Allegations of brainwashing by a former church member Quiboloy and the Kingdom of Jesus Christ have been sued by a woman for allegedly
brainwashing and holding her 19-year-old daughter, who joined the church in 2004, against her will.
Dispute with the New People's Army The
New People's Army (NPA), the armed wing of the
Communist Party of the Philippines, has accused Quiboloy of being behind the massacre of K'lata-Bagobo leader Datu Domingo Diarog and his family on April 29, 2008, for allegedly refusing to sell of their property for ₱50,000 to Quiboloy and his sect. The property is within the ancestral domain claimed by the
Bagobo people in Tugbok and is adjacent to Quiboloy's walled "prayer mountain" in Tamayong. Diarog's widow said followers of Quiboloy had threatened to evict them from the land and her relatives were even offered a ₱20,000 bounty for Diarog's head. Quiboloy, however, said the charges were "totally false and baseless, if not ridiculous." While Quiboloy has branded the rebels "
mga anak ni Satanas" ("
Satan's children"), the NPA has declared him a "warlord in the service of the
Arroyo administration's policies against the peasants and indigenous peoples." Police investigator Ireneo Dalogdog, head of the Tugbok police office, said he had been receiving reports that Diarog was being harassed by armed men associated with Quiboloy, and that Diarog's farmhouse had earlier been razed three times. Quiboloy accepted the challenge and declared that in four months, the whole network's operations would shut down as well. On May 5, 2020, the
National Telecommunications Commission ordered ABS-CBN to cease its television and radio broadcasting operations after their 25-year broadcast franchise expired the previous day, and officially signed off at 7:52 p.m (local time) the same day. More than two months later, on July 10, 2020, the
House of Representatives of the Philippines rejected the new ABS-CBN franchise bid after a 70–11 vote against it. Following this, ABS-CBN shifted its news, radio, and entertainment operations into online platforms and other television networks.
Ang Probinsyano released its series finale on August 12, 2022.
Ongoing accusations, indictments, and sanctions The prosecutors for the
Central District of California indicted Quiboloy and top church administrators for
conspiracy to conduct human and sex trafficking, money laundering,
immigration fraud and other charges on November 11, 2021. Some followers were sexually and physically abused by Quiboloy and other church administrators, under the guise of avoiding '
eternal damnation'.
Full-time workers in North America The highest-achieving full-time workers (workers that raised most funds in the Philippines) were nominated by church personnel to fundraise in North America. Apollo's administrators would falsify their visa applications, claiming that they're only travelling for church-related performances. Upon arriving in the United States, church administrators would confiscate the workers' passports and coerce them into soliciting and fundraising. Lead administrators created non-profit entities such as the "Children's Joy Foundation USA" as their platform to fundraise. Full-time workers would claim that any funds raised are for helping impoverished children in the Philippines but prosecutors allege that in reality, most or all of the raised money were used to fund Quiboloy and their administrator's lavish lifestyle.
'Night duty' and pastorals According to the indictment, some ladies were forced to "night duties", in which they were sexually abused by Quiboloy. Prosecutors stated that they will also retrieve Quiboloy's US assets originating from ill-gotten wealth, alleging that he used church donations to pay for his lifestyle. On February 5, 2022, the
Federal Bureau of Investigation released a
wanted poster for Quiboloy. As of August 2022, the Philippine
Department of Foreign Affairs is still yet to receive an
extradition request from the US Department of Justice. Once found to be sufficient, the request can then be endorsed to the Philippine
Department of Justice. On December 10, 2022, the
US Department of Treasury and
Department of State imposed sanctions on Quiboloy for gross human rights abuses and corruption. These sanctions come on the occasion of International Anti-Corruption Day and on the eve of International Human Rights Day, wherein the United States sanctioned up to 40 individuals and entities from nine different countries for corruption and human rights violations. The sanctions were imposed based by Executive Order 13818 pursuant to the
US Global Magnitsky Act. Quiboloy is accused of being involved in the sexual abuse and human trafficking of young girls within his religious group. The US imposed the following sanctions on Quiboloy. Quiboloy's assets in the United States are sanctioned by the US Department of Treasury
Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) on December 10, 2022
Philippine Senate inquiry contempt order On February 21, 2024, Quiboloy, in an almost 40-minute audio recording, claimed that the US, President Bongbong Marcos, and First Lady Liza Araneta-Marcos conspired in a plot to assassinate him, prompting him to go into hiding for his safety. Quiboloy said the
FBI had placed a $2 million bounty on him, that his reputation was being maliciously tarnished, and that he was being persecuted because of his relationship with the Duterte family. Senator
Risa Hontiveros responded by saying Quiboloy should "stop
playing a victim" and "simply to face the allegations in the legal process" or face arrest; meanwhile, the US Embassy in the Philippines said it was confident Quiboloy will "face justice for his heinous crimes". Supporters of Quiboloy held a protest at
Liwasang Bonifacio on March 4, holding placards bearing the messages "Justice for Pastor Apollo", "Resign Risa Hontiveros", "Restore Freedom of Expression", and "Stop Human Rights Abuses". On March 5, Senator Risa Hontiveros, chair of the Senate Committee on Women, Children, Family Relations and Gender Equality, cited Quiboloy in contempt "for his refusal to be sworn or to testify" before
an ongoing Senate investigation of alleged crimes within Quiboloy's organization; Hontiveros further requested the Senate President to order his arrest so that Quiboloy "may be brought to testify". Senator
Robin Padilla moved to block the arrest order, describing Quiboloy "as a hero and a victim" for fighting the
New Peoples Army; Padilla initiated a letter of objection to Quiboloy's arrest signed by him and three other Senators—
Imee Marcos,
Cynthia Villar, and
Bong Go. In early July 2024, a 10 million
bounty was offered by the
Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) for information that would lead to Quiboloy's arrest. Quiboloy's lawyer,
Ferdinand Topacio, questioned the bounty as it came from anonymous private persons, whose identities the DILG refused to disclosed.
Philippine justice department case On March 19, 2024, the DOJ filed child abuse and human trafficking charges against Quiboloy and co-accused Jackielyn W. Roy, Cresente Canada, Paulene Canada, Ingrid C. Canada, and Sylvia Cemane. The Information charged Quiboloy of Qualified Human Trafficking charges under Section 4 (a) of Republic Act No. 9208, the
Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act of 2003 as amended, before a Pasig court. The charges under Section 5(b) and Section 10(a) of Republic Act 7610, the "Special Protection of Children Against Abuse, Exploitation, and Discrimination Act" were also filed against Quiboloy before a Davao court. No
bail was recommended for the charges. The Davao Regional Trial Court Branch 12-Family Court, in an Order dated April 1, 2024 of Judge Dante Baguio, declined to defer the immediate implementation of an
arrest warrant against Apollo Quiboloy and five others for child abuse and sexual abuse. On April 3, the NBI placed under its custody the 3 accused after having arrested Barangay Tamayong, District
Calinan Chairman, Cresente Canada, while KOJC church associates Paulene Canada and Sylvia Cemañes voluntarily surrendered. The 3 were all freed after having posted P80,000 bail each. Accordingly, the
Davao City Police forthwith served the arrest warrants against Quiboloy and his co-accused. "The Officers went to the KOJC headquarters to serve the warrant," Davao Region Police Director PBGen. Alden B. Delvo, PRO 11 said. The NBI would consider Quiboloy as a fugitive. On April 4, Jackielyn Roy and Ingrid Canada, the personal assistants of Quiboloy surrendered to the NBI and were freed after having posted P80,000 bail each. The
Supreme Court of the Philippines' Second Division granted DOJ's April 4 petition for
change of venue to avoid
miscarriage of justice. It ordered Davao City RTC Branch 12 Clerk of Court to deliver court case records to the Office of the Executive Judge of the RTC, QC RTC for raffle. On April 11, Pasig Regional Trial Court, Branch 159 Acting Presiding Judge Rainelda Estacio-Montesa issued a warrant of arrest against Quiboloy, Jackielyn Roy, Sylvia Cemañes, Cresente, Paulene, and Ingrid Canada for violations of Section 4 (a) of
Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act of 2003. Lawyer Israelito Torreon said “he still in the Philippine territory and they would file the
motion to quash” forthwith. Marcos Jr. said that "Quiboloy’s surrender conditions were a
tail-wagging-the-dog situation, but also assured Quiboloy that the government would “exercise all the compassion” to him.
