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Meyer says she should not have to defend how she spends the ministry's money. "We teach and preach and believe
biblically that God wants to bless people who serve Him," Meyer said. "So there's no need for us to apologize for
being blessed."
Meyer's "trusted" board
For the most part, Meyer can spend the ministry's money any way she sees fit because her board of directors is
handpicked. It consists of Meyer, her husband and all four of her children — all paid workers — as well as six of
Meyer's closest friends. (Ministry officials said that daughter Laura Holtzmann has now resigned; state records
still list her on the board.) "Our family is a huge help to us," Meyer said. "We couldn't do this if we didn't have
somebody we trusted."
Board members Roxane and Paul Schermann are such close friends that for more than a decade they lived in the
Meyers' home. The ministry employed both of them as high-level managers and in 2001 bought them a $334,000 home.
Roxane Schermann no longer works at the ministry; her husband continues as a paid division manager. The Schermanns
bought the house at the same price from the ministry in January. Delanie Trusty, the ministry's certified public
accountant, also serves as the ministry board's secretary.
The board decides how the ministry's money is spent. The salaries of Meyer and her family are set by those board
members who are not family members and are not employed by the ministry, Meyer's lawyer said. The arrangement meets
IRS regulations, the lawyer said.
"We certainly wouldn't have enemies and people we don't know" on the board, Meyer said. "That wouldn't make any
sense. Anybody who has a board is going to have people in favor of you."
Meyer and her ministry refuse to tell how much the ministry pays Meyer, her husband, her children and her
children's spouses. "I don't make any more than I'm worth," Meyer said. "We're definitely within IRS guidelines."
Such an overlap between top administrators and board members concerns the IRS because "the opportunity to
manipulate and control the organization is easier to accomplish," said Bruce Philipson of St. Paul, Minn., the IRS
group manager of tax-exempt organizations for this region. (Carolyn Tuft and Bill Smith St. Louis Post-Dispatch
11/15/2003)
"Am I therefore become your enemy, because I tell you the truth?" Galatians 4:16
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