Monday, January 14, 2013

Samuel Rodriguez on a Global Evangelical Movement to End ...

Even before the Louie Giglio imbroglio brought evangelical anti-human-trafficking efforts back into the limelight, I asked my friend Erik Campano to conduct a series of interviews on evangelical (as well as non-evangelical and even non-Christian) efforts to bring an end to human trafficking. My wife and I got involved in anti-trafficking and anti-slavery efforts many years ago, and some of the most profound stories of compassion and deliverance I?ve heard in recent years have centered on ending the trafficking of modern-day slaves, and especially ending the practice of kidnapping girls and selling their rape for profit. My own hometown of Atlanta, to its shame, is a sort of regional hub for networks of human traffickers. Our church and others have begun to band together to try to put a stop to it.

As it turns out, this is an important weekend for anti-trafficking efforts, and it presented the opportunity to talk with our friend Samuel Rodriguez about the matter. Here is Erik?s interview with Rev. Rodriguez:

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A number of Christian organizations ? mostly, but not exclusively, evangelical ? have designated this weekend the National Weekend of Prayer to Abolish Slavery and Trafficking. Its stated purpose is ?to mobilize prayer in America and to encourage awareness of the issue of human trafficking which is correctly called modern day slavery.? Reverend Samuel Rodriguez, head of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference (Hispanic Evangelical Association), is Honorary Co-Chair of the event. Erik Campano spoke to him for Patheos.

What is the National Weekend of Prayer to Abolish Slavery and Trafficking?

It is a national effort of globalization and messaging, to help change the optics: to basically engage the Christian community in prayerful advocacy to end human slavery ? sex trafficking ? in the 21st century.

The church of Jesus Christ would take the lead in serving as an advocate to end human slavery in the spirit of Wilberforce, in the same emancipation spirit that we saw in the abolitionist movement in the 1800s, in the spirit of Dr. King ? that?s what the church is doing.

In other words, what you?re calling for is a broad-based, mass evangelical movement to tackle the issue of human trafficking.

It?s critical here that the term movement is exactly what we?re looking for. It?s not just top-down leaders speaking about a subject matter. It?s grass-roots, from the bottom up and the top down.

Can you give us a creative idea of what practically you would expect evangelical Christians in the United States to do to combat trafficking?

We?re calling upon every single evangelical church in America this Sunday to designate prayer before the presence of the Lord to end trafficking. Every pastor will tell their parishioners: this week, we want you to call members of Congress in your district, on the House side and the Senate side, and tell them that you want them to make the end of human trafficking, of sex trafficking, a priority.

In social media, we?re getting young people to push via Facebook, via YouTube, via Instagram, how important this subject matter is.

One of the greatest lacks right now is providing shelter and homes for the individuals. Once you have this 15-year-old, where do they go? And we?re asking evangelical churches if they could provide something like the battered women?s shelters that were created in the 70s and 80s.

In 2000 the United States passed the Trafficking Victims Protection Act, and then President Bush made it, at least rhetorically, one of his most important human rights issues. President Obama has also spoken about it. Do you feel that the federal government is still not doing enough?

While I commend in part President Bush and President Obama for their efforts, it?s more rhetoric than action. We?re seeing very little legislative action. We still have policies in place that punish, in a de facto manner, these 16, 15, 14-year-olds that are being sold. They?re basically regarded as prostitutes, when, in essence, they are slaves.

The federal government is already putting tens of millions of dollars into anti-trafficking agencies. Do you expect them to increase that budget? Or do you feel that these agencies are not doing their work properly?

I think these agencies have a good heart. I do believe that other issues are taking priority. It has become number 10 on the list of 12 things to do. We understand that resources are federally allocated. We understand that on a rhetorical basis, and even on a legislative basis, there are policies in place. Nonetheless, implementation is not taking place at the level it should be. I personally do not believe that we have achieved a collective American awareness of the issue.

You?ve said that the current system of immigration actually invites human trafficking.

We have an immigration policy that has been broken for years. We basically have a system where people come in here legally with a visa, and then apply for permanent residency and then for citizenship. But I have some in my church who came in here legally, had all their documentation right there, and they were told, we?re working on it, working on it. Twelve months! A year!

