for BigTrial.net
![]() |
Greg Holston posing in his N.J. backyard |
After his legal career ended, Holston subsequently became a minister known for a bad Martin Luther King Jr. imitation, and blatant race-baiting against white people.
Holston also has a record of not paying his bills and not paying his taxes. And in 2016, he presided over the sale of three church buildings on behalf of the United Methodist Church of Philadelphia that were ultimately sold for a total of $865,000.
Before the sale went through, however, a valuable old pipe organ worth tens of thousands of dollars was stolen from one old church, causing a realtor to drop the church as a client. And, after the sales finally went through, church leaders and congregants were left to wonder where the proceeds went that were supposed to go to the United Methodist Church of Philadelphia.
Krasner's Roster of Lawbreakers
Sadly, in the D.A.'s office under Larry Krasner, Rev. Holston isn't an exception for bad behavior. When you're Larry Krasner, who didn't respond to a request for comment, you tend to surround yourself with people of questionable ethics, such as:
-- Krasner's former gun violence counselor who shot and killed a male prostitute that he arranged a tryst with during work hours.
-- A top Krasner advisor who got arrested for child abandonment after she left her four-year old daughter locked in a car.
-- An ADA who was accused by his former stripper girlfriend of breaking into her home and stealing porn that he had allegedly co-starred in.
-- A total of four top Krasner supervisors, and one former ADA who has since resigned, who were formally reprimanded by two different judges for a "lack of candor."
-- Five Krasner ADAs who signed a brief sent to Common Pleas Court Judge Scott DiClaudio that claimed Krasner didn't have a financial relationship with a couple of former law partners who were involved in a double murder case up on appeal.
Judge DiClaudio subsequently discovered that according to Krasner's own personal financial disclosure forms, the D.A. did receive income from his former law partners.
-- An ADA who was Krasner's former head of homicide who was demoted after a road rage incident where he was sued for false arrest.
![]() |
Birds of a feather |
-- An alleged criminal justice reformer whom Krasner hired to train his young prosecutors who was subsequently accused of being a serial predator and rapist who was knowingly spreading STDS.
-- Finally, there's Krasner's former supervisor of the victim and witness services and restorative justice unit who was still on the job when Krasner's office decided to ignore an obvious conflict of interest and not prosecute her son for beating up his baby mama in broad daylight.
Movita Johnson-Harrell went on to become a state legislator who subsequently went to jail for stealing $500,000 from a nonprofit that she founded.
Nothing better illustrates Krasner's coziness with criminals than his continuing friendship with Johnson-Harrell. At a rally at City Hall in March of this year, Krasner, Holston and Police Officer Agnes Torres, a member of Krasner's security detail, were only too happy to fraternize and pose for pictures with Johnson-Harrell.
At the time, Johnson-Harrell was on probation after spending two months in prison for the three felonies she pleaded guilty to, which involved stealing money that was supposed to support the homeless, seniors, drug addicts, the mentally ill, and the disabled. But instead, Johnson-Harrell spent the money on fur coats, a trip to Mexico, payments on a Porsche as well as funding her political campaign for state representative.
Greg Holston's Checkered Past As A Lawyer
In 1993, the state Supreme Court of Pennsylvania disbarred Gregory Holston as a lawyer because he forged a judge's signature on a phony divorce decree, and when questioned about it by that judge, he lied.
According to an opinion issued by the state Supreme Court, in the case of Office of Disciplinary Counsel v. Gregory Holston, Holston was hired in 1987 to represent Richard Wofford of Philadelphia in a divorce. But Holston's attempts to serve Wofford's wife with the divorce complaint through the Philadelphia sheriff's office resulted in a return of "not found."
According to the state Supreme Court opinion, Holston "did nothing else to serve the defendant or to locate her whereabouts." Some seven months later, when Wofford asked Holston how the case was coming along, Holston "assured him that things were proceeding and in early August, 1988, [Holston] informed his client that a divorce decree had been granted."
