Nonprofit
Contributions call school board president’s ethics into question
James Pressley, school board president in Pleasantville, N.J., sought money from community businesses who were seeking contracts from the school board. John Froojian, of the Press of Atlantic City, reports that money was solicited for the James A. Pressley Scholarship and Community Youth Build Foundation, although neither the IRS nor the New Jersey Consumer Affairs…
Read MoreShriners investigation
Over a year ago, online investigative reporter Sandy Frost began digging into whistleblower
Read MoreBoy Scouts executives splurge on conference
Tony Saavedra and Teri Sforza of The Orange County Register report on internal travel records showing that executives of the Boy Scouts ran up a tab of over $27,000 at a four-day conference in Key West, Fla. held last January. The Orange County Boy Scouts chapter picked up most of the tab, although they were…
Read MoreNonprofit subsidizes Schwartenegger’s lavish travel
Paul Pringle of the Los Angeles Time reports that much of Gov. Arnold Schwartzenegger’s travel is billed to “an obscure nonprofit group that can qualify its secret donors for full tax deductions.” Not only do watchdogs claim these write-offs are “abuse of tax codes,” but they also create a loophole to limits on campaign finance…
Read MoreHealthcare nonprofits spend millions in federal funds, operate in secrecy
In a two-part series, Clark Kauffman of The Des Moines Register examined the Iowa Foundation for Medical Care, the largest of 53 federally funded Quality Improvement Organizations. The newspaper found that the tax-exempt Iowa foundation, which investigates complaints of poor patient care received by Iowa’s 500,000 Medicare beneficiaries, reviewed only 12 complaints in 2005. That…
Read MoreHospital profits from nonprofit tax loopholes
Tim Darragh and Ann Wlazelek, of The Morning Call, report on the Lehigh Valley (PA) Hospital which posted a record surplus – $ 76 million – in 2005. “Such boomtown prosperity at a nonprofit institution is allowed under the tax code as long as the hospital provides a substantial “community benefit” each year in exchange…
Read MoreCharities lose out in bingo game benefits
Darren Barbee of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram analyzed state records and found the proceeds of bingo games were going to the people running the games instead of benefiting the charities they were supposed to help. “No bingo proceeds were reported being spent by more than 40 Texas groups conducting bingo last year, though they raised…
Read MoreBuilders, nonprofit have close ties
Reese Dunklin of The Dallas Morning News reports that “The low-income housing builders at the heart of the FBI’s corruption investigation at City Hall created a nonprofit organization, stocked it with friends and political allies and used it to obtain more than $3 million in tax-free subsidies that earned their companies millions more in profit.”…
Read MoreDubious charities raise millions
Ronald Campbell of The Orange County Register reviewed more than 10,000 pages of court records, financial reports and other documents and found that former associates of imprisoned charity telemarketing king Mitch Gold have raised more than $83 million in four years for dubious charities. Fundraisers and managers kept almost all the cash, leaving just 7…
Read MoreProgram for disabled exploited
Jeff Kosseff, Bryan Denson and Les Zaitz of The Oregonian used hundreds of interviews, thousands of pages of documents and visits to more than a dozen charities in seven states to show that a program created to benefit Americans with severe disabilities is being exploited at the cost of the people it was supposed to…
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