Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Many Donor-Advised Funds Don’t Disclose Executive Pay

by Gary Snyder    

Seven of the nation’s 11 largest donor-advised funds controlling more than $30 billion in assets don’t report the pay of their highest executives, according to an analysis by The Chronicle.

Donor-advised funds belong to a special category of charity that is growing fast. The funds are subject to federal pay-disclosure laws like every other tax-exempt group in the United States.

Experts say the funds probably aren’t doing anything illegal by not reporting executive pay, but many say they are violating the intent of federal rules and laws intended to bring transparency to the nonprofit world.

"This is not transparency. The public should know what’s going on," says Dean Zerbe, a former aide to the Senate Finance Committee, where he investigated charities.

Donor-advised funds collect money from individuals who get an immediate tax deduction and then can channel that money to any charity they want at any time.

The Schwab Charitable Fund and the Vanguard Charitable Endowment Program (the second and third largest commercial donor-advised funds in the country by revenue) reported paying their presidents $600,000 and $314,000, respectively, in calendar year 2013, according to the organizations’ 2014 Forms 990.

Renaissance Charitable Foundation, which is affiliated with Renaissance Administration LLC, a for-profit charitable-services provider in Indianapolis, reported paying its leader $89,292 in 2014. The Ayco Charitable Foundation reported paying John Mastriani, its president and a member of the Board of Directors, $8,500 in 2015, during which time he reported working two hours a week at the charity.

Representatives of the Morgan Stanley Global Impact Funding Trust, U.S. Charitable Gift Trust, the Bank of America Charitable Gift Fund, and the Raymond James Charitable Endowment Fund declined to comment or did not respond to repeated requests for comment from The Chronicle.

Mr. Zerbe, who left Capitol Hill to be National Managing Director at Alliantgroup, which helps businesses find tax credits and incentives, also is skeptical that volunteers lead the donor-advised funds. "These things aren’t running on autopilot," he told The Chronicle.

Mr. Zerbe, who helped craft the 2006 Pension Protection Act, which overhauled many of the laws governing nonprofits, says executive pay should be reported even if it isn’t necessarily legally required. If it isn’t listed on the 990, Mr. Zerbe says, it should be posted on the nonprofit’s website. "Salaries and compensation are a cornerstone of the 990," he says.

Nonprofit Imperative gathers its information principally from public documents...some of which are directly quoted. Virtually all cited are in some phase of criminal proceedings; some have not been charged, however. Cites in various media: Featured in print, broadcast, and online media outlets, including: Charity Navigator, Vermont Public Radio, Miami Herald, National Public Radio (NPR), Huffington Post, The Sun News, Atlanta Journal Constitution, Wall Street Journal (Profile, News and Photos), “Betrayal”, (a movie), NBC (on Charity Fraud…TBD), FOX2, ABC Spotlight on the News, WWJ Radio, Marie Claire, Ethics World, Aspen Philanthropy Newsletter, Harvard Business Review, Current Affairs, Charity Navigator, The Chronicle of Philanthropy, St. Petersburg Times, Board Room Insider, USA Today Topics, Accountants News, Newsweek.com, Responsive Philanthropy Magazine, New York Times, Portfolio Magazine, The Virgin Islands Daily News, NANKAI (China) BUSINESS REVIEW, National Religious Broadcasters newsletter, The Charity Governance Blog, American Chronicle, Palm Beach Post, Detroit Free Press, Oakland Press, Nonprofit World, Socially Responsible Business Forum, PNNOnline, Ohio Nonprofit Resources, Nonprofit Good Practice Guide, Nonprofit Startup Guide, Nonprofit Blog, National Coalition of Homeless Newsletter, Finance and Administration Roundtable Newsletter, MichiganNonprofit.com, CORP! Magazine, Crain’s Michigan Nonprofit, ncrp.org, PhilanTopic, Nashville Free Press, Nonprofit Law Blog, Seniors World Chronicle, Carnegie Reporter, Assoc. of Certified Fraud Examiners Examiner, msnbc.com, Worchester (MA) Telegram and Gazette, Carnegie Corporation of America, EO Tax Journal, Wikipedia: Non-profit Organizations; Parent: Wise Austin, Accountants News, Veterans Today, Answers.com, Far-roundtable, #Nonprofit Report, nonprofithelpnews, nonprofit news; National Enquirer, Northwest Herald, The HelpWise Daily, The #Nonprofit Report, Wikipedia (Nonprofit Organization), Answers.com, Nonprofits: On the Brink (2006) Silence: The Impending Threat to the Charitable Sector (2011)

Monday, April 25, 2016

A Serial Charity Thief Of Almost $500,000, Plus More

by Gary Snyder


When former Triangle Area Network (TAN) director Peggy Lynn Gibson pleaded guilty to embezzling more than $200,000 from the nonprofit in front of Jefferson County’s 252nd District Court Judge Raquel West many were surprised that the charismatic and energetic executive would be morally capable of such indiscretion. However, this isn’t the first time Gibson has absconded with tens of thousands of dollars meant for the healthcare of those she was paid to assist.

