The 1997 Sigma Delta Chi Awards

Pensacola News Journal


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SUNDAY, NOV. 16
Secrets inside the revival
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Church budget is $6.6 million
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On the road: Pleas for money intensify
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Give at least $100 revival leaders urge
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Brownsville Revival costly, figures are vague
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Revival maestro's money, business is no secret
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Ministry fails to meet watchdog's guidelines
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Revival for sale through merchandise
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3 top ministers fail to pay state sales tax
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MONDAY, NOV. 17
Kilpatrick rules over revival
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Pastor's visions launched his career
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New lifestyle includes a $310,000 coach
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Kilpatrick takes hard line against dissenters
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Pastor's homes raise financial questions
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Authors: Prophecies aim to silence critics
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Kilpatrick: History shows revivals
are divisive
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Sadness, fear fill members who left Brownsville
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TUESDAY, NOV. 18
Hill's bio fraught with fallacies
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Hill's boasts often exaggerate the facts
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Money for missions fails to add up
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Hill's criminal record not what he says it is
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Revival's leader touts 'Son of Sam' conversion
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Hill settles down on 40 acres in South Alabama
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Teen Challenge is Hill's longtime favorite
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WEDNESDAY, NOV. 19
Pastor orchestrated first revival
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Brownsville Revival similar to one in Toronto
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Critics attack tactics, theological basis
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THURSDAY, NOV. 20
Revival benefits: Fact or fiction?
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Escambia sheriff disputes claims of crime reduction
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Neighborhood sees no benefit from revival
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No medical proof of 'miraculous healings'
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Confused? Question, reason, consult the Bible
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Addicts may be getting false hope, experts say
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Dad says church was no help
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Other churches reach out to community
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9. Public Service in Journalism
CIRCULATION LESS THAN 100,000

PUBLISHED SUNDAY NOVEMBER 20, 1997
Copyright 1997 The Pensacola News Journal. All rights reserved

Escambia sheriff disputes claims of crime reduction

By Amie K. Streater
staff writer

Brownsville Revival leaders claim the revival has reduced crime in the Pensacola area.

Statistics and statements from the county 's top law enforcement officer show otherwise.

The Escambia County Sheriff 's Office crimes and arrests statistics show that crime actually rose in 1996 compared to 1995, the year the revival began.

The actual number of crimes rose 3 percent, from 13,121 in 1995 to 13,502 in 1996. The data is for the seven index crimes tracked by law enforcement nationwide: murder, rape, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary, larceny and motor vehicle theft.

Escambia Sheriff Jim Lowman said he can 't see that the revival has had a great impact on the crime figures.

"But if they make crime go away, we 'll give them all the credit," he said.

Revival leaders have also claimed that law enforcement officers are so impressed by the revival that on occasion they have hauled suspects into the revival instead of taking them to jail.

That has never happened, Lowman said, and it simply could not happen because it would be a violation of law enforcement procedure.

"If we have someone in custody, based on the statutes, taking them to church, any church, is not an option," Lowman said.

"We don 't have any information that indicates we have ever done that, nor has any other law enforcement agency."

Jerry Potts, Pensacola Police assistant chief, said that a number of people have asked him if there is any truth to that story.

Potts said, emphatically, that none of his officers ever took such action.

"We just don 't do that kind of thing," he said

Revival leaders have also claimed the revival is reducing juvenile crime, and they point to crime data to prove their claim.

Law enforcement officials say that data tells only part of the story.

The revival leaders are citing state figures for the number of juveniles taken into custody, not the number of arrests or crimes for which they were arrested.

Escambia Sheriff 's Office statistics show that juvenile arrests almost doubled in 1996 compared to the year before, increasing from 1,243 to 2,392.

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