims from the accounts into which they have been written is harder.

The Church had been destroyed as an entity. Its trustees would face prison, disgrace, and, in Mr. Pelt’s case, the enduring humiliation of having been offered as a settlement concession and rejected as insufficiently liquid. Its advisors would issue statements. Its investors would discover themselves shocked. Its bankers would revise procedures. Its lawyers would discover memory loss. The federal government would celebrate the tax victory.

But among the survivors, the language remained.

Some still counted meals.

Some still apologised for sleep.

Some still believed kindness was an advance requiring repayment.

Some still heard, in moments of fatigue, the old instruction beneath the world:

Raise more.
Owe more.
Bring others.
Settle.

Therefore I propose a final adjustment, outside the accounts and against all prior classifications.

Debit: Church, trustees, advisors, investors, enablers, and all predatory systems wearing charitable clothes.

Credit: the living.

Narration: reversal of false obligation.

Supporting evidence: breath.

The ledger resisted this entry.

I made it anyway.

I am an accountant.

We are difficult people when properly annoyed.


Final Note

The case is now known publicly as a tax matter.

This is perhaps inevitable. Societies prefer crimes that fit filing cabinets.

The newspapers reported unpaid taxes, improper deductions, disguised income, and charitable abuse. They did not report the cold rooms, the red barn, the spoons, the empty ninth chair, or the way the trustees bowed when the federal agents read the warrants aloud.

They certainly did not report that, during asset liquidation, the receiver sold the boardroom furniture at public auction.

Eight chairs went cheaply.

The ninth was listed separately.

No bidder touched it.

At closing time, Mr. Orn marked it unsold, carried it to the alley, and broke it with an axe.

The next morning his office contained ten chairs.

This is outside the scope of my engagement.

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