George A. Smith, in a sermon from 1864, accuses Warren Parrish and other dissenters of stealing from the safe of the Kirtland Bank.
George A. Smith, "Historical Discourse," November 15, 1864, Journal of Discourses, 26 vols. (Liverpool: B. Young, Jun., 1867), 11:11
Warren Parrish was the teller of the bank, and a number of other men who apostatized were officers. They took out of its vault, unknown to the President or cashier, a hundred thousand dollars, and sent their agents around among the brethren to purchase their farms, wagons, cattle, horses and every thing they could get hold of. The brethren would gather up this money and put it into the bank, and those traitors would steal it and send it out to buy again, and they continued to do so until the plot was discovered and payment stopped. It was the cursed apostates—their stealing and robberies, and their infernal villainies that prevented that bank being conducted as the Prophet designed. If they had followed the counsel of Joseph, there is not a doubt but that it would have been the leading bank in Ohio, probably of the nation.