Explore Kent Hovind net worth, age, height, bio, birthday, wiki, and salary! To the Orthodox Jewish creationist, Hovind’s approach relies upon a strict literal reading of the King James translation. Where Jews interpret the Hebrew through Talmud and Midrash, Hovind relies on a direct reading of English. For example, Hovind claims that the word dinosaur, which was introduced to English in 1841, refers to what previously had been called dragon. Dragon is used where tannin (Hebrew: תנין ) appears, but it means serpent or crocodile. In this article, we will discover how old is Kent Hovind? Who is Kent Hovind dating now & how much money does Kent Hovind have?
| Name | Kent Hovind |
| First Name | Kent |
| Last Name | Hovind |
| Occupation | Science Teacher |
| Birthday | January 15 |
| Birth Year | 1953 |
| Place of Birth | Illinois |
| Home Town | Illinois |
| Birth Country | United States |
| Birth Sign | Capricorn |
| Full/Birth Name | |
| Father | Not Available |
| Mother | Not Available |
| Siblings | Not Available |
| Spouse | Mary Tocco (m. 2016), Jo Hovind (m. 1973–2016) |
| Children(s) | Eric Hovind, Marlissa Dublin |
Kent Hovind Biography
Kent Hovind is one of the most popular and richest Science Teacher who was born on January 15, 1953 in Illinois, Illinois, United States. At the age of 16, Hovind became a born-again Christian within the Independent Fundamental Baptist church. He married his wife Jo in 1973 and they had three children between 1977 and 1979. Between 1975 and 1988, Hovind served as an assistant pastor and teacher at three private Baptist schools, including one he started. In 1989, the family moved to Pensacola, Florida, where Jo would attend Pensacola Christian College and would earn a bachelor’s degree in music and master’s degrees in music and sacred music.
In 1989, Hovind started Creation Science Evangelism. In 1998, he created his Dr. Dino web site and began producing articles and selling video tapes, books, and fossil replicas. Prior to his incarceration, Hovind had numerous speaking engagements (around 700 in 2004) at churches, private schools, and other venues each year, in addition to hosting a daily internet radio talk show and establishing Dinosaur Adventure Land in Pensacola, Florida. In 1999, his son Eric Hovind began traveling to present his arguments and seminars. Kent and Jo divorced in 2016.
Hovind established Creation Science Evangelism (CSE) in 1989 and Dinosaur Adventure Land in 2001 in Pensacola, Florida. He frequently spoke on Young Earth creationism in schools, churches, debates, and on radio and television broadcasts. His son Eric Hovind took over operation of CSE after Hovind began serving a ten-year prison sentence in January 2007 for federal convictions for failing to pay taxes, obstructing federal agents, and structuring cash transactions.
The most widely distributed antievolution work, Big Daddy?, was first published in 1972 and revised several times; it is one of the controversial Chick tracts, comic strips intended to convert people to fundamentalist Christianity. Material from Hovind was incorporated into the 2000 revision.
In 1971, he graduated from East Peoria Community High School in East Peoria, Illinois. He entered the accredited Illinois Central College, then transferred to the unaccredited Midwestern Baptist College in 1972, attaining a Bachelor of Religious Education in 1974. In 1988 and 1991 respectively, Hovind received a master’s degree and doctorate in Christian Education through correspondence from (also unaccredited) Patriot University in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Patriot University is a diploma mill.
Hovind established Creation Science Evangelism in 1989 to evangelize and teach creationism. In May 1999, his son Eric joined Creation Science Evangelism as a speaker, and his daughter Marlissa began training to become Hovind’s secretary. That year, CSE merged with Faith Baptist Fellowship of Hawthorne, Florida, beginning a relationship that lasted until 2002. In 2003, with the aid of Glenn Stoll (a promoter of tax-avoidance schemes), Hovind set up a series of entities starting with “an unincorporated association of pure trust” on May 13, under which a corporation sole and several ministerial trusts were established starting on May 23. CSE properties were conveyed to the trusts which operated under business licenses from the “Kingdom of Heaven”. Hovind is associated with the Unregistered Baptist Fellowship (UBF), a loosely affiliated group of roughly 100 churches which share a “theology of Christian resistance” to civil governments. Because the UBF would consider it an acknowledgement of government authority over the church, they reject the highly favorable 501(c)3 status, which makes donations tax deductible and exempts them from income tax, but not FICA taxes or employee income tax withholding. The UBF holds that governmental authority stops “at the threshold of the church”, and Hovind has likened his ministry’s status to that of the Vatican City State. When the federal government obtained a search warrant in 2004, an Internal Revenue Service (IRS) criminal investigator made the sworn statement that the organization did not have a business license and did not have tax-exempt status.