That invites human trafficking because many of these people, they come here, and they do whatever they can. Children are left behind, and these children are never to be heard from again. And then they?ve been through such an emotionally destructive process, that only the work of Christ can do the healing.

What does it mean for a trafficking victim to be rescued and reintegrated?

It is a redemption. It is the epitome of holistic salvation, a transformation that can only be expressed through unconditional love.

Are you saying that trafficking victims have only been rehabilitated when they have found Jesus, or have become Christian?

The word ?only? would be too exclusive. In addition to this wonderful Christian faith that I hold dear, there are secular organizations that have a strong commitment to fixing these shattered lives, and I applaud them for their efforts. When people say that only through Jesus Christ can these people be healed, I can tell you that through Jesus Christ, I have received healing. I have personally been restored through the work of Christ in my life.

If you look at the statistics, nine out of ten trafficking cases in the world are labor trafficking. Why don?t we hear evangelicals talking more about labor?

You?re right. Because it?s a difficult subject matter to understand. The issue of labor-related migration and the migratory trends that we have seen historically, that have stemmed out of south of the Equator, north of the Equator, the local nuances on labor?that is the number one reason that you see the difficulty in evangelicals addressing the labor component of human trafficking.

Does the Hispanic community play a special role in the fight against trafficking?

Sure, because as a community, particularly in the past few decades, vis-a-vis the immigration issue, we have experienced a great amount of exploitation. You could argue that in today?s reality, there are many Latinos that exist as indentured servants. If you have some of our workers working farms with dangerous pesticides, 18 hours a day ? this is the new fiefdom of the 21st century. So Latinos ? it?s not that we have a greater level of credibility ? but we have experienced that in our community.

In other words, what you see as the exploitation of Latino labor, in what sounds like agricultural settings, primarily, is a reason for Latinos to sympathize with victims of trafficking.

We sympathize with them because we experience it firsthand. Statistically, Latinos represent a huge portion of the victims of human trafficking in America.

I?m guessing that you want to see federal and state governments providing more funding to faith-based anti-trafficking organizations.

You are guessing 100 percent accurately. And we need this across the board: federal funding for churches to provide a place of refuge in rescuing these individuals.

That raises dicey issues of the separation of church and state. What do you see as the proper ratio of faith-based versus non-faith-based work on this in the United States? Is this something primarily for the church to do, or that the government should be dealing with?

I am an advocate that the church of Jesus Christ should always lead the way in issues of justice. I, Samuel Rodriguez, believe that we are obligated to do justice, in bringing the Good News of the name of Jesus. Not that government does not have a role, but the church must take the lead. We have a prophetic mandate to do so.

The issue is going to require collaboration. First you have federal legislative policy, you have federal law, federal resources. Because it?s a law enforcement issue, we can?t do this alone, from a practical standpoint. We?ve seen the expansion of faith-based partnerships even through the Obama administration. I have to commend George W. Bush for being the founding father of this sort of idea. And I believe this is an excellent opportunity to demonstrate to all Americans that faith and government can work together for the common good.

What about unity between evangelical and other Christians ? let?s say Catholic or progressive Christians. Have you seen any sort of cooperative work there?

Yes, we have. And it?s good news. We see cooperative work on immigration reform, with Catholic bishops and conservative evangelicals holding hands. In human trafficking, we?re going to see the same.

And I do believe this collaboration is necessary for success. I don?t think it?s an option. I don?t think it?s going to be a kumbaya moment at the end of the day when we pat ourselves on the back and say hey, we worked together.

Once you have an evangelical movement, what is the next step?

It must be viable and sustainable. Once we have that, then we have to solidify a Christian movement that is beyond the evangelical moniker. We have the Catholics fully engaged, progressive evangelicals, mainline Protestants, on board. We have some internal objectives, which is by 2020, we want to see a significant decrease. We want to end it. The movement will not only be evangelical, but have a strong evangelical underpinning.

And you also hope that non-Christians would also be part of this movement.

Of course. And to give them credit, it was not Christians who began sounding the alarm and blowing Joshua?s trumpet, even before Christians woke up to the reality of trafficking. So we want to collaborate with non-Christians. Christians have the responsibility of crystallizing the moral imperative of every social rights or justice movement in America.

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Editor?s Note: For more information, and for actions you can take, see the International Justice Mission page on this weekend of prayer and action.

