
Matt Sowash, founder of Holy Ground Tiny Homes, stands outside a 32-foot home that it built. (Images courtesy of YouTube)
In a TikTok video posted July 27, Matt Sowash wears a âMy Life Was a Fiasco Without Jesusâ T-shirt, stands beside a half-built tiny home and makes his sales pitch.
âIf youâre looking for a 24-footer in the next couple of weeks, Iâve got it!â he tells his 77,000 followers.
Six days later, another video from the same account: âWe’ve got your new tiny home ready and waiting!â And again two weeks later: âWe’ve got a tiny home for you!â
But customers of Holy Ground Tiny Homes say it does not have a tiny home for you. It doesnât even have a tiny home for them. And theyâve paid tens of thousands of dollars.
The Englewood nonprofit and its owner Sowash â a convicted fraudster who was once the intended target of a bungled murder plot involving rattlesnakes â have taken their money, lied repeatedly about when their homes will be built, and refused to issue refunds, according to seven customers who spoke to BusinessDen and three others suing Holy Ground.
âHe took my money knowing, âIâm not going to give this woman a house anytime soon, if ever.â Thereâs no doubt about that now,â said Lori Birckhead, a Tennessee woman who took out a loan and wired $46,500 to Holy Ground in April for a home she was promised would arrive in July. She has since been told it will be delivered in 27 to 30 months.
Another customerâs lawsuit estimates âhundreds of consumers throughout Colorado and the United States have wired their life savingsâ to Holy Ground for tiny homes they didnât receive. Some have waited 18 months for a house they were promised would arrive in three months.
As word has trickled out â the Better Business Bureau now gives Holy Ground an F rating â and customers across the country have organized online, Sowash has tried to quiet criticisms by warning that complaints and bad reviews will make matters even worse for clients.
In an interview, Sowash acknowledged that some customers have waited a long time for their houses and some will have to wait a long time still. It is all part of what he called âa constant juggling act to get us out of the situation that we got ourselves into.â
âI canât help what has happened,â Sowash said of the past 18 months. âI take full responsibility for any time length, no matter what the situation. What Iâm trying to convey to you is that we care about these people more than anyone can ever really imagine.â
âOut of the Wild Westâ
In 2006, Sowash co-founded a free amateur poker league in Denver â cashing in on a game that was exploding in popularity. After straddling a legal line for a while, by 2007 there were law enforcement investigations, a failed Las Vegas tournament and angry investors.
As police scrutinized the leagueâs gambling, they discovered something darker: Herb Beck, a bitter investor, and Christopher Steelman, a private investigator heâd hired, planned to kill Sowash by building a box, filling it with poisonous rattlesnakes, kidnapping him, forcing his legs into the box until the snakes bit him, taking him to a hiking trail and leaving him to die.
âItâs a story out of the Wild West,â a spokesman for the Colorado Bureau of Investigation said at the time. âThereâs poker, rattlesnakes and unsavory characters. The only thing I havenât heard is someone calling another guy a varmint.â

Matt Sowash, then 34, was sentenced to five years in prison for felony theft in 2009. (The Denver Post)
Beck and Steelman each pleaded guilty to one count of extortion and were sentenced to probation. Sowash, then 34, pleaded guilty to felony theft for bilking investors out of $470,000 and was sentenced to five years in prison. He served less than two.
While in prison, Sowash converted to Christianity. In 2019, he says, God whispered to him during a moment of frustration and doubt: âMatt, build a tiny house.â
Holy Ground Tiny Homes was born. In July 2020, the Internal Revenue Service determined it was a charity exempt from federal taxes, records show. By the next year, marketing led to a flurry of orders, Sowash said. Too many. After the cost of construction materials soared last year, Holy Ground raised prices but still built about 100 homes at a loss of $1 million, Sowash claims.
Others werenât built at all.
Theresa Meggitt, of Lakewood, says she ordered hers in February 2021, sent a down payment of $14,000 and was told to expect it in July 2021. She liked Holy Groundâs low prices and Christian message but now believes both were lies. She hasnât received the home.
Robyn and Mark Bellamy, who live in Oregon, each bought a Holy Ground house that spring. She wired $48,000 in March 2021 with assurances it would be finished that July; he sent $22,000 for a house he was told to expect in October, according to their June 6 lawsuit in Arapahoe County District Court. Neither received a house or refund.
