In a late (some would say very, very late) filing this week, the Mormon Church disclosed an additional $190K of expenses in support of Proposition 8. Here’s the link to the SoS page with the filing. Essentially, they spent a bunch of money producing videos, and shuttling one of their high priests, Elder L.W. Clayton, around from Utah to California. These are classic organizing expenses. Expenses which help you raise money from other people, rather than dishing it out from your own funds. And it has been documented over and over again that is exactly what the Church did in the case of Prop 8.
From the Chronicle’s John Wildermuth:
The report, filed with the secretary of state’s office, listed a variety of California travel expenses for high-ranking members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and included $20,575 for use of facilities and equipment at the church’s Salt Lake City headquarters and a $96,849 charge for “compensated staff time” for church employees who worked on matters pertaining to Prop. 8.
“This is exactly what we were talking about when we filed the suit,” said Fred Karger of Californians Against Hate, which opposed the same-sex marriage ban. “They spent money on the campaign and were supposed to report it.”(SF Chron 1/31/09)
By law, the Church should have filed these expenses during the campaign. Instead, they received the benefit of saying that they provided very little support. It was all a lie. The Church was so focused on its single-minded goal of discriminating against committed LGBT couples that they couldn’t find the time to follow the law for their nearly $200,000 of expenses.
Fred Karger’s complaint is still being investigated, and if the Church is found to have failed to comply with disclosure laws, they will be fined by the Fair Political Practices Commission. At any rate, it is a good thing that the truth is slowly emerging of the puppet strings that the Mormon Church was playing with in the Prop 8 campaign.