100 episodes

Conversations at the intersection of faith and true crime hosted by private investigator and church safety advocate Lori Morrison.

The Unlovely Truth Lori Morrison

    • True Crime
    • 4.8 • 61 Ratings

Conversations at the intersection of faith and true crime hosted by private investigator and church safety advocate Lori Morrison.

    The Relentless Search for a Victim:S6E4

    The Relentless Search for a Victim:S6E4

    I’m so glad you’ve joined me at the intersection of faith and true crime here at The Unlovely Truth. Security issues are hiding in every church - do you know where to look for them? I’m your host, church safety advocate Lori Morrison. Our churches need to be the safest places in our communities, so our mission here is to find actionable steps that will make our churches sanctuaries of physical, emotional, and spiritual safety. To give you tools to help make that happen in your church, we’re going to investigate real crime stories from real churches. I’ve got three cases for us to investigate today, so let’s dive right in. 
     
    Highlights from this episode include:
     
    A female volunteer who abused a minor
    Pastors who abuse staff, volunteers, and congregants
    A staff member’s financial abuse of an entire church
     
    Visit my website to access more episodes. If you would like to contact me about booking me as a speaker, or ask about my safety consulting services, please email me at lori@theunlovelytruth.com. 
     
    Ways you can support the work of The Unlovley Truth:
     
    Share the episode 
     
    Follow me on Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn (add pinterest when done)
     
    Check out my Amazon Author Page to find resources on personal safety, and safety training for churches. 
     
    Read more about Reagan Gray
     
    Read more about Scott Sauls
     
    Read More about Lisa Noble here and here 

    • 10 min
    There Are Clues. There Are Always Clues: S6E3

    There Are Clues. There Are Always Clues: S6E3

    I’m so glad you’ve joined me at the intersection of faith and true crime here at The Unlovely Truth. Security issues are hiding in every church - do you know where to look for them? I’m your host, church safety advocate Lori Morrison. Our churches need to be the safest places in our communities, so our mission here is to find actionable steps that will make our churches sanctuaries of physical, emotional, and spiritual safety. To give you tools to help make that happen in your church, we’re going to investigate real crime stories from real churches. I’ve got three cases for us to investigate today, so let’s dive right in. 
     
    Highlights from this episode include:
     
    Trust should be given based on character - not titles
    How NOT to respond to a crisis
    Crimes in church are bad enough - the coverup is always worse
     
    Visit my website to access more episodes. If you would like to contact me about booking me as a speaker, or ask about my consulting services, please email me at lori@theunlovelytruth.com. 
     
    Ways you can support the work of The Unlovely Truth:
     
    Share the episode 
     
    Follow me on Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn 
     
    Check out my Amazon Author Page to find resources on personal safety, and safety training for churches. 
     
    Car scam pastor 
     
    Social Security con pastor
     
    Christian school teacher tries to kill husband
     
    Priest tries to kill reporter

    • 12 min
    Church Safety in the Spotlight After High-Profile Misconduct: S6E2

    Church Safety in the Spotlight After High-Profile Misconduct: S6E2

    I’m so glad you’ve joined me at the intersection of faith and true crime here at The Unlovely Truth. Security issues are hiding in every church - do you know where to look for them? I’m your host, church safety advocate Lori Morrison. Our churches need to be the safest places in our communities, so our mission here is to find actionable steps that will make our churches sanctuaries of physical, emotional, and spiritual safety. To give you tools to help make that happen in your church, we’re going to investigate real crime stories from real churches. I’ve got three cases for us to investigate today, so let’s dive right in. 
     
    Highlights from this episode include:
     
    A church treasurer and a pastor managed to embezzle tens of thousands of dollars from their respective churches due to lack of proper checks and balances in financial management. Learn how your church can avoid a similar tragedy.
    You’ll discover a little thought about cyber-security threat and how you can protect your church from more than the loss of sensitive data. Hint: it’s your public Wifi.
    Are controvertial comments from the pulpit a risk to half of your congregation’s emotional safety - and could they even border on spiritual abuse?
     
    James 3:9-12 speak directly to this type of communicating. I’m going to read from the International Children’s Bible to make it as simple as possible so you can share it with anyone who thinks this behavior is ok.
     
    We use our tongues to praise our Lord and Father, but then we curse people. And God made them like himself. Praises and curses come from the same mouth! My brothers, this should not happen. Do good and bad water flow from the same spring? My brothers, can a fig tree make olives? Can a grapevine make figs? No! And a well full of salty water cannot give good water.
     
    Just a few verses prior to this, in James 3:1, James says “Not many of you should become teachers, my fellow believers, because you know that we who teach will be judged more strictly.”
    I’d say that we can extend that logic to pastors as well. Any pastor that would say such degrading things about half of the world’s population has no place in leadership. Do you think that’s too harsh? Would you think that if rather than being of a sermon, these words had been spoken directly to your daughter or some other woman you care deeply about? If that would be seen as abusive, then saying it from the stage should be looked at as being much, much worse
     
    Visit my website to access more episodes. If you would like to contact me about booking me as a speaker, or ask about my consulting services, please email me at lori@theunlovelytruth.com. 
     