Erik Campano is formerly a local news anchor of National Public Radio?s?All Things Considered, and radio host and reporter at German Public Broadcasting in Bonn and Radio France Internationale in Paris.

Source: http://www.patheos.com/blogs/philosophicalfragments/2013/01/12/samuel-rodriguez-on-a-global-evangelical-movement-to-end-human-trafficking/

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Sunday, January 13, 2013

Hitting the debt limit: What bills would be paid?

WASHINGTON (AP) ? In the summer of 2011, when a debt crisis like the current one loomed, President Barack Obama warned Republicans that older Americans might not get their Social Security checks unless there was a deal to raise the nation's borrowing limit.

After weeks of brinkmanship, Republicans consented and Obama agreed to a deficit-reduction plan the GOP wanted. Crisis averted, for a time.

Now that there's a fresh showdown, the possibility of Social Security cuts ?and more ? is back on the table.

The government could run out of cash to pay all its bills in full as early as Feb. 15, according to one authoritative estimate, and congressional Republicans want significant spending cuts in exchange for raising the borrowing limit. Obama, forced to negotiate an increase in 2011, has pledged not to negotiate again.

Without an agreement, every option facing his administration would be unprecedented.

It would require a degree of financial creativity that could test the law, perhaps even the Constitution.

It could shortchange Social Security recipients and other people, including veteran and the poor, who rely on government programs.

It could force the Treasury to contemplate selling government assets, a step considered but rejected in 2011. In short, the Treasury would have to create its own form of triage, creating a priority list of its most crucial obligations, from interest payments to debtors to benefits to vulnerable Americans.

"It may be that somewhere down the line someone will challenge what the administration did in that moment, but in the moment, who's going to stop them?" asked Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former director of the Congressional Budget Office. "I pray we never have to find out how imaginative they are."

In such a debt crisis, the president would have to decide what laws he wants to break. Does he breach the borrowing limit without congressional OK? Does he ignore spending commitments required by law?

In a letter to Obama on Friday, Senate Democratic leaders urged him to consider taking any "lawful steps that ensure that America does not break its promises and trigger a global economic crisis ? without congressional approval, if necessary."

The White House has resisted that path. It has rejected recommendations that it invoke a provision in the 14th Amendment to the Constitution that states that "the validity of the public debt of the United States ... shall not be questioned."

"There are only two options to deal with the debt limit: Congress can pay its bills or they can fail to act and put the nation into default," White House press secretary Jay Carney said. "Congress needs to do its job."

So what's left if Congress does not act in time?

Technically, the government hit the debt ceiling at the end of December. Since then, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has halted full payments into the retirement and disability fund for government workers and to the health benefits fund of Postal Service retirees.

The Treasury can stop payments to a special fund that purchases or sells foreign currencies to stabilize world financial markets.

Past administrations have taken such steps to buy time awaiting a debt ceiling increase. That happened under Presidents Bill Clinton and President George W. Bush. The government restored those funds after Congress raised the debt ceiling.

Those measures and others could keep the government solvent, perhaps as far as early March, according to an analysis by the Bipartisan Policy Center.

There are other extreme possibilities as well.

The federal government could sell some of its assets, from its gold stockpile to its student loan portfolio.

"All these things are in principle marketable, and in a crisis you'd get huge discounts on them," said Holtz-Eakin, now head of the American Action Forum, a conservative public policy institute. "They wouldn't be good ordinary business, but you would be in extraordinary times."

According to a treasury inspector general report last year, department officials in 2011 considered and rejected the idea, concluding that gold sales would destabilize the international financial system, that selling off the student loan portfolio was not feasible and that such "fire sales" would buy only limited time.

An idea pushed by some liberals would take advantage of a legal loophole meant for coin collectors and have the Treasury mint platinum coins that could be deposited at the Federal Reserve and used to pay the nation's bills. But the Treasury issued a statement Saturday putting the idea to rest, saying neither the department nor the Federal Reserve believes the law "can or should be used to facilitate the production of platinum coins for the purpose of avoiding an increase in the debt limit."

Once all efforts are exhausted, then the government would be in uncharted territory.

At that point, the government would continue to get tax revenue, but hardly enough to keep up with the bills. According to the Bipartisan Policy Center, the federal government between Feb. 15 and March 15 will get $277 billion in revenue and face $452 billion in obligations.