After meeting Sowash at a Denver home show in October, Timarie Bashorâs 16-year-old daughter took out a personal loan and put $14,000 down on a Holy Ground home. The Northern Colorado mother and daughter were, like others, initially impressed.
âTheir prices were a whole lot less than other companies. That was the biggest reason. And I liked that it was a nonprofit. I believed in what they said,â Bashor said.
That late spring day when the home was supposed to arrive has come and gone. So, too, has a second deadline in July. Bashor has asked for a refund but knows not to expect one.
âHe has everyone afraidâÂ
Through it all, Sowash has never stopped selling houses. Because he canât.
âIf I only built those older homes,â he said of homes ordered in 2021, âweâd be out of business in a month because we donât have any money.â Holy Ground uses new money to finish old orders.

Matt Sowash wears a T-shirt stating “If You Bring Up My Past You Should Know That Jesus Dropped The Charges” in a December 2021 video. (Images courtesy of YouTube)
âThere is no way he can keep going like he is,â customer Cory Anderson said of Sowash.
Anderson considers himself one of the lucky ones. The Utah man wired $34,500 to Holy Ground in March, despite misgivings about a too-good-to-be-true price, and was told to expect his house in July. âThe second the wire transfer went across, I had this sinking feeling.â
Eventually, he says, he was able to get a refund. â(Sowash) was patting himself on the back left and right because he finally made good on something and all the while Iâm thinking, âThis is awful, he just sent me a bunch of peopleâs down payments to get me off his back.â â
Clara Davis, a 24-year-old teacher in upstate New York, was told early this year that she would receive free shipping by Aug. 1 if she paid for her tiny home in full. So, she wired her life savings, more than $42,000, to Holy Ground, according to a federal lawsuit she filed Aug. 12. Like others, Davis never received a house or a refund. The lawsuit is pending.
Birckhead, the Tennessee woman who has been told to wait 27-30 months for her house, operates a nonprofit farm where she grows food for Nashville-area food banks. The tiny home isnât for her, itâs for a young homeless woman who works on her farm.
âIt makes you feel really ridiculous. You think, how did a halfway intelligent person â how did I do this? But I really wanted this tiny house for this poor girl,â Birckhead said.
Disheartened Holy Ground customers say they have sought help from police, prosecutors, attorneys, private investigators, the BBB and the IRS, with little success so far. Sowash, by his own admission, has told them that posting negative reviews or filing complaints will only make their situations worse by restricting the cash flow he needs to build their orders.
âSomebody reached out to me and said, âPlease shut up because if this guy goes out of business, we all lose our money,â â Anderson recalled. âHe has everyone afraid that if these reviews gain any traction then it is going to shut him down.â
Sowash insists that customers are happy with the product.
âEvery bad review youâll see on BBB is all about timeframe. Itâs not about quality of construction. People love our homes, when they get them. I mean, we build a great home.â
Holy Ground is operating on a financial treadmill it canât step off of, a precarious position that requires it to take orders it likely wonât fulfill soon.
And its biggest gamble is yet to come: a planned 54-unit tiny home village at 5030 York St. in the Elyria Swansea neighborhood. Sowash said he âbelieves in his heartâ the village is a blessing from God that will fix Holy Groundâs finances.
âIâm praying, brother, that this is the time that we will be able to do the things that we need to be able to do to really get out of the hole, get people caught up and either refund their money or build them a house, whichever they want, and move forward,â he said.
At the center of it all â Holy Groundâs past, its future and its failures â sits Sowash. In 2007, a former employee of his failed poker league described Sowash as âa convincing salesmanâ who could âlook at people with his big blue eyes, tell them âI don’t lie,â and they believed him.â
In the eyes of angry Holy Ground customers, Sowash is a fraud who will never change his stripes. In his own eyes, he says, he is a reformed man carrying out the whispered wishes of God.
âI donât sleep well, brother. I really donât,â he said. âBecause my compassion is for these people. I donât make any money. I live in the back of one of my car garages. I donât have a house. I donât have a home. Thatâs where I live. I donât draw a salary.
