The Watch Tower Society, the parent company of Jehovah's Witnesses, has built a financial and doctrinal empire that oscillates between religious devotion and institutional opacity. With a model that combines massive voluntary donations, multimillion-dollar investments, and hierarchical control, this organization has faced accusations of covering up sexual abuse, opaque fund management, and doctrinal manipulation. This book explores how the combination of coercive dogma, social isolation, and lack of transparency has turned the Watch Tower into a paradigmatic case of institutionalized abuse, where organizational survival takes precedence over human dignity.