“It did not show up on any of the background checks,” TAN board of directors president Jeff McManus said of eventually learning that Gibson had embezzled from her last employer before finding a new victim in the nonprofit TAN, staffed mostly by volunteers. “From what I know now, she was barely out of that when she started with us.”

According to information obtained by The Examiner, Gibson was charged with embezzling at least $108,000 from Texas Home Health in Hardin County while she was employed by the healthcare provider in 2009. At the end of 2010, she agreed to pay back the money in exchange for the complainant dismissing charges. By January 2012, it appears she still had yet to make good on her end of the bargain as a Hardin County grand jury indicted Gibson on second-degree theft charges for the 2009 embezzlement. A little more than a year later, in July 2013, Hardin County prosecutors moved to dismiss the charges because “the defendant has paid restitution in full.”

Where she got the money to pay off her $100,000-plus bounty is open to speculation, but according to the Jefferson County indictment that charges she went on to embezzle more than $363,000 from TAN, her crimes against the Beaumont nonprofit.

An out-of-state criminal background check may have alerted someone to at least some of Gibson’s prior bad acts, but they would have to know some of her many other names – such as Peggy Coker, Peggy Redmond and Peggy Doan.

It was under the name Peggy Doan that the admitted embezzler was first convicted of theft. According to a criminal background check, Gibson (Doan) pleaded guilty to two counts of theft and one count of forgery in El Paso County, Colorado in 1996. She was given deferred adjudication and a fine.

Gibson later went on to register a string of businesses – some of which are still in operation, according to filings made with the state of Texas. It is alleged that one way she was able to embezzle from past employers was by opening up similarly named companies and depositing checks meant for the legitimate firm. 


Nonprofit Imperative gathers its information principally from public documents...some of which are directly quoted. Virtually all cited are in some phase of criminal proceedings; some have not been charged, however. Cites in various media: Featured in print, broadcast, and online media outlets, including: Charity Navigator, Vermont Public Radio, Miami Herald, National Public Radio (NPR), Huffington Post, The Sun News, Atlanta Journal Constitution, Wall Street Journal (Profile, News and Photos), “Betrayal”, (a movie), NBC (on Charity Fraud…TBD), FOX2, ABC Spotlight on the News, WWJ Radio, Marie Claire, Ethics World, Aspen Philanthropy Newsletter, Harvard Business Review, Current Affairs, Charity Navigator, The Chronicle of Philanthropy, St. Petersburg Times, Board Room Insider, USA Today Topics, Accountants News, Newsweek.com, Responsive Philanthropy Magazine, New York Times, Portfolio Magazine, The Virgin Islands Daily News, NANKAI (China) BUSINESS REVIEW, National Religious Broadcasters newsletter, The Charity Governance Blog, American Chronicle, Palm Beach Post, Detroit Free Press, Oakland Press, Nonprofit World, Socially Responsible Business Forum, PNNOnline, Ohio Nonprofit Resources, Nonprofit Good Practice Guide, Nonprofit Startup Guide, Nonprofit Blog, National Coalition of Homeless Newsletter, Finance and Administration Roundtable Newsletter, MichiganNonprofit.com, CORP! Magazine, Crain’s Michigan Nonprofit, ncrp.org, PhilanTopic, Nashville Free Press, Nonprofit Law Blog, Seniors World Chronicle, Carnegie Reporter, Assoc. of Certified Fraud Examiners Examiner, msnbc.com, Worchester (MA) Telegram and Gazette, Carnegie Corporation of America, EO Tax Journal, Wikipedia: Non-profit Organizations; Parent: Wise Austin, Accountants News, Veterans Today, Answers.com, Far-roundtable, #Nonprofit Report, nonprofithelpnews, nonprofit news; National Enquirer, Northwest Herald, The HelpWise Daily, The #Nonprofit Report, Wikipedia (Nonprofit Organization), Answers.com, Nonprofits: On the Brink (2006) Silence: The Impending Threat to the Charitable Sector (2011)

