Sunday, August 25, 2024-A Catholic Reverend father has been ousted by Police authorities for lying to donors after he raised at least $650,000 for overseas medical clinics he claimed to operate, but in reality used the donations to fuel an extravagant lifestyle that included 'heavenly' meals, trips to the Hamptons and plastic surgery.
Pawel Bielecki, known as “Father
Paul,” claimed he ran medical clinics in war-torn Lebanon, meanwhile he was
5,600 miles away in Manhattan, New York..
“Bielecki exploited his position as a friar
to gain the trust of victims across the country and steal hundreds of thousands
of dollars from them,” said Damian Williams, US Attorney for the Southern
District of New York, which collared the clergyman on Aug. 17 on charges of
wire and mail fraud.
For eight years, the priest allegedly
preyed on the compassionate members of his flock, soliciting donations on local
radio shows and crowdfunding websites for non-existent Lebanese hospitals and
ambulances, authorities said.
The cleric allegedly exploited the
horrific August 4, 2020 chemical explosion in Beirut, which killed 218 people
to fill his wallet, claiming he was hurt in the attack.
But prosecutors said he wasn’t even there
and “made several purchases at coffee shops, restaurants and other businesses”
in Manhattan on the day of the disaster.
Investigators say he did not leave the
US between December 2019 and April 2022.
Friar Buck would direct his marks in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Georgia
and Florida to send checks to his friary with “Fr. Paul Bielecki’s Mission” in
the memo line, the feds said.
“Bielecki (above) exploited his position as
a friar to gain the trust of victims
across the country and steal hundreds of thousands of dollars from them,” said
a US Attorney for the Southern District of New York.
He would also sweet-talk victims into
sending donations by mail to “St. Francis in Beirut Inc.”— a non-profit
Bielecki established at the Manhattan friary where he resided.
Between December 2017 and February 2024,
the friar withdrew almost $50,000 in cash from his bank accounts; transferred
more than $600,000 to two credit card companies to pay for personal expenses,
including $334 per month for a luxe gym membership; forays to the Hamptons and
“numerous meals at high-end restaurants,” the complaint says.
He allegedly also used at least $15,000 on liposuction surgery, authorities
said.
At different times he claimed to be a
surgeon or a United Nations researcher, and the 48-year-old cleric used
multiple aliases, including “Dr. Phaakon Sonderburg-Glucksburg.”
In September he legally changed his name to
“Paul HRH Saxe-Coburg-Gotha” — with “HRH” standing for “His Royal Highness,”
authorities said.
In 2018, he told the Salaam Club of
New York and the Rotary Club of Verrazano: “Doctors are being taken along the
Syrian border. I was supposed to have had four physicians with me but they are
in jail now,” according to a story in the Brooklyn Reporter.
A Pennsylvania woman and her husband
transferred $84,000 to Bielecki’s bank account between June 2020 and October
2023, the feds said.
The woman emailed Bielecki on
Christmas Eve 2021, wishing him and “the people of Lebanon . . . many blessings
of consolation and peace during this Holy Season.”
Two weeks later, Bielecki replied that he
was “buying a new ambulance” that would “allow [him] to visit villages far
north and provide medical help.”
The woman emailed back expressing her
happiness that “the many prayers for an ambulance were answered” — and wired
Bielecki another $10,000.
The cleric followed up with her the day
after Valentine’s Day, writing, “God is great. The ambulance is OK to go . . .
I already did a few villages with medical help. People were crying . . . God
bless you both every day . . . every minute — Love Fr. Paul.”
In reality, Bielecki had just visited an
NYC liposuction clinic, where he scheduled his $15,000 plastic surgery on March
8, police say.
John Abi-Habib, a member of the Salaam
Club of New York and an honorary consul of Lebanon, also got scammed. “No way,
oh wow!” he said, shocked after hearing of the arrest of the cleric.
“That’s scary man, that’s not right. Anyone that tries to use good people
and hardworking people. . . and then not use [the donations properly]? It
hurts. It hurts a lot.”
The Polish-born Bielecki entered the order
of Capuchin Franciscans in Krakow in 1994 — ironically taking a vow of poverty,
which required him to renounce material things and to not hold any property or
bank accounts.
He was ordained a priest in 2001, church
officials said.
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