According to the FIR, Micah Mark was intercepted at Bengaluru airport with 24 foreign debit cards, while investigators recorded digital evidence destruction, shell entities, Rs 37 lakh seizure and UAPA sections in the case file.
From Kensington’s northern India trail to Mission Grove’s $1.6 million campaign, the investigation shows how foreign churches publicly backed TTI’s India focused church planting ecosystem through money, training and field engagement.
TTI, earlier known as Project India, faces scrutiny after ED found Rs 95 crore withdrawn through foreign debit cards while old posts reveal repeated India links of the Nelms family.
Book 10 does not discuss caste as a social problem. It presents caste as a practical missionary tool. It says selecting leaders from each caste can help missionaries reach local people to Christ more effectively.
The manual portrays Hindu villages as spiritually hostile. It asks missionaries to pray before entry as it claims Hindu villages are protected by "evil spirits" and at least one Hindu God. It discourages methods that attract suspicion. Instead it suggests trust building and gradual persuasion to move people away from Hindu beliefs.
TTI’s own material says donations fund leadership training, travel, stipends, field verification and village mapping. ED says foreign debit cards were used to withdraw cash across states while bypassing FCRA.