The Treasury would have to decide whether to pay some obligations and not others or to simply pay for one day's bills as it tax revenue rolls in, exponentially delaying payments the longer the debt ceiling is not raised. Under virtually every scenario contemplated, payment of interest on the debt takes precedence to put off a calamitous default.

"I happen to think the triage would be chosen to create the maximum amount of political pressure to break the impasse right away, which would be withholding Social Security checks," said Philip Wallach, a fellow at the Brookings Institution.

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Follow Jim Kuhnhenn on Twitter: http://twitter.com/jkuhnhenn

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hitting-debt-limit-bills-paid-160938609--finance.html

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Defendants' lawyers in the spotlight in Indian rape case

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - In a grubby room, one wall lined with legal tomes, a father and his son leaf through thick case files in preparation for the trial of their lives - defending the main accused in a gang-rape that outraged India and caused shock waves around the world.

The small New Delhi legal firm, with its headquarters in a cramped office above a local bank, has been thrust into the international spotlight after being appointed to represent bus driver Ram Singh.

Singh is accused of leading a gang that raped and severely injured a 23-year-old student in a moving Delhi bus, leading eventually to her death.

A local lawyers association said its members had agreed not to take up the case for the accused in view of the nature of the crime and the public outrage it has caused.

Vibhor Anand, a 24-year-old law student, saw things differently and convinced his father to seize the opportunity.

"It was my idea to go for the case," Anand said, leaning forward in his chair. It was important the defendants were represented, however terrible the crime, he said.

So V.K. Anand, 57, headed down to the pre-trial court in another part of town to offer his services. He was shouted down when he stood up in the tightly packed court room and announced his desire to defend the main accused. One woman lawyer prodded him hard in anger.

"They did not allow me to make an appearance in the court itself, they created such a problem for me, but ultimately I said it is the right of the accused person," he said.

Despite the public hostility to anyone defending the accused, in the end the Anands had competition for Singh's case, with an outspoken Supreme Court lawyer, M.L. Sharma also coming forward and seeking to represent him. Eventually, Sharma was hired by Singh's brother Mukesh, another of the accused.

Another lawyer is representing two other accused while it is not yet clear who exactly is representing the fifth man.

All of the accused are friends who, according to the police charge sheet against them, went out on a joy ride on December 16, looking for women.

The five have been charged with multiple offences including murder, attempt to murder, gang-rape, kidnapping, criminal conspiracy, dacoity and unnatural sexual offences. They face the death penalty, if convicted.

The five accused are due back in court on Monday where police will seek to extend their remand in custody. The court which is listening to pre-trial hearings is also expected to commit the case to a fast track which will then begin the trial. The fast track court is expected to reach a verdict within three months.

Charges against a sixth member of the group have not been brought while police complete an inquiry to confirm his age. He has said he is 17, and under Indian law, a juvenile court has to try anyone below 18.

According to the police chargesheet seen by Reuters the men lured the young woman and a male friend into the bus, offering a ride home, and then attacked the man first, before taking the woman to the rear of the bus and raping her by turns.

The men also assaulted the woman with iron rods and the pair were thrown off the bus, left on a highway, police said. Ram Singh, the driver of the bus led the assault on the woman, according to the police chargesheet.

LAWYER WANTS JUSTICE FOR ALL

Anand senior said while the crime was heinous, the defendants were entitled to a fair trial.

"Just as the victim must get justice, the accused should also get justice. You cannot hang a person just because the public wants them hanged," said the moustached and balding Anand as his son fielded calls from the world media.

Father and son seemed to be enjoying the attention, as they finished each other's sentences and seemed to speak almost as one voice during a conversation with Reuters.

Anand said he has been a defense lawyer in both criminal and civil cases for nearly three decades, and together with his son also ran a charity that offers free 24-hour legal advice.

They said they would base their defense on lapses in the police investigation, and discrepancies in witness statements.

"From the investigation stage, the accused are entitled to legal aid," Anand senior said. "The court is under obligation to provide legal aid counsel in case they have not engaged any lawyer.

"This is where they went wrong, no legal aid was assigned to those people themselves," he said.

RENOWNED FOR CHALLENGING AUTHORITIES

Sharma, the wiry lawyer for Mukesh Singh, the main accused's brother, said he had to virtually plead with the pre-trial court to allow him to speak to his client when he was brought before the court.