Kent Hovind Net Worth
Kent is one of the richest Science Teacher from United States. According to our analysis, Wikipedia, Forbes & Business Insider, Kent Hovind's net worth $5 Million. (Last Update: January 13, 2024)
Kent E. Hovind (born January 15, 1953) is an American Christian fundamentalist evangelist and tax protester. He is a controversial figure in the Young Earth creationist movement whose ministry focuses on denial of scientific theories in the fields of biology (evolution), geophysics, and cosmology in favor of a literalist interpretation of the Genesis creation narrative found in the Bible. Hovind’s views, which combine elements of creation science and conspiracy theory, are dismissed by the scientific community as fringe theory and pseudo-scholarship. He is controversial within the Young Earth Creationist movement, and Answers in Genesis openly criticized him for continued use of discredited arguments abandoned by others in the movement.
| Net Worth | $5 Million |
| Salary | Under Review |
| Source of Income | Science Teacher |
| Cars | Not Available |
| House | Living in own house. |
During a debate with Farrell Till, Hovind said that Donald Johanson had uncovered the leg bones of Lucy at a different site over a mile away from the reported site, in a deeper stratum, quipping, “I would like to know how fast the train was going that hit that chimpanzee.” This was clearly contrary to the published statements by Johanson. After Hovind had been informed in 1993 that his statement was false, he agreed to stop using the claim. When he repeated the claim in 1995, he once more agreed he was in error.
In 1993, Hovind announced that he would be debating the renowned evolutionary biologist, Stephen Jay Gould, who had a longstanding opposition to debating Creationists and had turned down numerous challenges. When contacted about the announcement, Gould said he had never heard of Hovind, much less agreed to debate.
Ethnicity, religion & political views
Many peoples want to know what is Kent Hovind ethnicity, nationality, Ancestry & Race? Let's check it out! As per public resource, IMDb & Wikipedia, Kent Hovind's ethnicity is Not Known. We will update Kent Hovind's religion & political views in this article. Please check the article again after few days.
In 1990, Hovind made a $10,000 offer to anyone who could meet a set of requirements he said would prove evolution, and he later raised the amount to $250,000. In 2007, Creation Science Evangelism removed the offer from its website.
Who is Kent Hovind Dating?
According to our records, Kent Hovind married to Mary Tocco (m. 2016), Jo Hovind (m. 1973–2016). As of January 13, 2024, Kent Hovind’s is not dating anyone.
Relationships Record: We have no records of past relationships for Kent Hovind. You may help us to build the dating records for Kent Hovind!On March 1, 1996, Hovind filed a Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition to avoid paying federal income taxes, claiming he was not a citizen of the United States and that he did not earn income. He claimed that as a minister, everything he owned belonged to God and he was not subject to paying taxes for doing God’s work. On June 5, 1996, the Court dismissed Hovind’s bankruptcy case, finding he had lied about his possessions and income. The court upheld the IRS’s determination that his claim “was filed in bad faith for the sole purpose of avoiding payment of federal income taxes” and called Hovind’s arguments “patently absurd”. It also said that “the IRS has no record of the debtor ever having filed a federal income tax return.”
Height, Weight & Body Measurements
Kent Hovind height Not available right now. Kent weight Not Known & body measurements will update soon.
| Height | Unknown |
| Weight | Not Known |
| Body Measurements | Under Review |
| Eye Color | Not Available |
| Hair Color | Not Available |
| Feet/Shoe Size | Not Available |
Hovind was originally reported to the Internal Revenue Service by Pensacola Christian College senior vice President Rebekah Horton in the mid 1990s, after she learned of Hovind’s anti-tax stand. Hovind’s organization had neither business licenses nor tax-exempt status, nor was it considered a church by people who worked there. The ministry’s organizational structure was described by the United States Tax Court as appearing to be “based on various questionable trust documents purchased from Glen Stoll, a known promoter of tax avoidance schemes”, leading the Court to conclude that Hovind used these trust documents as well as other fraudulent means to conceal the ownership and control of his activities and properties.
On May 13, 1998, Hovind and his wife filed a “Power of Attorney and Revocation of Signature” document in Escambia County which would nullify any of their promises, debts, or legal agreements made prior to April 15, 1998. The Hovinds claimed they had signed government documents “due to the use of various elements of fraud and misrepresentations, duress, coercion, under perjury, mistake, ‘bankruptcy’,” and argued that Social Security is a “Ponzi scheme”. The document referred to the United States Government as “the ‘bankrupt’ corporate government”, renounced the Hovinds’ United States citizenship and Social Security numbers to become “a natural citizen of ‘America’ and a natural sojourner”, and referred to their home state of Florida as “the State of Florida Body-Politic Corporation.” Judges and the IRS did not appear to honor this as a legally relevant document in future decisions. In 2002, Hovind was again delinquent in paying his taxes, and unsuccessfully sued the IRS for harassment.
Facts & Trivia
Kent Ranked on the list of most popular Science Teacher. Also ranked in the elit list of famous people born in United States. Kent Hovind celebrates birthday on January 15 of every year.
In 1998, the IRS requested account information about Hovind from an internet provider after Hovind made claims on an internet broadcast about his own tax law noncompliance, going back to the 1970s. When the provider initially balked, the courts granted a subpoena on the basis that the IRS could demonstrate that Hovind had received income but had filed no income tax returns going back to 1991. In 2003, Hovind would tell The New York Times, “I haven’t filed a tax return in 30 years.”
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