Arrest On June 10, 2024, the
Criminal Investigation and Detection Group and about 100 police officers of the
Philippine National Police-
Special Action Force raided Quiboloy's properties to serve him an arrest warrant. The raided properties were the
KOJC Dome at
Buhangin District at 4 a.m., including Quiboloy's Glory Mountain and Prayer Mountain in Barabgat Tamayong and KJC compound in Lanang at 8 a.m. Quiboloy's counsel agreed to the third and latest service of three
arrest warrants upon him and five accused. KJC members protested at the raid and expressed shock at the presence of "the police and military in full battle gear". However, Davao PR 11–PIO chief Major Catherine Dela Rey, in an
autopatch explained that "Quiboloy and the other subjects were not found." The raiding forces destroyed the KOJC compound main gate, while two KOJC members were injured and five people carrying
bolos were arrested. The raids were condemned by former President Duterte, who described the implementation of the arrest warrants as "excessive and unnecessary force" and "overkill". A resolution was later filed by Senator
Robin Padilla asking the Senate to probe the police's alleged use of "unnecessary and excessive force" during the raids. Police operations in the compound continued until September 8, 2024, when Quiboloy was apprehended in Davao City. The
Philippine National Police later said that Quiboloy surrendered to the Intelligence Service of the
Armed Forces of the Philippines following a 24-hour ultimatum issued by the PNP. Quiboloy was taken to Metro Manila and detained at PNP headquarters in
Camp Crame,
Quezon City. On September 9, Quezon City Regional Trial Court (RTC) Branch 106 ordered the transfer of Quiboloy and co-accused Cresente Canada to the
New Quezon City Jail in
Payatas and announced that their arraignment and pre-trial conference would be held on September 19. However, he remains detained in Camp Crame, while his four co-accused were transferred to the
Pasig City Jail. The Pasig Court granted Quiboloy's petition for a
medical furlough from November 8–16 at the
Philippine Heart Center after suffering
chest pain,
arrhythmia and
atrial fibrillation. The court extended the furlough until November 27 due to dental issues including an
infected dental implant which affected his
jaw. On January 18, 2025, Quiboloy was hospitalized for pneumonia.
Complaints filed by Quiboloy and KJC members Against Rappler, et al In December 2021,
Rappler published series of articles detailing accusations against Quiboloy including sexual abuse, trafficking and fraud. In connection with these, since January 2022,
Kingdom of Jesus Christ officials filed a total of 53 counts of cyber libel against Rappler and its four journalists, and four resource persons including an
Ateneo de Manila University professor and three former KJC members who turned as whistleblowers, before the City Prosecutor's offices in various cities in
Mindanao, particularly in
Cagayan de Oro (7 counts),
Davao City (28),
General Santos (7),
Ozamiz (7) and
Panabo (4); all were dismissed for lack of probable cause with those filed in Davao City the last to be dismissed in May.
Against Manny Pacquiao Then senator and presidential candidate
Manny Pacquiao cited charges of sexual abuse against Quiboloy as his reason for turning down an invitation for a presidential debate that was organized by the latter in February 2022. This was the subject of a cyber libel complaint filed by Quiboloy against Pacquiao, which was dismissed by
Davao City prosecutors in September, stating the complainant's failure to present supporting evidence.
Social media bans On June 21, 2023, the video-sharing platform
YouTube terminated Quiboloy's channel due to an alleged community guidelines violation. This was later followed by similar bans on several other accounts owned and/or affiliated with Quiboloy, such as the SMNI News and Kingdom of Jesus Christ channels, which were also terminated on July 7. The termination of Quiboloy's channels occurred following a tweet made by Mutahar Anas, a popular gaming YouTuber known as SomeOrdinaryGamers, tagging YouTube's support account on
Twitter and bringing attention to the FBI's arrest warrant for Quiboloy.
Google, in their later statements, said that these actions were in compliance with existing sanctions by the
United States against Quiboloy. Quiboloy, not being upset by the termination, said in an interview by his own media network that he is "bulletproof" from his detractors including US authorities whom he accused of "political and religious persecution". Quiboloy and SMNI later created accounts on the
alt-tech video service
Rumble as well as an
alternate account for SMNI on YouTube in defiance of the sanctions; the latter account was suspended by YouTube a few days later. Also in July,
China-based video-sharing service
TikTok – also complying with US sanctions – banned Quiboloy's account. On August 17, Quiboloy's accounts on
Meta-owned social media platforms
Facebook and
Instagram were banned following a complaint from an anonymous source. Meta later clarified in a statement with
Rappler that the ban was due to the "Dangerous Organizations and Individuals" policy as outlined in their terms of service, which also extends to third parties showing support or representation of Quiboloy and any organizations associated with him. On September 15, 2023, the SMNI News' Facebook page was deleted, in accordance to Meta's Dangerous Organizations and Individuals Policy; sockpuppet accounts representing SMNI are still in operation as of 2024, to which the Philippine National Police urged Facebook and YouTube to take down. == See also ==