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August 23, 2010
Judge to Rule on CNHD-LCMS vs. 4 CA Women on Sept. 10, 2010
The Judge is scheduled to rule on the motion for summary judgment in California-Nevada-Hawaii District of the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod (CNHD-LCMS) vs. four Oakland CA women on September 10, 2010.
The CNHD-LCMS filed suit against Sharon Bowles, Mary-Ann Hill, Portia Ridgeway, and Celia Moyer for the church property of Our Redeemer Lutheran Church of Oakland CA (case number RG07363452).
The suit was originally filed by Legal Counsel to the LCMS Board of Directors, Attorney Sherri Strand, on December 28, 2007.
September 10, 2010 is coincidentally the last day of LCMS President Kieschnick’s term in office. No matter how the Judge rules, Kieschnick will not be able to manage information about the suit in the LCMS. Responsibility for the suit will then belong to newly-elected LCMS President Matthew Harrison.
On September 10, 2009, President Kieschnick wrote: “The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod is not a party to this lawsuit and is not involved in the property dispute which is the subject of the lawsuit….Further, the LCMS has not paid any legal fees in connection with this lawsuit, which was filed neither at my direction nor with my awareness.”
However, during his deposition on Ash Wednesday, February 17, 2010, Kieschnick admitted that he had not been forthright in his letter because it was Christian News (a paper he testified twists the truth) that had asked the question. Kieschnick admitted he actually did have knowledge of the suit.
Kieschnick wants members of the LCMS to believe that Attorney Sherri Strand isn’t charging the Synod any legal fees for representing him before, during, and after the deposition.
In a letter from the President of the Council of District Presidents, President of the Pacific Southwest District, Dr. Larry A. Stoterau, quoted Kieschnick’s September 10, 2009 letter as the official position of the COP, a letter that Kieschnick and the COP knew was a deception written to Christian News.
Four months later, on January 19, 2010, Chief Administrative Officer of the LCMS Ronald P. Schultz issued a letter stating, “The LCMS is
not a party to the lawsuit involving Our Redeemer Lutheran Church; the LCMS has
not provided any funds for the lawsuit….”
Schultz, Kieschnick, and Strand, who all sit on the LCMS Board of Directors, want members of the Synod to believe they didn’t discuss the lawsuit in the previous four months and that the Synod is not paying Strand for representing Kieschnick.
Schultz wrote, “…we cannot respond to them [your questions] because the LCMS is not involved in the dispute, and it is the general policy and practice of the LCMS not to comment on pending litigation or others’ speculation on such litigation.”
However, in the same letter Schultz also wrote, “the plaintiffs request the Court to find the individuals named as plaintiffs, together with other members of Our Redeemer Lutheran Church, have the exclusive right to possess and control the property of Our Redeemer, and to find that the defendants’ actions in asserting control over the property are interfering with the plaintiffs’ rights.” For a Synod that doesn’t comment on litigation, Schultz had no difficulty giving the plaintiff’s side of the suit and leading the Synod to believe the defendants are guilty.
Schultz also wrote: “One of the plaintiffs is Our Redeemer Lutheran Church, a member congregation of the LCMS for more than 80 years, and one is the California-Nevada-Hawaii District of the Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod, the District in which Our Redeemer Lutheran Church is located.”
During the hearing on June 1, 2010, Attorney for the defendants Paul Nelson told the court that Our Redeemer could not be a legitimate plaintiff in the suit because Our Redeemer never voted to sue anyone. In other words, Schultz deceived the LCMS into believing the fraudulent claims of the plaintiffs.
One never knows how a judge will rule until he gives his ruling. On September 10, 2010, we may learn if the Judge decides the CNHD-LCMS has the right to claim ownership of Our Redeemer Lutheran Church of Oakland CA.
We will learn if the Judge agrees with Attorney Sherri Strand’s claim in court that these four ladies should be sued for violating the Synodical Handbook, which Strand held up above her head as she spoke to the Judge.
Those familiar with LCMS polity know it is impossible for laypeople to be sued for violating the LCMS Handbook because laypeople do not belong to the LCMS.
We will also learn if a District of the LCMS can sue four ladies for attempting to vote their church out of the LCMS.
How is it possible for a corporation in California to file suit against lay people in California for violating the Handbook of a corporation in Missouri, while the Missouri Corporation claims it is not a party to the suit?
The suit includes a six-page history of the LCMS in St. Louis, uses the acronym
LCMS more than 30 times, and has
LCMS on the front page, yet the Synod says it is not a party to the suit. The question is, “If you were sued by Chevrolet, can General Motors say they are not a party to the suit?” In the case of Chevrolet every Judge knows General Motors is a party to the suit.
We will also learn if the LCMS is guilty of bringing false suit, libel, slander, fraud, and conspiracy to commit fraud.
Even though Kieschnick responded to Herman Otten’s questions about the lawsuit in writing in September of 2009, Kieschnick refused Otten’s request to put a stop to the lawsuit.
If it is indeed true that Kieschnick, the COP, and the LCMS Board of Directors didn’t know about the lawsuit until they read about it in Christian News (a year and half after it was filed by Sherri Strand), the LCMS must be on the verge of financial and administrative collapse.
This also means that Christian News is the only reliable source of information about what is really taking place in the Synod for the LCMS BOD. Neither
The Lutheran Witness,
The Reporter,
Affirm,
Jesus First, nor any district papers have informed readers that the suit even exists. They wouldn’t even report that Kieschnick was compelled to give a five-hour deposition in St. Louis.
It is little wonder why Christian News is condemned in every District across the Synod, ridiculed by the LCMS clergy, and Herman Otten is barred for life from the LCMS clergy roster. Only Christian News has reported that more than an estimated one million dollars in mission funds has been spent to sue these four ladies, and that they have spent $569,000 defending themselves.
The 2007 LCMS Convention voted that it is a sin to sue your Christian brother. However, there is no acknowledgement of the pain, suffering, and anguish this fraudulent suit filed by a hypocritical Synod has caused these elderly women. The COP has forgotten who the God of orphans and widows is.
Despite Kieschnick’s hopes that mission funds not be used to pay for the suit, the June 2010 minutes of the CNHD-LCMS reported another payment of $306,780 from designated mission funds to be used for legal expenses.
It will be interesting to see what the Judge rules on September 10, 2010.
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