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Truth & Transparency Foundation

Truth & Transparency Foundation (TTF; formerlyMormonLeaks and originallyMormon WikiLeaks) was awhistleblowing organization inspired byWikiLeaks, which focused on exposing documents from the leadership ofthe Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Founded in December 2016 and ceasing operations in April 2022, Truth & Transparency was a nonprofit newsroom dedicated to religious accountability through impact journalism.

Truth & Transparency Foundation
MormonLeaks logo
MormonLeaks logo
AbbreviationTTF
PredecessorMormonWikiLeaks
FormationDecember 19, 2016; 8 years ago (2016-12-19)
FounderRyan McKnight
TypeDocument archive anddisclosure
PurposePublicize secretLDS Church documents
Region
Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Official language
English
StaffFive volunteers and one attorney
Volunteers5
Websitetruthandtransparency.org
Formerly called
MormonLeaks
MormonWikiLeaks

It began in October 2016 as a leaked series of videos on theYouTube channelMormon Leaks. In total, 15 videos were initially leaked via the Mormon Leaks channel from meetings of high-ranking LDS leaders including theQuorum of the Twelve. They discussed topics including the "homosexual agenda", thesubprime mortgage crisis, and a debate over thesexual orientation ofChelsea Manning. Politicians featured in the videos included former Utah governorMike Leavitt and former U.S. Senator from OregonGordon H. Smith.

Ryan McKnight, founder of TTF, was interviewed byThe New York Times about his YouTube channel Mormon Leaks, and this led to contacts fromReddit who asked him for a secure way to send files. He set up a website to allow whistleblowers to protect theiranonymity. The submission process ensuresconfidentiality, including erasure ofIP addresses, asking leakers to use the privacy browserTor, sending documents viaSecureDrop, and additionalencryption methods. Initial funding was raised throughGoFundMe, and an officialTwitter account was set up. The site's intent is to increase transparency of LDS Church leadership, and would not leak names of lower-level employees, instead focusing on the Quorum of the Twelve and theFirst Presidency.

University of Tampa professor Ryan Cragun said scholars were interested in finding out what documents would be revealed, noting there was a dearth of information available about thefinances of the LDS Church. He said active Mormons were unlikely to view the leaked materials, but the material would have a more significant impact on those who were questioning or had already resigned their membership status. Mormon scholar and columnistJana Riess gave a mixed assessment, criticizing their tactics regarding privacy while saying it could help to increase LDS Church leadership transparency. Utah attorney and Mormon blogger Steve Evans said the practice of leaking was criminal publication of stolen property, and said LDS Church employees who leaked material were likely violating anon-disclosure agreement.

Organization

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Beginnings on YouTube

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Videos were posted to the YouTube channel Mormon Leaks on the last day of the October 2016 LDSGeneral Conference.[1][2]

Ryan McKnight, the site's founder, had previously gained attention in October 2016 when he was interviewed byThe New York Times about hisYouTube channelMormon Leaks, which released videos of top LDS leadership executive discussions.[3][4] McKnight is a former Mormon, having resigned from the LDS Church in 2014,[4][5] residing inLas Vegas, Nevada.[6][7] The anonymous individual who sent him the videos via email, according to McKnight, had been holding onto them for a period of years but with the intention to do something with them eventually.[8][9] Within a time span of under a month the YouTube channel had garnered 2,200 followers.[10]

The LDS Church did not publicly question the veracity of the videos,[6] which included top leadership debating the "homosexual agenda".[11] Additional topics discussed by the high-level LDS Church leadership in the videos includedmarijuana,Islam, thesubprime mortgage crisis, and a debate over thesexual orientation ofChelsea Manning.[2][1][12] LDS Church spokesman Eric Hawkins provided an official response, which stated: "In these committee meetings, presentations are routinely received from various religious, political and subject matter experts on various topics. The purpose is to understand issues that may face the Church, and is in pursuit of the obligation Church leaders feel to be informed on and have open discussion about current issues. This is an informational forum, not a decision-making body."[2][13][14] Hawkins pointed out the videos were from a timeframe of 2007 through 2012.[2][13][14]

