Members of Minnesota's first Korean church filed a lawsuit against its pastor accusing him of illegally living in the northeast Minneapolis church with his wife and refusing to leave despite more than a dozen members of the small congregation voting to terminate him.
Instead, senior members of MN Korean Church of Christ Grace say that Wanpyo Hong won't step down, still lives in the church and has allegedly carried out other illegal activity, such as unauthorized applications for Paycheck Protection Program loans and unapproved expenses from the church's bank accounts. Members say that when they raised concerns, Hong physically assaulted them.
Church board members voted to terminate Hong in November 2021. In response, Hong "waged an aggressive campaign to unlawfully terminate the membership and officer positions of all who opposed him," according to the lawsuit filed in Hennepin County District Court.
In response, Hong filed a flurry of other litigation, including harassment restraining orders against three members now banned from attending services, and a lawsuit against six members to exclude them from worshiping.
Chris Boline and Stephanie Huisman, with Minneapolis law firm Felhaber Larson, represent 13 church members in the lawsuit. They declined to comment. Hong is represented by his son, Sung Woo Hong, who recently graduated from law school and began working at Trott Law in St. Paul at the time litigation commenced.
Sung Woo Hong did not respond to requests for comment.
According to the lawsuit:
The church, at 3665 Tyler St. NE., has a congregation of about 20 members and the most senior members first joined the church back in the early 1980s.