1986–87: Scientific skeptic and professional
stage magician
James Randi reported that Grant had been supplied with notes concerning the ailments of audience members before the show, that he used a "
sleight of hand" trick to make a person's leg appear to grow, and that he had members of the audience who walked into the event placed into wheelchairs beforehand and then, during the service, he asked them to stand and walk. Randi also claimed that Grant's wife first gathered information about members of the audience, which she relayed to her husband via slips of paper in a Bible he displayed during his presentations.
1991: Grant was investigated by
ABC News and
Trinity Foundation for an
exposé report on
Primetime Live (with
Larry Lea and
Robert Tilton). A 2006 opinion article in the
Dallas Observer claimed that the examination of documents in various lawsuits revealed deceptive journalistic techniques were utilized by
ABC News, and concluded that a key element of the televised Primetime Live report relating to Tilton was "bogus".
1996: The Dallas Morning News reported that one of Grant's fundraising letters was apparently written by
Gene Ewing, who heads a multi-million dollar marketing empire, writing donation letters for other evangelicals like
Don Stewart and
Robert Tilton.
2003: Atlanta television station
WAGA-TV investigated Grant and found that Grant liked to arrive at his revivals early, hours before they were supposed to begin. WAGA reporters showed up early as well, with hidden cameras, and watched the preacher talk to several people already in the church. As it turned out, many of them were people Grant would later pick out of the crowd and "miraculously" announce their name and their disease." The report concluded that of three people Grant claimed to heal, two were in worse condition after, and one assisted Grant with the setup with no sign of the condition he claimed during the service.
2011: British
mentalist Derren Brown produced a program "Miracles for Sale" broadcast on
Channel 4. As part of the program, Brown and his team made two visits to Grant's church in Dallas. During the first visit, Grant claimed that "God" had told him the name of a member of Brown's team, but the name he gave out was a false one that the person had written on a contact card prior to the start of the service. This indicated that Grant's knowledge came from the card and not from any supernatural means. On their second visit, Grant performed his leg lengthening "miracle" on Brown himself. The footage showed Grant using the same shoe-manipulation technique that Brown had exposed earlier on the program. ==References==