In total the 15 videos were published to YouTube on the last day of the October 2016 LDSGeneral Conference.[1][2][13] Most of the videos were from closed session events only attended by high-level LDS Church leadership.[13] The majority of them depicted lectures given to theQuorum of the Twelve, the second-highest ranking leadership group within the LDS Church.[1]Mike Leavitt, former governor of Utah, appeared in a video filmed in 2012 and gave a presentation onState Religious Freedom Restoration Acts.[1]Gordon H. Smith, former U.S. senator from Oregon, was shown in another video talking to the LDS Church leadership.[15][16] Smith lectured the LDS Church leaders about the "inestimable power" yielded from being able to contact U.S. Senators whenever necessary for assistance.[15] The lectures given to LDS Church leadership in this fashion were businesslike, withstatistics andMicrosoft PowerPoint presentations.[17]

McKnight suddenly found himself the point-person on the Internet for those wishing to maintain anonymity and yet simultaneously publicize secret documents from the LDS Church.[18] After the videos engendered debate and attention from Mormons and the wider Internet community, McKnight was asked to add more videos from people who messaged him onReddit.[19][3] After another anonymous user on Reddit asked him, he publicized documents from the LDS Church detailing a rules modification about homosexual partners.[5] Reddit users asked him for a more secure means of submitting documents about the LDS Church.[20]

Transition to dedicated website

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TTF usesTor privacy browser andsecure communicationSecureDrop to protect confidentiality.[10][8]

McKnight decided to found TTF so whistleblowers could protect theiranonymity.[19] Since his increased attention from the October videos and the November policy change leaks, McKnight has been contacted by 25 sources inside and outside of the LDS Church with potential material to release.[5] McKnight and his team spent six months planning creation of the organization.[5] He estimated approximately a potential for between hundreds to thousands of additional individuals who may wish to leak information through the site.[8] The organization has no affiliation withFred Karger or his websiteMormonTips.com, which also publicizes confidential documents from the LDS Church.[5] MormonLeaks takes steps to protectconfidentiality of their sources, including erasing all IP addresses from submissions and removing watermarks from submitted materials.[5] The site asks users who wish to submit secret documents to use theTor privacy browser to protect themselves.[10] Users then send the documents to TTF viaSecureDrop.[8]Encryption methods are further incorporated to mask the identity of the whistleblowers.[18] The motivation behind the organization is to increase transparency of LDS Church leadership.[21][22]

The TTF website (then "MormonLeaks") launched on December 19, 2016.[19][5][20] The organization was started with a website and accompanyingTwitter page.[19] The TTF team works to verify documents before posting them live.[6][5] This fact-checking team includes five volunteers and an attorney.[7] MormonLeaks does not take funding through advertising.[6] Funds to start TTF itself were initially raised through donations fromGoFundMe.[5][7] The hope of its founder was that TTF would demonstrate the LDS Church's profitable nature as a business as opposed to its assertion of religious status.[6] The founder said it was highly unlikely the LDS Church would voluntarily publicize more of its innermost proceedings, saying it "will never be voluntarily transparent, they have nothing to gain from it".[5] The site's intention was to avoid publishing specific lists of names of membership, and instead focus on economic information and internal organization policies and procedures.[23][22] The site intended to limit disclosure of actual people's names to high-ranking officials including theQuorum of the Twelve and theFirst Presidency.[23][24]

The organization's first leaks appeared on December 19, 2016, in the form of LDS Church documents from 2010.[7][10] It published four files onto its account on Facebook as of December 20, 2016.[23] The first documents publicized by TTF included memos about legal procedures, a letter to the temple department's executive director regarding unsanctioned materials on the Internet, and anorganizational chart for theintellectual property division of the LDS Church.[24] TTF asserts to have been offered documents from two separate individuals who were employees of the LDS Church concerningtithing information of famous Mormons, including American football quarterbackSteve Young.[24]

After TTF (then "MormonLeaks") had posted a handful a number of LDS Church documents for four months, the Church sent acease-and-desist letter allegingcopyright infringement with regard to a leaked Church leadershipPowerPointpresentation published by TTF in February 2017. The PowerPoint discussed societal pressures that the Church felt had led some LDS members to apostasy, which includedpornography, the issues agitated for byOrdain Women, and questions regardingMormon history such as those promoted in books by lawyer / Fundamentalist MormonDenver Snuffer or in online postings by psychologistsocial criticJohn Dehlin. TTF pulled the offending document for a short while, until its attorney,Marc Randazza, sent the LDS Church a letter which said, "At this point, my client is willing to let bygones be bygones. If your client is willing to step back from the brink, and to cease efforts to censor this material, my client is willing to refrain from bringing a claim [of abusing copyright law]."[25][26]