Thursday, April 14, 2016

Nonprofit Imperative Mid April E-newsletter



Nonprofit Imperative
your nonprofit browser
April 2016

The monthly newsletter dedicated to:
  • exposing the crisis in nonprofit fraud leadership…a crisis of pervasive and monumental waste, fraud, abuse, mismanagement, and malfeasance throughout the charitable sector which costs taxpayers and contributors tens of billions of dollars annually; and,
  • seeking reforms that will restore the public’s lost confidence in the sector.
What’s Included:
Skunk of the Month:
Priest Takes $400,000; Healing Arts Institute Lost $750,000
Breaking the Silence:
Wounded Warrior Project…more Vet Info.
Charity Check Up:
$75 million Cancer Charity Malfeasance
A Thought or Two:
Nonprofit Diversified Behavioral Comprehensive  Care Lost $8 million
Nonprofit News-In Case You Missed It:
IRS; $4 Million Megachurch; Steven Cohen Commits $75 Million To Vets…more
Political/Official Chicanery:
SD; NY; IN; MI; FL; VT…more
What Do You Think?
·       To do good, donors must do their homework
·       Give without being taken

"Board members of the city’s nonprofits must take more responsibility and become better stewards of their organizations, says a new report released Tuesday, the second self-examination of the sector to come out in the past month, a recently released report from the Human Services Council said.”

·       Fraud is on the rise at nonprofit organizations, and it’s increasing frequency and cost;
·       Nonprofit organizations account for 11% of all occupational fraud recorded (nonprofits represent only 5.4% of GNP)
·       Nonprofit organizations suffered the largest median losses in the study
·       Most fraudsters (90%) have never been punished or terminated by an employer for fraud-related conduct
Skunk of the Month…
        “They came to do good and they did very well indeed (for themselves).”

Skunk of the Month is the twice-monthly designation made by Nonprofit Imperative, the organization dedicated to eliminating waste, fraud, abuse and mismanagement in nonprofits and government. The Skunk of the Month award is given to charities and government officials who show blatant disregard for the interests and trust of contributors and taxpayers. This month’s example is:

Priest Gambled Away About $400,000 Meant For Refugees
According to reports in the Canadian media, an Ontario-based Catholic priest is under investigation on suspicion of gambling away funds that had been set aside to provide for refugees newly settled in Canada.