He was jostled, somebody shouted out he was a lawyer desperately seeking attention and that he should be thrown out of the room. But he said he was not going to give up, because his fight was not just about defending the accused, but also to expose the police and the criminal justice system.

"We all know how the police investigation system works in India. They will pick anyone from the street and make him the sacrificial lamb," the 56-year-old lawyer said in a conversation in the gardens of India's Supreme Court where he is a frequent litigant on public matters.

He said the police case was built on confessions from the men and that he found it strange that the statements of each of the five men given in the chargesheet were identical. "They are ditto the same. It's like somebody is dictating it."

He then charged that his client Mukesh told him he'd been sexually assaulted by inmates at Tihar jail since he was brought there from police custody, including with a rod.

Police have denied the allegation.

Sharma has had a history of taking on the higher judiciary. Among the cases he has argued is a public interest litigation inquiring into the assets of a former Supreme Court chief justice and another against a sitting chief justice of the top court, both of which were thrown out.

Not only was his case against the chief justice S.H.J. Kapadia arguing that there was a conflict of interest in a high-profile tax dispute involving Britain-based Vodaphone Group rejected, he was fined 50,000 rupees ($909) for wasting the time of the court.

A Supreme Court lawyer working on behalf of the government said Sharma was "notorious" for being an excessive litigant. Under Indian law any citizen can file a public interest litigation and the latest Sharma is fighting is one against a government decision to allow foreign direct investment in retail.

"My fight is against corruption whether in government or judiciary," said Sharma. "I can see the same thing happening in this case. There is public pressure, the politicians are pressing the police. The evidence will not be evaluated, innocent people will be fixed."

Lawyer A.P. Singh, who will argue the case for Vinay Sharma, a gym assistant, and Akshay Thakur, a bus cleaner, recalled that when he went to prison to meet his client, the accused begged him to save him.

"He caught hold of my feet. He started crying," Singh said.

$1=55.01 rupees

(Additional reporting by Suchitra Mohanty; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/defendants-lawyers-spotlight-indian-rape-case-111552630.html

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WTB : iPhone 5, iPhone 4s, iPhone 4 ( 14-01-2013 )

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Home staging seminar scheduled for Jan. 19 in Dover ...

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DOVER ? Maple Suites, a senior independent living retirement community in Dover, will host a seminar to help homeowners stage and price their home for sale this winter or spring.

The 45-minute seminar at 11 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 19, will be conducted by Louise Ducharme, Re/Max Realty One, a licensed broker and Realtor in New Hampshire and Maine for the past 25 years. Ducharme has assisted in selling hundreds of homes during her career.

Also participating in the seminar will be Patrice Sweet, certified interior staging specialist and owner of Stunning Spaces LLC. Sweet has been staging homes in New Hampshire, Maine and beyond for the past six years and will share "must have" information about how to get a competitive advantage when selling your home.

The seminar will cover the proper way to stage a home, how to price a home to sell, what's happening in the Seacoast housing market this winter, the outlook for spring housing sales, the science and psychology of selling your home, and quick enhancements that will add the most value to your home.

To attend the seminar, RSVP to Maple Suites at 742-8820.

Commercial Realtors named new officers

BEDFORD ? The New Hampshire Commercial Investment Board of Realtors recently held its annual meeting and 2013 installation of officers at the Derryfield Country Club.

New Hampshire Association of Realtors 2012 President William Weidacher conducted the installation of NHCIBOR's officers, who include:

President: Tom Duffy, Prudential Verani Realty; President-elect Mark Dickey, KW Commercial Boston Metro; Treasurer Bill Jean, Fulcrum Associates, Inc.; Secretary Jason Craven, Craven, Sullivan & Splendore; Immediate Past President Chris Norwood, NAI Norwood Group.

In addition, the following individuals were inducted as directors: Roger Dieker, CB Richard Ellis New England; Chris Nadeau, Nobis Engineering; John Jackman, Jackman Commercial Realty, Inc.; Wendy Keeler, Fairway Real Estate, LLC; Ronald Penn, Veyron, LLC; Doug Martin, Grubb & Ellis/Northern New England; Gerry O'Connell, KW Commercial, N.H. and Maine; Charles Panasis, Brady Sullivan Properties; Arthur Slattery, Phoenix Realty Group/Arthur Slattery; and Andre Tremblay, Peoples United Bank D/B/A Ocean Bank.