FaithLeaks

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In 2018, McKnight and Dodge launched FaithLeaks, a similar website. FaithLeaks hosts documents in relation to transparency about theJehovah's Witnesses. It initially published papers about an internal investigation of alleged sexual abuse. These exemplify attempted to deal with the cases through the congregation'sinternal disciplinary court. FaithLeaks was hoped to help highlight cases of corruption by religious organizations, and was particularly concerned with issues of finance, policies, procedures and sex abuse settlements.[27] After a settlement with theWatch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania all their copyrighted documents were removed and Truth & Transparency, and its founders, Ryan McKnight and Ethan Gregory Dodge, were forbidden to publish copyrighted material owned by the Watch Tower Society again.[28]

Reception

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WikiLeaks was aware of the foundation under the site's original name of MormonWikiLeaks, and sent them a message on Twitter asking them to change their name.[7] The founder originally stated he would retain the name as MormonWikiLeaks, and said a trademark application was pending.[7]

University of Tampa professor Ryan Cragun said academics were excited to discover more information about the economics behind the LDS Church, as members tithe 10 percent of their earnings and there was not much in the way of transparent documents available to research their holdings and finances.[4] Cragun said it was unlikely active members of the LDS Church would end up viewing the leaked documents because they were "highly insulated".[4] However, he notes documents would have a greater impact on someone who is considering leaving the LDS Church: "For someone in the middle of a faith transition, such information is more fuel for the fire."[4]

Editor-in-chief ofThe Nonprofit Quarterly, Ruth McCambridge, wrote that the appearance of MormonLeaks was reflective of an increasing trend by individuals to use technology to force nonprofit organizations to be transparent and accountable to the public.[29] MormonLeaks has an attorney on staff, which McCambridge notes may be beneficial given the prior litigation history where the LDS Church made a copyright infringement assertion against WikiLeaks for publishing the church'sHandbook of Instructions.[29]

Mormon scholar and columnistJana Riess was critical of the organization's tactics, stating: "I am very concerned about privacy in our culture more generally. People in the workplace have the right to expect that intraoffice communication and their emails will stay private."[6] She called MormonLeaks "disturbing" and said: "It is not good news for any of us."[6] On a positive note, Riess said it could motivate the upper LDS Church leadership to increase its transparency.[6]