Father Amer Saka, a priest at the St. Joseph Chaldean Catholic Church in London, Ontario, is suspected to have lost roughly half a million Canadian dollars (equivalent to $380,000 U.S.) that had been entrusted to him by local families keen on sponsoring new arrivals from the Middle East.
He lost all the money by ‘Gambling,’" church's bishop, Emanuel Shaleta, told the Toronto Star. Seven to eight families had given their donations to Saka. "They trusted him. They did not give it as a gift. They were trusting the priest. They didn't ask for receipts," he said.
Canada's government-led program to give sanctuary to tens of thousands of Syrian and Iraqi refugees involves the combined efforts of the state as well as private donations to sponsor refugee arrivals. Saka was in charge of funds raised by the Hamilton Diocese to sponsor 20 Iraqi refugees.
$750,000 Theft Ends Up With Worse Charges
This is scary: After leaving her office for the day, a man holding a cup approached her, the authorities said. The cup was filled with a chemical drain cleaner, and he flung the liquid at her, severely burning her face. The executive of Healing Arts Initiative was targeted to cover up a scheme led by a former bookkeeper for the organization to embezzle more than $750,000, according to a 65-count indictment. The bookkeeper, Kim Williams, created dozens of bank accounts under fake names, where she deposited more than $600,000 for herself and another $150,000 for a friend, who was also arrested. The executive noticed money was missing and called a meeting to discuss it; days thereafter the accountant hired an outsider to perform the act. The recently hired executive was hospitalized with severe burns and required multiple surgeries. She has not returned to work, officials said. (nytimes)
Breaking the Silence:
More On Wounded Warrior Firings
Steven Nardizzi and Al Giordano were fired from Wounded Warrior Project for extravagant spending practices.
They are not going away quietly.
The reports highlighted expensive conferences, travel, and other lavish spending by the nonprofit. The Times investigation also featured interviews with employees who said they were fired for minor offenses or disloyalty.
Together they started a blog, the Wounded Truth, devoted to attacking media investigations into Wounded Warrior Project.
Its first post appears to be from March 17 and highlights a criticism of the media investigations carried out by the Charity Defense Council. Mr. Nardizzi serves on the steering committee of the defense council’s advisory board, and the council received a $150,000 grant from the veterans charity, according to Wounded Warrior’s 2013 Form 990.
They were featured in television interviews defending themselves and Wounded Warrior with a local Fox TV station in New York and with Brian Kilmeade, co-host of Fox & Friends. They also penned an op-ed for The Washington Examiner this week attacking the media reports and defending their former organization.  (Chronicle of Philanthropy)
An Army veteran has been named to the position of interim chief operating officer of the Wounded Warrior Project after a major shakeup at the nation's largest veterans charity in the wake of investigations including a culture of fear at the Jacksonville-based nonprofit.
More Vet theft: A woman has been indicted on charges of defrauding an organization that works with veterans. Investigators say she was given thousands of dollars for a benefit that was never held. They say she stole the identity of the founder of "Veterans Hope Charity" and opened a credit card account, charging $25,000.
Even More On Vet Charities: More than two months after Donald Trump skipped a Republican debate to hold a fundraiser for veterans, the targeted beneficiaries are still seeing most of the promised money. Nineteen of the 22 veterans’ charities to which Trump promised to donate the proceeds, and found that only about $2.4 million of the $6 million raised has been distributed. (wsj)
More On Trump: A list of Donald Trump’s donations over the past five years, compiled in a list by his campaign, did not include a single contribution of his own money, a Washington Post analysis reported. Trump has claimed he’s given more than $102 million to charity in the last five years. But the Post found of the 4,844 donations listed in the campaign’s report, most of the contributions consisted of free rounds of golf at his courses for charity auctions and raffles. The newspaper also reported the largest donations on the list were land-conservation agreements to waive development rights on some of his properties. 
Charity Check Up:
The Sugarcoating Of Cancer Charity Fraud
He took $75 million from donors and the punishment he got was that he can no longer do the same because they took away his keys to the vault. The two bogus charities-Cancer Support Services and Cancer Fund of America-he set up were closed and he is barred from making money through charity fund-raising or working in the not-for-profit world. (Freep)

The reality is that he remains a very wealthy man. The amount he took according to the “FTC and our state enforcement partners… have ended a pernicious charity fraud that siphoned hundreds of millions of dollars away from well-meaning consumers, legitimate charities, and people with cancer who needed the services the defendants.“ It seems like he got away with much more than reported.

“Today’s agreement helps ensure that the charitable donations of Michigan residents are used as intended by their donors and for the good of society,” according to Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette.

This is nonsense. Both of these are public pronouncements are attempts to cover the magnitude of the problem.

The fraud we uncovered from public records taken from charities and taxpayers is enormous and it is a sliver of the actual amount. Studies suggest that charity fraud amounts in excess of $40 billion.
                                    ----------------------------------
On the day of the press conference on the two bogus charities, public documents reveal that…
1. Another charitable foundation was defrauded out of $75 million;
2.Twelve Detroit principals, an administrator and a vendor were charged in a $1-2.7 million kickback scheme;
3. A youth baseball league charity was ripped off for $22,000;
4. Millions of dollars were taken from an animal cruelty charity;
5. A Kentucky church was hit for $274,000;
6. A township Supervisor is accused of embezzling from the Fraternal Order of the Eagles;
7. A treasurer of a youth football league is accused of taking $204,000.
This magnitude of charity fraud is a daily occurrence. 

The likelihood of restitution is minimal.  Restitution is seldom discharged. In some instances, legal authorities do not even seek it.
A Thought or Two:
Nonprofit Caught In Huge Fraud
Nonprofit Diversified Behavioral Comprehensive Care, which billed itself as a group that provided social services and mental health care to children and their families, was charged with illegally spending more than $8 million in taxpayer money. The owner admitted at a federal hearing to submitting two nearly identical grants — one for $450,000 and another for $342,000 — to fund his personal and business, according to a Department of Justice release. Previously, State investigators alleged in their joint 2011 report that the owner mismanaged or misused portions of the $18 million in state grants he received.
He remains free on bond and is due back in court in July for sentencing.