    Ways you can support the work of The Unlovley Truth:
     
    Share the episode (w/link)
     
    Follow me on Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn (add pinterest when done)
     
    Check out my Amazon Author Page to find resources on personal safety, and safety training for churches. 
     
    Read about the pastor who embezzled from his church
     
    Article about church treasurer turned embezzler
     
    This is why you need to be careful with your church Wifi
     
    The Roys Report
     
    Read about Pastor Bobby

    • 11 min
    That Would Never Happen in My Church: S6E1

    That Would Never Happen in My Church: S6E1

    Security issues are hiding in every church - do you know where to look for them? I’m your host, church safety advocate Lori Morrison and I’m so glad you’ve joined me at the intersection of faith and true crime. Our churches need to be the safest places in our communities, so our mission here is to find actionable steps that will make our churches sanctuaries of physical, emotional, and spiritual safety. We’re going to investigate The Unlovley Truth about real crime stories affecting real churches so you can help make your church a safe and secure place. I’ve got new cases for us to investigate today, so let’s dive right in. 
     
    I don’t share these stories with you because I’m wanting to bash the church. I love the church - especially when it functions in healthy and Christ-honoring ways. But it doesn’t always work out like that does it?
     
    Highlights from this episode include:
     
    49% of adults in America say that religion is losing influence in public life
    Living Word Church in Midland Michigan recently had 2 leaders charged with sex crimes
    An Asheville, NC church found a shocking intruder hiding in their crawl space last week
     
    Christian ministries need to keep the church building safe, and the people within. We can take what we’ve learned today to partner with pastors and other church leaders to enhance the safety of our flocks.
     
    Visit my website to access more episodes. If you would like to contact me about booking me as a speaker, or ask about my consulting services, please email me at lori@theunlovelytruth.com. 
     
    Ways you can support the work of The Unlovley Truth:
     
    Share the episode 
     
    Follow me on Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn 
     
    Check out my Amazon Author Page to find resources on personal safety, and safety training for churches. 
     
    Read the Pew Research article here
     
    Read the LifeWay Research article here
     
    Stats from notinourchurch.com
     
    Investigate today’s cases here, here, and here

    • 10 min
    Compassionate Communities: a Key to Crime Reduction, Part Two

    Compassionate Communities: a Key to Crime Reduction, Part Two

    Threats of violence didn’t keep Dr. William Cook and his staff from treating the growing number of HIV-positive patients in Austin, Indiana. Their efforts were paying off with more and more people beginning treatment crucial to their short and long-term health. Then the government got involved.
     
    Welcome to another episode of The Unlovely Truth. I’m your host. Join me for another captivating true crime story, where physical, spiritual, and emotional safety takeaways are waiting for us. 
     
    We’re wrapping up our deep dive of William Cooke’s fascinating book “Canary in the Coal Mine: A Forgotten Rural Community, a Hidden Epidemic, and a Lone Doctor Battling for the Life, Health, and Soul of the People”. We’ll also talk about ideas for how anyone can be what I call a different kind of P.I. - not a private investigator like me but a person of impact in your community. 
     
    Decisions on how to handle the local health crisis started being driven by elected officials rather than trained medical personnel. Of course, the issue of IV drug use that fueled the spread of HIV infections was sharply debated. But the underlying poverty and hopelessness that factored in were mostly ignored. It seemed like the infection itself became the issue, not the well-being of the people who were suffering from its effects.
    And very little was being done to address the root causes of the epidemic - domestic violence, generational poverty, a lack of resources, and other things that led to a sense of desperation and hopelessness that fueled the sex work and drug abuse that was spreading the HIV virus. Outside entities were trying to fix a problem they didn’t completely understand. 
    Situations like this are where local churches can and should step in to do whatever they can. Everyone was going to have to set aside egos and the desire for control to work together if things were going to get any better for the citizens of Austin. 
     
    Let’s take a quick look at Parable of the Pharisee and Tax Collector from Luke 18:9-14, and I’m reading from the New LIving Translation:
    Then Jesus told this story to some who had great confidence in their own righteousness and scorned everyone else: “Two men went to the Temple to pray. One was a Pharisee, and the other was a despised tax collector. The Pharisee stood by himself and prayed this prayer[a]: ‘I thank you, God, that I am not like other people—cheaters, sinners, adulterers. I’m certainly not like that tax collector! I fast twice a week, and I give you a tenth of my income.’
    “But the tax collector stood at a distance and dared not even lift his eyes to heaven as he prayed. Instead, he beat his chest in sorrow, saying, ‘O God, be merciful to me, for I am a sinner.’ I tell you, this sinner, not the Pharisee, returned home justified before God. For those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted.”
    I love parables. Words from the mouth of Jesus himself that are often so much deeper than they appear at first glance. The Pharisee thought he was righteous, but his heart was exposed with the self-contered prayer that he prayed. The tax collector knew just how much he needed God’s mercy, so he received it. 
    But it’s easy to miss the very beginning of this parable - the fact that Jesus boldly told this story to people who were acting just like the Pharisse in the story. He is giving them the opportunity to see themselves in this story and hopefully re-examine the states of their hearts. He is doing the same for us today. 
    What traditions do we hold onto, like dressing a certain way for church, that we’ve allowed ourselves to believe make us more in tune with God than those who dress differently out of lack of awareness for our custom or lack of resources to dress up at all? When we tell ourselves that certain people don’t measure up to our standards, we forget that without Jesus, none of us can measure up to God’s standards.
    SFX

