A call center telemarketing agent talking on a headset while working or assisting on a computer screen in an office. (Charday Penn / Getty Images)
By Jack Cowhick February 15, 2026 at 6:00am
A Michigan federal grand jury indicted an individual for her alleged involvement in a “forced labor conspiracy” spanning Michigan, Florida, Texas, and Missouri.
Kathleen Klein, also known as “Prophetess,” ran a network of call centers throughout several states and “used forced labor to solicit donations” for Kingdom of God Global Church, according to a Thursday Department of Justice news release.
“Victims were forced to work grueling hours at the call centers without pay and pressured to hit impossible fundraising targets,” the news release stated. “When victims fell short of leaders’ goals or dared to push back, the punishment was severe: public humiliation, sleep deprivation, physical violence, withholding of food and shelter, forced repentance rituals, and threats of eternal damnation.”
Klein, 53, allegedly controlled “virtually every aspect of their victims’ lives.” According to the news release, KOGGC collected “roughly $50 million in donations,” used by church leaders to pay for “personal real estate, vehicles, travel, and luxury goods.”
Assistant Attorney General A. Tysen Duva said in the news release that the case “reflects the gravity of forced labor schemes that strip victims of their basic human rights and subject them to physical and brutal psychological abuse.”
“Combating human trafficking is a top priority for the Department of Justice. We will relentlessly pursue those who facilitate and profit from forced labor and fight to obtain justice for survivors,” he continued.
Special Agent in Charge Jennifer Runyan of the FBI’s Detroit Field Office called the action a “direct assault on human freedom” which “strips victims of their dignity, autonomy, and basic right to control their own lives,” according to the release.
“Anyone who conspires to exploit and enslave others for profit will be held fully accountable under the law,” Runyan said. “This case demonstrates the strength of our federal, state, and local partnerships in dismantling a multi-state forced labor operation. We will not stop until these criminal networks are shut down and justice is delivered.”
A federal grand jury indicted two individuals in August 2025 for their alleged roles in the same conspiracy, charging them with conspiracy to commit money laundering and conspiracy to commit forced labor.
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