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Nonprofit News…
In Case You Missed It:
1.     Nearly seven out of 10 charities expect to raise more money in the coming year, with 15 percent of groups projecting growth of more than 15 percent, a survey has found.
2.  A man has pleaded guilty in a $1 million charity fraud case involving the sale of donated mattresses contributed to the Ecumenical Refugee and Immigration Services Inc. in Denver, officials said.
3.     A federal appeals court slammed the Internal Revenue Service for what it called three years of “continuous resistance” to turning over documents in connection with a class-action suit brought by tea party groups singled out for months of delays, excessive paperwork and scrutiny as they sought tax-exempt status in 2010. A unanimous ruling by a three-judge panel of the Cincinnati-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit found that the IRS, in its unresponsiveness to the charges, “has only compounded the conduct that gave rise” to them. The case was brought by the NorCal Tea Party Patriots and other groups, in 2013.
4.     A California accountant was sentenced to nearly five years in prison for stealing more than $4 million from a megachurch and the Western States Golf Association, a California group for which he served as treasurer, from 2007 to 2014 to feed a growing gambling addiction. 
5.     Good Vet News: Billionaire hedge-fund investor Steven A. Cohen is committing $275 million to form a national network of free mental health clinics for military veterans and their families. The pledge is his biggest yet under a philanthropic push that grew after his son, Robert, was deployed as a U.S. Marine to Afghanistan in 2010. Cohen is seeking to open 25 clinics by 2020 serving a total of more than 25,000 patients a year, said Anthony Hassan, the retired Air Force officer who runs the initiative as executive director of the Cohen Veterans Network.
 We flagged these few examples of charity misdeeds:
1.     Visit Philadelphia $200,000
2.     Framingham United Soccer Club (MA) $175,000
3.     The Fort Peck Fine Arts Council (MT) $83,000
4.     Grand Valley State University (MI) <$100,000
5.     26.4.26 Foundation (TN) $70,000
6.     Moore Charitable Foundation $25 million
7.     26.4.26 Foundation (Sandy Hook charity)  $73,000
8.     The Cuban Chamber of Commerce (MI) unknown
9.     Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Tri-State (WV) $36,000
10.  Detroit Metro Stars $22,000
11.  Diablo Valley (CA) Youth Football Conference $200,000
12.  Peaceable Farms (VA) million
13.  Scottsville Baptist Church (KY) $274,000
14.  Disabled American Veterans (DAV) (TX) $31,000
15.  Southwestern Michigan Community Ambulance Service (MI) <$100,000
16.  Fraternal Order of Police (NC) unknown
17.  Saint Ignatius High School (CA) $180,000
18.  Agape Family Worship Center (NJ) $4 million
19.  Camarillo Fiesta Association (CA) $24,000
20.  American Legion Post #28 (DL) $641,000
21.  Bernalillo Public Schools (NM) $68,000
22.  Sons of Malta (MI) thousands
23.  Grass Valley Downtown Association (NV) >$1000
Political/public official chicanery (just a few):
1      A former nonprofit executive and two local education agency staffers have been charged with multiple conspiracy and theft felonies involving the embezzlement of more than $1 million in federal grant funds intended to help Native American students prepare for college. The Executive Director of the nonprofit American Indian Institute for Innovation (AIII), a subgrantee in South Dakota’s GEAR UP program and the executive director and interim business manager, respectively, of the Mid-Central Educational Cooperative (MCEC), were also charged.
2      The executive director of a Queens nonprofit organization that provides services for developmentally disabled persons was charged Monday with embezzling Medicaid funds to hire housekeepers to clean her home and care for her kids. Yolanda Vitulli allegedly paid more than $60,000 in Tender Care Human Services funds to at least three housekeepers.
3      The Trump Foundation appeared to have illegally given $25,000 to a political group supporting Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi while her office was reportedly considering taking action against Trump University and told the IRS that the Foundation hadn’t given any money to political groups.  The Foundation told the IRS that the money instead went to a Kansas anti-abortion group. Aides now claim that Bondi asked the Trump Organization for money on behalf of the political group, that the contribution was originally intended to come from Trump personally, but that his staff thought the contribution was going to a similarly named Utah charity, so his foundation cut a check to that charity, then somehow sent it to the Florida political group anyway, and then on the Foundation’s taxes listed the name and address of another similarly named Kansas group as the recipients of the check. 
4      A former office manager for the Bloomington Parks Department will spend the next two years in federal prison. She was convicted of diverting, embezzling and misappropriating over $430,000 in funds from the Parks Department and the Bloomington Community Parks and Recreation Foundation for her personal use. She used foundation credit cards to make personal purchases and transferred funds to her personal bank and credit card accounts. 
5      Lapeer County (MI) Circuit Judge Byron Konschuh was charged in 2014 with embezzling about $4,000 while serving as the county prosecutor. A Genesee County Circuit Judge gave Konschuh a 90-day delayed sentence after Konschuh pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor of failing to account for county money. He’s expected to return to the bench.
6      A former Loudoun County deputy was convicted of embezzling more than $229,000 from the county’s asset forfeiture fund.
7      Grenville (SD) financial officer is charged with embezzlement of nearly $72,000 from the community.
8      The executive director of the Hope Children’s Home, a former Tampa Fire Captain, pleaded guilty to stealing more than $187,000 from orphans, and abused and neglected children.
9      A volunteer treasurer of the Hubbard Lake South Shore Fire Department was arrested a former fire department volunteer accused of embezzling up to $100,000.
10   The agency that maintains Utah’s 911 system stated one of their employees and a family member allegedly used agency credit cards fraudulently to the tune of more than $1 million over the course of several years. The Utah Communication Authority stated the employee in question has been fired, a civil lawsuit has been filed, and police are investigating the alleged case of embezzlement for criminal charges. Both have agreed they owe the state $2,328,000 when you factor in the $1 million alleged embezzlement, along with $578,000 in pre-judgment interest and $750,000 in punitive damages.