    • 13 min
    Compassionate Communities: a Key to Crime Reduction

    Compassionate Communities: a Key to Crime Reduction

    Do some people deserve the suffering they are enduring? Or Should there always be room for compassion when criminal behavior regardless of why a person did what they did, ends in tragedy? If your community is struggling to find its way in a crisis you’ll want to hear how Dr. William Cooke has done it in tiny Austin, Indiana. 
     
    This is Season 5, Episode 11. We’re going to take a two part deep dive into Dr. William Cooke’s incredible book, “Canary in the Coal Mine: a Forgotten Rural Community, a Hidden Epidemic, and a Lone Doctor Battling for the Life, Health, and Soul of the People”. We’ll also talk about ideas for how anyone can be what I call a different kind of P.I. - not a private investigator like me but a person of impact in your community. 
     
    The U.S. Census Bureau says that roughly 20% of the U.S. population lives in a rural area, even though urban areas make up only 3 percent of the U.S. land area. That often means that our rural citizens may not always have direct access to things most of us take for granted. In Austin Indiana from the mid 1970’s until 2004, the down had no doctor of it’s own. When Dr, William Cook set up his practice he had no idea the journey he was about to take.
     
    Not very many doctors start solo practices in impoverished areas, but Dr. Cook felt that was his calling. Some of his patients had never seen a doctor before. That’s not something we expect to hear in America, is it?
     
    Every church has physical, emotional, and spiritual safety issues. Most just don’t know it. Are you going to wait for a trainwreck to occur before you address them? Helping churches be proactive about safety is why I wrote “Reclaiming Sanctuary: Enhancing Physical, Emotional, and Spiritual Safety in Our Churches”. I know how hard it can be to address unpleasant issues because I’ve been where you are - in a leadership position needing an intentional approach customized to the needs of my unique church. 
     
    I’m offering a free 20 minute strategy call for church leaders to see if my work might be a good fit for you. Email me today at lori@theunlovelytruth.com and we’ll start a conversation about your church’s needs and how we can work together to create a customized plan for your church. Schedule your no risk, all reward call today!
     
    Luke 5:31-32
     
    Jesus answered them, “It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. 
    I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.”
     
    The teachers of the law, the religious folk of the time, tried to trap Jesus so many times. After He called Levi to follow Him, these leaders asked why Jesus and His followers would eat and drink with people they called “sinners”.  How easy it can be to fall into that trap. 
     
    Does it remind you of the people who criticized Dr. Cooke for his work, and even threatened him? Does it remind you of anything else? Maybe something you’ve seen in your church? I know I’ve seen it in churches I’ve attended. I’ve probably even been guilty of it myself.
     
    God can’t use us when we are showing that kind of pride. Casting Crowns has a great song called “Jesus, Friend of Sinners” . One line that really makes you think is “Nobody knows what we're for, only what we're against, when we judge the wounded”. I know that using drugs isn’t a good choice. Selling your body isn’t a great choice. But we don’t always know what has driven a person to make those choices.
     
    Jesus would’ve hung out with drug addicts, and the homeless, and the sex workers. So why aren’t we? And if you do, I’m really glad to hear it. If you don’t, maybe it’s because you just don’t know how. If your church doesn’t have a ministry to feed the homeless, maybe you can work with another church’s ministry or a local non-profit. I don’t recommend going into a homeless camp by yourself though. Criminals will target the homeless because they are so vulnerable. If that type of ministry isn’t f

    • 16 min

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5
61 Ratings

61 Ratings

Hooks2Crook ,

I know her well!

Thank you Lori for your bravery to shed light on difficult stories. Season 4 Episode 4 is powerful and offers hope throughout both ladies stories. Again thank you so much for being a PI (person of impact.)❤️

Lori A from Texas ,

Fascinating, Enlightening,

I only recently discovered this podcast, but I am so thankful I did. I appreciate how the host shares stories of true crimes with insight and sensitivity, bring forth a spiritual truth as she does. I enjoy hearing from the Private Investigator perspective, but even more so I enjoy hearing from a Person of Impact perspective.

TJM in TN ,

Excellent podcast

Well communicated and interesting while shedding light on unsolved cases and some everyday situations we all need to be on guard for.
💪🏻💪🏻💪🏻

Top Podcasts In True Crime

Status: Untraced
Tenderfoot TV & Audacy
Beyond All Repair
WBUR
Dateline NBC
NBC News
Crime Junkie
audiochuck
Morbid
Morbid Network | Wondery
MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories
Ballen Studios

You Might Also Like

True Crime All The Time
Emash Digital / Wondery
True Crime All The Time Unsolved
PodcastOne
Anatomy of Murder
audiochuck
Crime Junkie
audiochuck
The Deck
audiochuck
The Generation Why Podcast
Wondery