The evening also included Norwood presenting NHCIBOR's 2012 President's Award to Jim DeStefano, Grubb & Ellis/Northern New England, for his work with "NHCIBOR Cares," a 501c3 charitable organization affiliated with the commercial investment real estate industry. Over the past two years, NHCIBOR Cares has donated almost $10,000 to various New Hampshire organizations in need.

NHCIBOR, the voice for commercial real estate in New Hampshire, represents several hundred commercial Realtors and real estate professionals, dedicated to their advancement and that of the commercial real estate sector. The organization provides a central source of pertinent information, education, products and services, in conjunction with the standards of the National Association of Realtors?, thereby creating an environment for the success of its members.

Centrix Bank grants $5.9 million loan for housing project

DOVER ? Centrix Bank announced it recently granted The Housing Partnership a $5.9 million construction loan to support the development of a 42-unit workforce housing project in downtown Dover to be known as Woodbury Mills.

Woodbury Mills is at 1 Dover St. within walking distance of the downtown business district. THP will renovate a 5-story, 58,000 square foot., brick mill building built in 1885. The project is expected to be complete by January 2014.

"Centrix Bank is pleased to partner with The Housing Partnership on the development of Woodbury Mills," said Sean Fitzgerald, vice president of the bank's Dover location. "There continues to be a strong market for workforce housing in the Dover area, so a project of this magnitude will be a welcome addition for the city."

The Housing Partnership is a nonprofit affordable housing developer and provider of housing-related services. It has developed 312 affordable rental units on the New Hampshire and Maine seacoasts.


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Source: http://www.seacoastonline.com/articles/20130112-BIZ-301120310

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The Canada Revenue Agency Revokes the Registration of Trinity Divine Outreach Ministries as a Charity

OTTAWA, ONTARIO--(Marketwire - Jan. 11, 2013) - The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) will revoke the registration of Trinity Divine Outreach Ministries, a Scarborough-based charity. The notice of revocation will be published in the Canada Gazette with an effective date of January 12, 2013.

On November 30, 2012, and in accordance with subsection 168(1) of the Income Tax Act, the CRA issued a notice of intention to revoke the registration of Trinity Divine Outreach Ministries as a charity. The letter stated, in part, that:

The Canada Revenue Agency's (CRA) audit has revealed that the Organization has not complied with the requirements of the Income Tax Act through its participation in a donation arrangement promoted by Innovative Gifting Inc. As a direct result, the Organization issued 40 donation receipts for a total exceeding $1.1 million for shares purportedly traded on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange. It is the view of the CRA that the shares for which the tax receipts were issued did not legally qualify as gifts; that the Organization failed to demonstrate that it had actually received the tax-receipted shares; and that the Organization failed to report the fair market value of the shares purportedly gifted.

A copy of the notice of intention to revoke and other letters relating to the grounds for revocation are available to the public on request, in the language they were originally written, by calling 1-800-267-2384.

An organization that has had its registration revoked can no longer issue donation receipts for income tax purposes and is no longer a qualified donee under the Income Tax Act. The organization is no longer exempt from income tax, unless it qualifies as a non-profit organization, and it may be subject to a tax equal to the full value of its remaining assets.

Registered charities perform valuable work in our communities, and Canadians support this work in many ways. The CRA regulates these organizations through the Income Tax Act and is committed to ensuring that they operate in compliance with the law. When a registered charity is found not to comply with its legal obligations, the CRA may revoke its registration under the Income Tax Act.

The CRA is reviewing all tax shelter-related donation arrangements (for example, schemes that typically promise donors a tax receipt worth more than the actual amount of the donation), and it plans to audit every participating charity, promoter, and investor. For more information about tax shelters, go to the CRA's Tax alert Web page at www.cra.gc.ca/alert.

For more information about the registration of Canadian charities, go to the CRA's Charities and Giving Web page at www.cra.gc.ca/charities.

FOR BROADCAST USE:

The Canada Revenue Agency has announced that it will revoke the registration of Trinity Divine Outreach Ministries, a Scarborough-based charity. The revocation will come into effect on January 12, 2013.

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Source: http://www.marketwire.com/mw/release.do?id=1744907&sourceType=3

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