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- RELIGION, Page 65Judgment DayThe jury nails Jim Bakker on all 24 counts of fraud
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- Just before the inevitable verdict came down last week, a
- gaggle of Jim Bakker's faithful backers defiantly held aloft a King
- James Bible opened to Psalm 17:3: "Thou hast tried me, and shalt
- find nothing." But the jury sang a different psalm: Guilty as
- charged on all 24 counts of defrauding the public of $3.7 million
- via TV, phone and mail. Testimony about one of the ripest scandals
- in U.S. religious history had consumed 25 days; the jury needed
- less than eleven hours to decide.
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- Fittingly, the proceedings ended on a theatrical note. In the
- bail hearing, Federal Judge Robert Potter said he could not forget
- the parade of 35 Bakker loyalists who had spoken for the defense.
- "They have a Jim Jones mentality," he said, in a bizarre reference
- to the cult leader responsible for 900-plus deaths by mass suicide.
- "I've seen these people out here who think he could walk on water."
- Despite fears that Bakker's fans might spirit him out of the
- country, Potter freed the telefelon on a $250,000 secured bond; he
- must report daily to an Orlando parole officer.
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- Bakker, who will appeal, managed a trademark smile as he told
- reporters after the trial, "I come out today still innocent of the
- charges against me . . . My faith is still in God." Wife Tammy Faye
- tried to put the best face on the situation by singing a hymn and
- cooing, "It's not over till it's over."
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- Nor did the trial want for drama. Bakker was led away for
- psychiatric evaluation, one witness collapsed, and Hurricane Hugo
- interrupted the proceedings. The usual details emerged about
- Bakker's lavish spending habits (motorized bedroom draperies, a
- $500 shower curtain). The prosecution's star witness turned out to
- be Bakker himself. Jurors endured eight hours of videotape showing
- his histrionic money pitches and then heard the ex-preacher
- describe himself on the witness stand as a "minister of the
- gospel," not a "professional businessman."
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- Although Bakker will almost certainly not get the maximum
- penalty (120 years and $5 million in fines) when he is sentenced
- Oct. 24, he is likely to spend time behind bars. Potter had earlier
- meted out a tough eight years in prison and a $200,000 fine to
- former Bakker aide Richard Dortch, even though Dortch testified for
- the prosecution. Two other staffers who provided evidence drew
- draconian prison terms for tax evasion.