Elder,volunteerindictedmin scamfifePair charged with swindling seniors out of $300,000TAMPA (AP) — Two men connected to Greater Ministries International have been accused of ' swindling elderly people out ofnearly $300,000.Patrick Henry Talbert, a church elder who has organized financial trusts for ministry followers and Norman Lower, a ministry volunteer, were indicted Thursday on 42- counts of racketeering, conspiracy,- securities fraud, theft and other ! charges.The indictment is not related to Greater Ministries, though federal investigators are looking into allegations of money laundering and fraud within the group.Talbert reportedly promoted a program called Faith Promises, a suspected Ponzi scheme, in meetings across the country.A Ponzi scheme is one in which organizers promise high profits, then use new investors’ money to pay off earlier investors, all the while needing more and more new * i investors to keep up with growing numbers of earlier investors.Talbert and Lower also pitched DTA Trust, known alternately as Down Town Auto and Diversified Telecommunications Agency, to 11 elderly investors, state officials said.Investigators say Lower and Talbert spent some of the $280,000 they raised for DTA trust on themselves, put some in personal accounts and gave some to relatives.A Sebring couple with $100,000 invested in Down Town Auto reportedly were told the money jWent into a shop that spruced up ■cars to be exported for lucrative *sales.According to a previous civil ■^lawsuit, once the couple’s promised ‘payments didn’t materialize, they -went looking for the shop and found ,!a one-bay garage where no one had heard of DTA, or of Talbert or