Salary and Senate investigation In 2005,
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported that between 1997 and 2000, Long received more than $3.07 million worth of
compensation and benefits from his non-profit charity, 'Bishop Eddie Long Ministries Inc.' Long contended that the charity did not solicit donations from members but instead gained its income from royalties, speaking fees and several large donations. In 2007 a three-year investigation by the
United States Senate Committee on Finance into the tax-exempt status of six ministries, including Long's, concluded that there were no definitive findings of wrongdoing. Donations to the church dropped significantly following the investigation of Long's salary and church finances.
Teaching regarding sexual orientation CNN had stated that "Long frequently denounces homosexual behavior." Long had ministered "homosexual cure" programs to recruit homosexuals for what he called "Sexual Reorientation" conferences and his church offers an ongoing "Out of the Wilderness" ministry to
convert homosexuals to heterosexuality. In 2004, Long led a march with
Bernice King to the grave of her father, Martin Luther King, Jr. The march was a protest against
same-sex marriage and in support of a
national constitutional amendment to limit marriage rights to couples comprising "one man and one woman." In 2006, Long's appearance at
Atlanta's
Interdenominational Theological Center's spring graduation led to
Black theologian James Cone—who was scheduled to receive an honorary degree—to boycott the ceremony. Thirty-three graduating seniors sent a letter to the seminary's president "questioning Long's theological and ethical integrity to be their commencement speaker." Many students did not agree with Long's beliefs that God can "
deliver" homosexuals and his teachings on
prosperity. A 2007 article in the
Southern Poverty Law Center's magazine called him "one of the most virulently
homophobic black leaders in the religiously based anti–gay movement." The plaintiffs state that Long placed the men on the church's payroll, bought them cars and other gifts, including overseas trips. The lawsuits stated that Long would "discuss the
Holy Scripture to justify and support the sexual activity." On September 26, Long spoke to the New Birth congregation but he did not address the issue directly. Long spoke of painful times and said, "I've been accused. I'm under attack. I want you to know, as I said earlier, I am not a perfect man, but this thing, I'm going to fight." Long's unwillingness to address the accusations directly prompted a group of over 70 people, headed by the pastor of a small church in South Carolina, to hold a protest rally on the steps of the Georgia state Capitol on October 31, 2010, calling for Long's resignation. In May 2011, the lawsuits were settled out of court. The terms were undisclosed. Later on, media outlets indicated that
Centino Kemp was the fifth accuser who also settled. On May 30, 2011, an episode of the documentary series
Sex Scandals In Religion aired on Canadian television network
VisionTV. It took an investigative look at the allegations of inappropriate sexual behavior by Long with young men in his care. ==Weight loss and death==