Utah attorney and Mormon blogger Steve Evans called TTF (then "MormonLeaks") "a rebranding exercise of McKnight's existing practice of posting various confidential items."[6] Evans said TTF had "an added layer of cybersecurity, which won't necessarily protect the leakers, depending on their methods of obtaining the various stolen documents, videos, etc."[6] Evans was critical of McKnight's encouragement to those who choose to leak information to TTF: "the leakers are likely either church employees or consultants working for the church. In either of those situations, it's very likely that the leakers are violating their nondisclosure and confidentiality agreements with the church. McKnight is now publicly encouraging people to violate these agreements."[6]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdeCanham, Matt (October 2, 2016)."Leaked videos show Mormon apostles discussing political influence, gay marriage, marijuana and more".The Salt Lake Tribune. RetrievedDecember 21, 2016.
  2. ^abcde"Videos of high-ranking LDS leaders discussing social issues anonymously released on conference weekend".KSTU, Fox 13. October 2, 2016. RetrievedMay 28, 2025.
  3. ^abGoodstein, Laurie (October 2, 2016)."Leaked Videos Pull Back Curtain on Mormon Leadership".The New York Times. RetrievedDecember 20, 2016.
  4. ^abcdeChandler, Michael Alison (December 20, 2016)."Former church member launches 'Mormon Wikileaks' for anonymous sharing of documents and videos".The Washington Post. RetrievedDecember 20, 2016.
  5. ^abcdefghijNeugebauer, Cimaron (December 18, 2016)."Ex-Mormon creates MormonWikiLeaks website, set to launch on Monday".KUTV. RetrievedDecember 20, 2016.
  6. ^abcdefghijkStack, Peggy Fletcher (December 17, 2016)."New website plans to showcase leaked Mormon documents".The Salt Lake Tribune. RetrievedDecember 20, 2016.
  7. ^abcdefVelez, Mandy (December 20, 2016)."Former church member launches 'Mormon Wikileaks' for anonymous tips and whistleblowers".The Independent. RetrievedDecember 20, 2016.
  8. ^abcd"MormonWikiLeaker seeks LDS Church 'transparency,' not approval".Gephardt Daily. December 20, 2016. RetrievedDecember 21, 2016.
  9. ^Demasters, Tiffany; McAdam, Jeff (October 3, 2016)."Man behind postings of LDS Church leaked videos says clips were anonymously emailed to him".KSTU. RetrievedDecember 21, 2016.
  10. ^abcdJohnson, Alex (December 20, 2016)."A 'Wikileaks' for Secret Church Documents Launches for Concerned Mormons".NBC News. RetrievedDecember 21, 2016.
  11. ^Thompson, Alex (October 3, 2016)."Mormon church leaders discuss 'homosexual agenda' in leaked videos".Vice. RetrievedDecember 20, 2016.
  12. ^Canham, Matt; Noyce, David; Wood, Benjamin; Stack, Peggy Fletcher (October 2, 2016)."A brief look at what's in leaked Mormon videos".The Salt Lake Tribune. RetrievedDecember 21, 2016.
  13. ^abcd"See it now: Mormon Leaks shares video of closed-door briefings of LDS Church leaders".Gephardt Daily. October 2, 2016. RetrievedDecember 21, 2016.
  14. ^abVazquez, Aldo (October 2, 2016)."Videos of private meetings between LDS leaders leaked online".KTVX. RetrievedDecember 21, 2016.
  15. ^abMapes, Jeff (October 3, 2016)."'Mormon Leaks' Show Former Oregon Senator Who Did Favors For Church".KUOW-FM. RetrievedDecember 21, 2016.
  16. ^Jaquiss, Nigel (October 3, 2016)."Mormon Leaks Video Features Former U.S. Sen. Gordon Smith (R-Ore.)".Willamette Week. RetrievedDecember 21, 2016.
  17. ^Barker, Mary (November 1, 2016)."Mormon Leaks: Boring Meetings with Interesting Implications".Religion Dispatches. RetrievedDecember 21, 2016.
  18. ^abHaddad, Tareq (December 21, 2016)."Disillusioned ex-church member starts 'Mormon Wikileaks' to shed light on secretive organisation".International Business Times. RetrievedDecember 21, 2016.
  19. ^abcdVan Valkenburg, Nancy (December 15, 2016)."Developing: Mormon WikiLeaks website, Twitter page going online Monday".Gephardt Daily. RetrievedDecember 20, 2016.
  20. ^abBixenspan, David (December 20, 2016)."Former LDS Member Starts MormonWikiLeaks for Church Documents".Mediaite.Abrams Media. RetrievedDecember 20, 2016.
  21. ^"Former LDS member starts Mormon Wikileaks to share secret church documents".KIVI-TV. December 20, 2016. RetrievedDecember 21, 2016.
  22. ^abKale, Sirin (December 21, 2016)."The Ex-Mormon Exposing the LDS Church With a Whistle-Blowing Website".Vice. RetrievedDecember 21, 2016.
  23. ^abcWitham, Joseph (December 20, 2016)."Former Mormon launches MormonWikiLeaks website seeking church transparency".St George News.St. George, Utah. RetrievedDecember 20, 2016.
  24. ^abcMcDonald, Matt (December 20, 2016)."'MormonWikileaks' website launched, seeking transparency in LDS Church".KSTU. RetrievedDecember 20, 2016.
  25. ^Mims, Bob (March 14, 2017)."MormonLeaks reposts LDS Church apostasy presentation, rebuffs faith's copyright violation claim".The Salt Lake Tribune. RetrievedJune 16, 2017.
  26. ^Chandler, Michael Alison (March 17, 2017)."MormonLeaks website squares off with Mormon Church, posts leaked 'Enemies List'".The Washington Post. RetrievedJune 16, 2017.
  27. ^Graham, Ruth (Jan 12, 2018)."A New "Wikileaks for Religion" Publishes Its First Trove of Documents".Slate. RetrievedJanuary 4, 2020.
  28. ^"Truth & Transparency Settles with Watch Tower".Truth & Transparency. July 20, 2020. RetrievedAugust 4, 2020.
  29. ^abMcCambridge, Ruth (December 21, 2016)."Forcing Nonprofit Transparency: Mormon Church Ends Up with Its Own Wikileaks".The Nonprofit Quarterly.Boston,Massachusetts: Nonprofit Information Networking Association.ISSN 1934-6050.OCLC 46351191. Archived fromthe original on December 22, 2016. RetrievedDecember 22, 2016.

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