Rick's Blog

Children’s Trust Missed Huge Red Flag

In September 2025, the Escambia Children’s Trust received New World Believers’ financial documents, which included its 2024 federal tax return. I have reported on how the “audit report” and the tax return (Form 990) don’t match, but there is even a more significant red flag considering Trust Executive Director Lindsey Cannon’s statement at the Trust board meeting last week.

Background: New World Believers (NWB) has a contract with the Department of Juvenile Justice (DJJ) for a pre-arrest delinquency citation program for misdemeanor offenses. Inweekly requested the contract, and the document shows that NWB has had the contract since September 2017. See CN-800000-10559.

But here’s the red flag: The Schedule B of NWB’s Form 990 shows the only income coming from the Escambia Children’s Trust. Nothing from DJJ. The Trust staff should have caught it, especially since the Trust board gave them an additional 30 days to review the documents and work out a grant budget for NWB’s third year.

Other Red Flags

1) Under Trust requirements, financial reports must be audited by an independent certified public accountant or reviewed in a manner consistent with AICPA Standards for Government/Non-Profit organizations. They were not.

2) A simple math check would have revealed that the numbers didn’t add up on the balance sheet.

3) NWB’s corporate filing lists Radajeline Jones as a board member while she works as an aftercare coordinator. Board members are prohibited from directly or indirectly receiving Trust funds.

4) Six members of the Jones family were employed by NWB and receiving Trust dollars, a violation of the Trust’s anti-nepotism policy.

Double Billing

When Cannon spoke directly with DJJ’s contract manager in Tallahassee, the agency described expectations that included mental health counseling, behavioral support and mentoring—the same services for which NWB was billing the Trust.

Cannon noted she had only received the 400-plus pages of DJJ records the previous Friday, so her review was still in its early stages. Her preliminary review showed a multi-month billing overlap, potentially spanning October 2023 through January 2026.

It Took An Arrest

The only reason Cannon contacted DJJ at all is that Jones was arrested in January on a charge of sexual battery of a 16-to-17-year-old participant in the H.O.O.P.S. program.

After the arrest, the Trust voted to cancel its grant agreement with NWB. But the relationship should have ended months earlier.


The pattern of oversight failures surrounding NWB points to deeper operational problems at the Trust. With a referendum on the Trust’s renewal approaching, the public deserves a full operational review of all Trust grants.

 

 

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