Florida pastor and his son are arrested in alleged $8 million Covid scam

Authored by nbcnews.com and submitted by drkgodess

A Florida pastor and his son were arrested Wednesday on charges of fraudulently obtaining more than $8 million in federal Covid relief funds and attempting to use some of the money to buy a luxury home near Walt Disney World.

Evan Edwards, 64, and his son, Josh, 30, were taken into custody five months after an NBC News report raised questions over why they hadn’t been charged in the alleged scam, which federal prosecutors first identified in court papers in December 2020.

It wasn’t immediately clear whether the family had hired an attorney.

A source familiar with the investigation said NBC News' previous reporting led law enforcement to prioritize the case.

The case dates to April 2020, when Josh Edwards applied for a $6 million Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loan to cover payroll, rent and utilities for his family’s ministry. In the loan application, he claimed that the organization, ASLAN International Ministry, had 486 employees and a monthly payroll of $2.7 million, according to a federal forfeiture complaint.

ASLAN International was ultimately approved for an $8.4 million loan.

But when federal investigators showed up at the ministry's office in Orlando, the door was locked and workers at the neighboring businesses told them nobody was ever seen inside, the complaint says. A review of the ministry’s website found that the donation links were inactive and sections of text were apparently lifted from other religious sites, according to the complaint.

The Evans family: from left, son Josh, Pastor Evan, wife Mary Jane and daughter Joy. via Facebook

There were other red flags. The man who was listed on the loan application as the ministry’s accountant suffered from dementia and hadn’t done any work for the organization since 2017, federal prosecutors said in court papers, citing an interview with the man’s son.

Federal agents descended on the family's home in New Smyrna Beach about 7 a.m. Wednesday.

Evan Edwards was wheeled out of the house in a wheelchair. Agents escorted Josh Edwards out of the home and into a law enforcement vehicle, his hands cuffed behind his back.

Josh Edwards is taken into custody Wednesday outside the Edwards family’s New Smyrna Beach home. Obtained by NBC News

A six-count indictment unsealed Wednesday accuses them of making a series of false claims in their PPP loan application, including that ASLAN International had 486 employees and average monthly payroll expenses of $2.7 million.

Evan and Josh Edwards knew that ASLAN's actual number of employees and actual monthly payroll expenses were "significantly lower, or entirely nonexistent," says the indictment prosecutors filed in the Middle District of Florida.

The two men, who are originally from Canada, were hit with a total of six charges, including conspiracy to commit bank fraud and visa fraud. They were expected to appear in federal court in Orlando on Wednesday afternoon.

"I'm glad they got arrested," said a neighbor, who requested anonymity due to the sensitivity of the case. "It's a long time coming."

The Edwards family did missionary work in Turkey for many years before moving to Florida in 2019. They settled in a newly built community about an hour’s drive from Orlando. In September 2020, federal agents showed up at the home to execute a search warrant but no one was there and the place had been “cleared out,” according to the civil forfeiture complaint.

Florida police officers pulled over the family’s Mercedes SUV later that evening. They were speeding on I-75 north of Gainesville, according to a police report.

Federal agents arrived on the scene and found bags of shredded documents in the vehicle, as well as suitcases full of financial records and their electronic devices stuffed into so-called Faraday bags, which block radio frequencies to keep them from being tracked, according to the civil forfeiture complaint.

The Edwards family’s New Smyrna Beach home. NBC News

The family was taken into custody on an unrelated immigration charge but released the next day when the case was dismissed, according to court records.

Six months later, in April 2021, a federal judge in Florida ordered the forfeiture of the $8.4 million the Edwards family had received after the government claimed that it was the proceeds from bank fraud and money laundering offenses. The Edwards family did not challenge the seizure.

They had tried to use a portion of the money to purchase a $3.7 million home in a new Disney World development called Golden Oaks, according to the complaint.

But the deal never went through. The authorities seized the $868,000 that was set aside for the down payment on the 4,700-square-foot home, the complaint says.

ElefantPharts on December 15th, 2022 at 14:50 UTC »

Am I reading this wrong? The whole pastor thing was a scam, he’s wasn’t a “man of god” or anything like that, there never was a congregation or administration, he just made it all up with an address for a derelict building and they gave him 8.4m?! How the hell did someone with such an obvious scam get approved? The PPP system was that broken?!

ddubyeah on December 15th, 2022 at 14:14 UTC »

I encourage all of you to look up your local churches and see how much PPP money they took. In fact anyone you meet who has a business, look them up too. Its public information and quite illuminating.

drkgodess on December 15th, 2022 at 13:30 UTC »

A Florida pastor and his son were arrested Wednesday on charges of fraudulently obtaining more than $8 million in federal Covid relief funds and attempting to use some of the money to buy a luxury home near Walt Disney World.

Evan Edwards and his son, Josh, 30, were taken into custody five months after an NBC News report raised questions over why they hadn’t been charged in the alleged scam, which federal prosecutors first identified in court papers in December 2020.

A source familiar with the investigation said NBC News' previous reporting led law enforcement to prioritize the case.

The shocking part is that law enforcement was aware for years, but no action was taken until reporters started asking questions.