CNA Staff, Aug 15, 2025 / 13:11 pm
A Pennsylvania priest has been placed on administrative leave after he confessed to local prosecutors last month to falsifying the results of a high-level fundraising raffle at his parish.
Father Ross Miceli allegedly “admitted to publicly falsifying the results of the grand prize winner” of a raffle for either a Corvette or a $50,000 cash prize at St. Jude the Apostle Parish in Erie.
In an Aug. 14 statement, the Diocese of Erie told CNA that Miceli will be placed on administrative leave as part of the ongoing investigation into the priest’s actions. Erie Bishop Lawrence Persico has also recommended that St. Jude Parish hire “an independent forensic auditor to review all finances.”
The priest announced his resignation from the parish on the weekend of July 20, though he did not give a reason at the time. The Erie Diocese said last month that Miceli would be heading to St. Timothy Parish in Curwensville starting on Aug. 12, where he would be a “sacramental assistant.”
The diocese also said in its Aug. 14 statement St. Jude’s will “sell the car from the fundraiser back to the dealer, and the parish will attempt to refund all raffle ticket purchases.”
The Catholic parish hosted the “Winavette” raffle in 2024, allowing buyers to purchase $50 tickets for the chance to win a Stingray 1LT Corvette. The grand-prize winner of the event could take either the car or $50,000 in cash. The raffle was open to players nationwide.
On Dec. 25, 2024, the church announced that “Martin Anderson” of Detroit had won the grand prize. The reported winner “chose the cash option,” the church said.
Yet an employee of the parish allegedly “raised concerns” about the raffle to Persico, according to the warrants, leading the diocese to investigate the contest and eventually contact the county prosecutor’s office.
The priest reportedly “admitted [to the employee] that he fabricated the grand-prize winner’s name,” the Times-News reported, citing the documents. The priest allegedly committed the falsification after “a problem with the raffle system” left the grand prize without a winner.
The priest said the prize money was “still in an account” after the fabrication. Miceli allegedly told the employee that he “needed to keep this secret,” according to prosecutors. Miceli also allegedly fabricated several other winners in the raffle.
Miceli’s confession was reportedly detailed in warrants from the Erie County District Attorney’s Office, according to an Aug. 7 report in the Erie Times-News.
Detectives seized Miceli’s iPad and iPhone as well as financial records for both the parish and the raffle, the Erie paper reported.
Law enforcement handling the case did not respond to a query from CNA on Aug. 7.
But the diocese told the Times-News that it was aware of the investigation and was “cooperating fully with the appropriate authorities.”
On Facebook the church posted that 2024 was the “last year” the raffle would be held, though they noted that Father John Detisch was operatinga similar raffle at Dubois Central Catholic School in Dubois.