On November 15, 2025, after a second woman came forward with allegations of
sexual misconduct against the ACNA's Archbishop,
Steve Wood, Sutton stepped down, and Dobbs was appointed
dean of the
Anglican Church in North America, assuming responsibility as the denomination's acting archbishop. One day later, Dobbs
inhibited Wood over the allegations. On December 14, a board of inquiry announced it had found probable cause to put Wood to trial, and Wood was indicted on charges including the violation of ordination vows, conduct giving just cause for scandal or offense, and sexual immorality.
Trial of Bishop Stewart Ruch Under Dobbs' leadership on December 17, the ACNA's Court for the Trial of a Bishop concluded its
trial of Bishop Stewart Ruch, publishing a ruling acquitting Ruch of charges that Ruch had mishandled
sexual abuse in his diocese. In its 71-page ruling, the court wrote that "the failure of proof in this case is complete" and directed heavy criticism toward a former provincial prosecutor, calling his resignation and allegations of judicial misconduct “intolerable". The court commended Ruch for his "shepherd's heart", while complaining of "narrative capture" and "distorting influence" arising from online discussion of the trial. Significantly, the court also advanced a theory in its ruling that all sponsors of ecclesiastical presentments must have "firsthand knowledge" of each allegation, requiring as many as ten eyewitnesses for future cases of alleged sexual misconduct in the small, conservative denomination now led by Dobbs.
Dispute with the JAFC Under Dobbs' leadership, a legal dispute continued to unfold in the
United States District Court for the District of South Carolina between the ACNA and the
Jurisdiction of the Armed Forces and Chaplaincy (JAFC), which was seeking $7 million in damages and accusing the ACNA of staging "a failed corporate takeover" after inhibiting the JAFC's bishop in September. In December, the bishops of the JAFC, who had disaffiliated from the ACNA, launched a new denomination, the Anglican Reformed Catholic Church, which described itself as a member of the
Union of Scranton, an
Old Catholic communion group whose
holy orders are recognized by the
Roman Catholic Church.
Washington Post investigation In December 2025,
The Washington Post reported on two separate inquiries into financial misconduct amounting to $76,000 against Dobbs. A declaration attached to the JAFC's court filing, according to the
Post, alleged that Dobbs had been "found to have absconded with approximately $48,000" of the JAFC's money in March 2021. Reportedly, the JAFC had requested the ACNA investigate "missing funds not reported on the financial statements" of CANA in 2019, and the ACNA responded by appointing three individuals to investigate the JAFC's allegations. According to the
Post, by April 2020 the JAFC had contacted the
IRS about the allegations, and in March 2021 Dobbs had submitted a formal statement to Archbishop
Foley Beach, in which Dobbs wrote: "I regret and apologize for my part and on behalf of my staff, for the confusion in [the convocation's] financial accounting practices … and for any harm brought to the ministry of the Jurisdiction of the Armed Forces and Chaplaincy." The
Post reported that, at the time, the JAFC had accepted the statement and opted "not to initiate an investigation of, or action against Bishop Dobbs with any federal or state authorities." The
Post also reported on a separate inquiry into allegations of financial impropriety against Dobbs during his time at the Barnabas Fund from 2006-2014. In 2018, according to the
Post, the Barnabas Fund's British-based umbrella organization,
Barnabas Aid, had opened an investigation into Dobbs and his wife for claiming "unauthorized, unjustified, or unexplained expenses" related to phones, travel, and meals, totaling over $28,000. In a 102-page report, Barnabas Aid had concluded that Dobbs and his wife had committed "deliberate acts of misusing Barnabas Aid liquid assets to benefit either themselves or another ministry". The organization's CEO, Hendrik Storm, wrote in an email to the Dobbses that their actions "could even be construed as tantamount to fraud". Barnabas Aid shared their report with the ACNA in February 2019, but Archbishop
Foley Beach responded eight months later by dismissing the allegations against Dobbs. The charity ultimately accepted Beach's decision to close the case but insisted that its disagreement be "noted for the record" should Dobbs eventually come under
IRS investigation. The
Post reported that Beach had circulated a letter to the ACNA's college of bishops on December 12 claiming that the allegations against Dobbs were deemed baseless. Beach told the
Post that the allegations were "thoroughly investigated" and that Dobbs "did nothing wrong". Dobbs vehemently denied the charges, telling the
Post that all of the allegations against him were "unsubstantiated". Dobbs claimed that his diocese and the ACNA had conducted their own investigations into the allegations which had cleared him of wrongdoing. "I have never misappropriated funds," said Dobbs to the
Post, "And any such claims that I have done so are baseless, feckless, and without merit."
Federal defamation suit On February 17, 2026, Dobbs sued Bishop Derek Jones in the US District Court for the Northern District of Alabama for defamation in connection with financial allegations. The case requests a jury trial and punitive damages. ==Katartismos Global==