Holston mailed Wofford a divorce decree dated July 16, 1988 and signed by Common Pleas Court Judge Alex Bonavitacola, along with a certificate purporting to verify the accuracy of the decree.
But on Nov. 14, 1988, attorney Holston filed a motion to amend the complaint, and a petition for special service of the complaint through the U.S. Mail. In a hearing two weeks later, the judge looked at the complaint, and then asked Holston "to tell him where he had gotten it."
In response to this "direct question," according to the state Supreme Court opinion, Holston "lied and said that he did not know how he got the document and who prepared the order and certification."
In a subsequent meeting with an ethics lawyer, Samuel Stretton, Stretton advised Holston "that his conduct in this matter was improper and that he should reveal to Judge Bonavitacola that he was responsible for forging the name of the judge to the decree that he sent to Mr. Wofford."'
Holston "did so and, throughout these proceedings, he has admitted his wrongful conduct and shown his remorse for having forged a court order and lying to a court of law," the state Supreme Court opinion states.
Rather than be disbarred, Holston asked the state Supreme Court to publicly censure him. But Holston was disbarred, the state Supreme Court wrote, because his conduct "demonstrates a callous disregard for the very integrity of the judicial process and calls for the most severe sanction."
Holston's Suspect Career As A Minister
As a minister, Holston became the executive director of POWER Philadelphia, an interfaith justice advocacy organization. In that position, Holston was known for race-baiting.
In an Aug. 13, 2019 speech to Netroots Nation, Holston denounced "white privilege," and described the longstanding "unholy alliance" between the "white elite" and the "white working class." According to Holston, the "white elites promised poor white folks" that "I'll treat you just a little bit better than black folks."
And black people, Holston said, were treated as "less than human." According to Holston, the "promise that black people would be treated less than human . . . is still being kept." And that's why the country needs to pay reparations to black people, Holston said, plus an guaranteed annual income to all.
![]() |
Greg Holston & Movita at a rally |
According to court records, Holston failed to pay $1,286.84 in water bills from 2004 to 2014 for a property at 2320 Morris Street. A judgment was issued for $2,686.48 on Sept. 30, 2019 consisting of a $1,400 fine plus the money owed.
Records show that between 2005 and 2012, Holston also failed to pay $6,917.56 in property taxes on 2320 Morris Street, which led to the house being seized and put up for a sheriff's sale.
Holston subsequently sued in Common Pleas Court, claiming that he was the victim of a forged deed, and the court returned the property to him within a year.
However, court records don't state whether Holston ever paid the back taxes. The property, which was sold on Feb. 9th, is currently in a payment agreement with the city to pay back taxes of $1,384, an agreement similar to the one that fellow tax deadbeat Larry Krasner has with the city.
City agencies, including the revenue department, require a Philadelphia address before they will issue a paycheck. That means for the past three years, in order to get paid, Holston would have had to provide the city with either the address on Morris Street, or another address within the city limits.
Where'd The Money Go?
In 2016, Holston oversaw the sale of three church buildings on behalf of the United Methodist Church of Philadelphia that were eventually sold for a total of $865,000.
They include the former New Vision United Methodist Church at 1217-23 North Hancock Street in Philadelphia, for $515,000; the Mount Carmel Methodist Episcopal Church at 5901-07 North Park Avenue, for $300,000; and a building at 5909 North Park Avenue adjacent to the Mount Carmel church, for $50,000.
In 2020, church officials discussed hiring an auditor to investigate what happened to the proceeds of the sales.
But in an email, Bishop Peggy Johnson, who oversaw nearly 1,000 churches in the United Methodist Church's Eastern Pennsylvania and Peninsula-Delaware Annual Conferences, wrote, "I retired last year before anything was ever resolved. I really don’t know anything further about this situation."
"Was any of the money ever turned over?" I wrote her back. "I was told it was all missing."
"Don’t know one way or the other," the retired bishop wrote back.
![]() |
Johnson-Harrell with P.O. Agnes Torres |