Readers, weigh in as to what you think…please continue the tips (they are very helpful) gary.r.snyder@gmail.com
Nonprofit Imperative gathers its information principally from media sources...some of which are directly quoted. Virtually all cited are in some phase of criminal proceedings; some have not been charged, however there is money missing. These incidents include only a fraction of the estimated $40 billion of charity crimes. On rare occasions, there may be duplicates.
We’re noticed: Cites in various media:
Featured in print, broadcast, and online media outlets, including: Charity Navigator, Washington Post, National Enquirer, The Patriot-News, Vermont Public Radio, Miami Herald, New York Times, National Public Radio, Huffington Post, The Sun News, In Touch, Atlanta Journal Constitution, Wall Street Journal (Profile, News and Photos), FOX2, ABC Spotlight on the News, WWJ Radio, msnbc.com, Marie Claire, Ethics World, Tactical Philanthropy, Aspen Philanthropy Newsletter, Harvard Business Review, Current Affairs, The Chronicle of Philanthropy, St. Petersburg Times, Board Room Insider, USA Today Topics, Accountants News, Newsweek.com, Responsive Philanthropy Magazine, , Portfolio Magazine, The Virgin Islands Daily News, NANKAI (China) BUSINESS REVIEW, National Religious Broadcasters newsletter, The Charity Governance Blog, American Chronicle,  Palm Beach Post, Detroit Free Press, Oakland Press, Nonprofit World, Socially Responsible Business Forum, PNNOnline, Ohio Nonprofit Resources, Nonprofit Good Practice Guide, Nonprofit Startup Guide, Nonprofit Blog,  National Coalition of Homeless Newsletter, The Michigan Nonprofit Management Manual, MichiganNonprofit.com, CORP! Magazine, Crain’s Michigan Nonprofit, ncrp.org, PhilanTopic, Nashville Free Press, Nonprofit Law Blog, Seniors World Chronicle, Carnegie Reporter, Assoc. of Certified Fraud Examiners Examiner, Worchester (MA) Telegram and Gazette, Carnegie Corporation of America, EO Tax Journal, Wikipedia: Non-profit Organizations; Parent: Wise Austin, Accountants News, Veterans Today, VPR News, National Enquirer,
  • Silence: The Impending Threat to the Charitable Sector (Xlibris, 2011)
…”This book should be read by everyone. It will send a shiver down the reader's spine to think that people with little money to spare have given generously…”
  • Nonprofits: On the Brink (iUniverse, 2006)
  • The Michigan Nonprofit Management Manual, Governance Section
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Email: gary.r.snyder@gmail.com; 248/324-3700;
Gary Snyder is the author of Silence: The Impending Threat to the Charitable Sector (Xlibris, June, 2011) and Nonprofits: On the Brink (iUniverse, February, 2006) and articles in numerous publications. The book can be bought at amazon.com, barnesandnoble.com, Barnes and Noble (store)
© Gary R. Snyder, All Rights Reserved, 2016