Pubdate: Tue, 16 Aug 2011
Source: Wall Street Journal (US)
Copyright: 2011 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.wsj.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487
Authors: Sophia Hollander and Sean Gardiner
Note: Arian Campo-Flores contributed to this article.

POLICE PROBE FLORIDA PASTOR'S DEATH

Police said Monday they found a white powdery substance believed to be
drugs in a pocket of a pastor who was found dead Friday in a New York
hotel room.

Law-enforcement officials found the substance in the possession of the
Rev. Zachery Tims, Jr. Mr. Tims, who was 42 years old, founded a
ministry of 8,000 members in Florida and became a high-profile church
leader through his frequent television appearances. He chronicled his
struggle with teenage drug addiction in a 2006 memoir.

Another law-enforcement official familiar with the case said, "What
that white powdery substance is and whether it played a role in Mr.
Tims's death is still to be determined."

An autopsy was performed on Mr. Tims, but the medical examiner's
spokeswoman said authorities were awaiting results of toxicology tests
before determining the cause of death.

It is unclear what brought Mr. Tims to Manhattan last week. Police
said he was scheduled to fly from New York to Texas on Thursday night.
By about 5 o'clock on Friday afternoon, Mr. Tims still hadn't checked
out from room 3711 at the W Hotel near Times Square, police officials
said. A worker trying to refill the room's minibar couldn't enter
because the metal lock bar was engaged.

Hotel officials opened the door and found Mr. Tims lying face up on
the floor wearing a T-shirt and shorts. In the right pocket of his
shorts, police found a small plastic envelope containing a white powder.

As news of the death circulated, condolences poured in to Mr. Tims's
church, the New Destiny Christian Center in Apopka, Fla. Mourners
flocked to the church and posted messages of shock and sadness on
social media sites.

"I join many others in being saddened by the news of the death of Rev.
Zachery Tims of Florida," the Rev. Al Sharpton wrote in a Twitter message.

Mr. Tims grew up dealing and using drugs in Baltimore and was accused
as a teenager of attempting to kill a fellow gang member, though he
pleaded guilty to lesser charges, according his autobiography, "It's
Never Too Late." He had a religious epiphany and gave up drugs just
before his 20th birthday, he wrote.

In 1996, Mr. Tims and his wife, Riva, moved from Baltimore to Orlando
and founded the New Destiny Christian Center, holding their first
service in a hotel room. The ministry also runs a 34,000-square-foot
youth center that includes a gym, bowling alley and cyber cafe.

"He was able to do extraordinary things," said Rev. Randolph Bracy of
the New Covenant Baptist Church of Orlando. "He literally catapulted a
church that started in a hotel room into a megachurch."

Around 2009, Mr. Tims and his wife ended their 15-year marriage after
he admitted to an extramarital affair, according to Ms. Tims's father,
Fred Jennings.

Charisma House ceased publication of Mr. Tims's book after learning of
his divorce, according to the company's chief executive, Steve Strang.
In March, the company plans to publish a book by Riva Tims, titled
"When It All Falls Apart."

- -Arian Campo-Flores contributed to this article. 
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