“So, itâs not like Iâm doing this for the money.â

Matt Sowash, founder of Holy Ground Tiny Homes, stands outside a 32-foot home that it built. (Images courtesy of YouTube)
In a TikTok video posted July 27, Matt Sowash wears a âMy Life Was a Fiasco Without Jesusâ T-shirt, stands beside a half-built tiny home and makes his sales pitch.
âIf youâre looking for a 24-footer in the next couple of weeks, Iâve got it!â he tells his 77,000 followers.
Six days later, another video from the same account: âWe’ve got your new tiny home ready and waiting!â And again two weeks later: âWe’ve got a tiny home for you!â
But customers of Holy Ground Tiny Homes say it does not have a tiny home for you. It doesnât even have a tiny home for them. And theyâve paid tens of thousands of dollars.
The Englewood nonprofit and its owner Sowash â a convicted fraudster who was once the intended target of a bungled murder plot involving rattlesnakes â have taken their money, lied repeatedly about when their homes will be built, and refused to issue refunds, according to seven customers who spoke to BusinessDen and three others suing Holy Ground.
âHe took my money knowing, âIâm not going to give this woman a house anytime soon, if ever.â Thereâs no doubt about that now,â said Lori Birckhead, a Tennessee woman who took out a loan and wired $46,500 to Holy Ground in April for a home she was promised would arrive in July. She has since been told it will be delivered in 27 to 30 months.
Another customerâs lawsuit estimates âhundreds of consumers throughout Colorado and the United States have wired their life savingsâ to Holy Ground for tiny homes they didnât receive. Some have waited 18 months for a house they were promised would arrive in three months.
As word has trickled out â the Better Business Bureau now gives Holy Ground an F rating â and customers across the country have organized online, Sowash has tried to quiet criticisms by warning that complaints and bad reviews will make matters even worse for clients.
In an interview, Sowash acknowledged that some customers have waited a long time for their houses and some will have to wait a long time still. It is all part of what he called âa constant juggling act to get us out of the situation that we got ourselves into.â
âI canât help what has happened,â Sowash said of the past 18 months. âI take full responsibility for any time length, no matter what the situation. What Iâm trying to convey to you is that we care about these people more than anyone can ever really imagine.â
âOut of the Wild Westâ
In 2006, Sowash co-founded a free amateur poker league in Denver â cashing in on a game that was exploding in popularity. After straddling a legal line for a while, by 2007 there were law enforcement investigations, a failed Las Vegas tournament and angry investors.
As police scrutinized the leagueâs gambling, they discovered something darker: Herb Beck, a bitter investor, and Christopher Steelman, a private investigator heâd hired, planned to kill Sowash by building a box, filling it with poisonous rattlesnakes, kidnapping him, forcing his legs into the box until the snakes bit him, taking him to a hiking trail and leaving him to die.
âItâs a story out of the Wild West,â a spokesman for the Colorado Bureau of Investigation said at the time. âThereâs poker, rattlesnakes and unsavory characters. The only thing I havenât heard is someone calling another guy a varmint.â

Matt Sowash, then 34, was sentenced to five years in prison for felony theft in 2009. (The Denver Post)
Beck and Steelman each pleaded guilty to one count of extortion and were sentenced to probation. Sowash, then 34, pleaded guilty to felony theft for bilking investors out of $470,000 and was sentenced to five years in prison. He served less than two.
While in prison, Sowash converted to Christianity. In 2019, he says, God whispered to him during a moment of frustration and doubt: âMatt, build a tiny house.â
Holy Ground Tiny Homes was born. In July 2020, the Internal Revenue Service determined it was a charity exempt from federal taxes, records show. By the next year, marketing led to a flurry of orders, Sowash said. Too many. After the cost of construction materials soared last year, Holy Ground raised prices but still built about 100 homes at a loss of $1 million, Sowash claims.
Others werenât built at all.
Theresa Meggitt, of Lakewood, says she ordered hers in February 2021, sent a down payment of $14,000 and was told to expect it in July 2021. She liked Holy Groundâs low prices and Christian message but now believes both were lies. She hasnât received the home.
Robyn and Mark Bellamy, who live in Oregon, each bought a Holy Ground house that spring. She wired $48,000 in March 2021 with assurances it would be finished that July; he sent $22,000 for a house he was told to expect in October, according to their June 6 lawsuit in Arapahoe County District Court. Neither received a house or refund.
After meeting Sowash at a Denver home show in October, Timarie Bashorâs 16-year-old daughter took out a personal loan and put $14,000 down on a Holy Ground home. The Northern Colorado mother and daughter were, like others, initially impressed.
âTheir prices were a whole lot less than other companies. That was the biggest reason. And I liked that it was a nonprofit. I believed in what they said,â Bashor said.
That late spring day when the home was supposed to arrive has come and gone. So, too, has a second deadline in July. Bashor has asked for a refund but knows not to expect one.
âHe has everyone afraidâÂ
Through it all, Sowash has never stopped selling houses. Because he canât.
âIf I only built those older homes,â he said of homes ordered in 2021, âweâd be out of business in a month because we donât have any money.â Holy Ground uses new money to finish old orders.

Matt Sowash wears a T-shirt stating “If You Bring Up My Past You Should Know That Jesus Dropped The Charges” in a December 2021 video. (Images courtesy of YouTube)
âThere is no way he can keep going like he is,â customer Cory Anderson said of Sowash.
Anderson considers himself one of the lucky ones. The Utah man wired $34,500 to Holy Ground in March, despite misgivings about a too-good-to-be-true price, and was told to expect his house in July. âThe second the wire transfer went across, I had this sinking feeling.â
Eventually, he says, he was able to get a refund. â(Sowash) was patting himself on the back left and right because he finally made good on something and all the while Iâm thinking, âThis is awful, he just sent me a bunch of peopleâs down payments to get me off his back.â â
Clara Davis, a 24-year-old teacher in upstate New York, was told early this year that she would receive free shipping by Aug. 1 if she paid for her tiny home in full. So, she wired her life savings, more than $42,000, to Holy Ground, according to a federal lawsuit she filed Aug. 12. Like others, Davis never received a house or a refund. The lawsuit is pending.
Birckhead, the Tennessee woman who has been told to wait 27-30 months for her house, operates a nonprofit farm where she grows food for Nashville-area food banks. The tiny home isnât for her, itâs for a young homeless woman who works on her farm.
âIt makes you feel really ridiculous. You think, how did a halfway intelligent person â how did I do this? But I really wanted this tiny house for this poor girl,â Birckhead said.
Disheartened Holy Ground customers say they have sought help from police, prosecutors, attorneys, private investigators, the BBB and the IRS, with little success so far. Sowash, by his own admission, has told them that posting negative reviews or filing complaints will only make their situations worse by restricting the cash flow he needs to build their orders.
âSomebody reached out to me and said, âPlease shut up because if this guy goes out of business, we all lose our money,â â Anderson recalled. âHe has everyone afraid that if these reviews gain any traction then it is going to shut him down.â
Sowash insists that customers are happy with the product.
âEvery bad review youâll see on BBB is all about timeframe. Itâs not about quality of construction. People love our homes, when they get them. I mean, we build a great home.â
Holy Ground is operating on a financial treadmill it canât step off of, a precarious position that requires it to take orders it likely wonât fulfill soon.
And its biggest gamble is yet to come: a planned 54-unit tiny home village at 5030 York St. in the Elyria Swansea neighborhood. Sowash said he âbelieves in his heartâ the village is a blessing from God that will fix Holy Groundâs finances.
âIâm praying, brother, that this is the time that we will be able to do the things that we need to be able to do to really get out of the hole, get people caught up and either refund their money or build them a house, whichever they want, and move forward,â he said.
At the center of it all â Holy Groundâs past, its future and its failures â sits Sowash. In 2007, a former employee of his failed poker league described Sowash as âa convincing salesmanâ who could âlook at people with his big blue eyes, tell them âI don’t lie,â and they believed him.â
In the eyes of angry Holy Ground customers, Sowash is a fraud who will never change his stripes. In his own eyes, he says, he is a reformed man carrying out the whispered wishes of God.
âI donât sleep well, brother. I really donât,â he said. âBecause my compassion is for these people. I donât make any money. I live in the back of one of my car garages. I donât have a house. I donât have a home. Thatâs where I live. I donât draw a salary.
“So, itâs not like Iâm doing this for the money.â