Register Today for the Virtual NAAG/NASCO Conference

https://www.naag.org/meetings-trainings/other/naagnasco-conference.php

This year’s NAAG/NASCO Conference will be held virtually on the afternoons of November 17, 18, and 19, 2020. This conference is the only annual event at which state charity regulators and nonprofit organizations and their attorneys and accountants have the opportunity to meet, hear about, and discuss issues of interest to the charities community. The sessions on Tuesday, Nov. 17 and Wednesday, Nov. 18 are open to the public and provide an opportunity for representatives of the nonprofit sector to meet and participate in discussions with state regulators. The sessions on Thursday, Nov. 19 are open to regulators only.   The conference is titled “Weathering the Storm” and will address pressing and relevant issues regarding the nonprofit sector in these turbulent times. Sessions during the public portion of the conference will include discussion on the impact of the COVID crisis on state charity regulation, updates on significant enforcement actions from leading state regulators and the FTC, panels on asset management and fundraising, and an opportunity to ask questions to state regulators. Below you will find a general conference agenda for the public days. Please note that it is subject to change.   Please note the registration process has been moved to NAAG’s online portal.

NASCO Joins International Charity Fraud Awareness Week, October 19-23

NASCO is joining an international coalition of regulators, law enforcement agencies, charities, nonprofit associations and the Federal Trade Commission to announce the third annual International Charity Fraud Awareness Week (ICFAW), a coordinated international social media campaign to help charities and consumers avoid fraud and promote wise giving. The ICFAW Charity Fraud Hub features helpful documents, free tutorials, videos, case studies and on-demand webinars, including, ‘COVID-19 and charity fraud: what to watch out for and how to stay safe.’

Participants will share education tips and resources on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook using #charityfraudout and #charityfraudout2020

Attorney General Ellison secures repayment, permanent charitable-sector ban against former Journey Home Minnesota president

Settlement requires Blake Huffman to repay $60K in charitable assets he misused from veterans-housing charity Journey Home Minnesota, permanently bans Huffman from operating a charity in Minnesota

Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison filed a settlement agreement in Ramsey County District Court requiring Blake Huffman, the former president of the charity Journey Home Minnesota (“JHM”), to pay back $60,000 in funds that he misused from the charity. The settlement also permanently bans Huffman from operating a charity, having access to charitable assets, and soliciting charitable contributions in Minnesota. In addition, JHM must liquidate its assets, distribute them to a Minnesota-based veterans charity, and dissolve its operations. 

“As the primary regulator of charities in Minnesota, it’s my job to ensure that charities are using their assets solely on behalf of their mission and the public, and that Minnesotans can trust that the money they generously donate to charities is being used for the causes they care about,” Attorney General Ellison said. “Blake Huffman took advantage of Minnesotans’ trust. He exploited the sacrifices of Minnesota’s veterans to line his own pockets. This settlement makes sure that the money will go where it’s supposed to — to help veterans afford their lives — and that Huffman will never operate a charity Minnesota again.” 

In December 2019, Attorney General Ellison sued Huffman for failing to properly oversee JHM’s charitable assets and failing to operate JHM in furtherance of its charitable mission, among other things. The lawsuit alleged that Huffman, as JHM’s president, engaged in transactions that presented clear conflicts of interest; helped solicit tens of thousands of dollars to build a handicap-accessible home for a Minnesota family with terminally ill children, only to abandon the project; and attempted to cancel leases midway through tenants’ terms and increased tenants’ rent to market rates, contrary to JHM’s charitable mission. The lawsuit also claimed that Huffman abandoned JHM and its charitable mission, failed to pay its bills, and allowed some of its properties to be foreclosed upon. During the litigation, the Attorney General’s Office further discovered that Huffman had misused nearly $81,000 of JHM’s assets.   

JHM owned property throughout the metro area, including Ramsey, Dakota, Anoka, and Cook counties. The lawsuit filed in Ramsey County District Court asserted that Huffman and JHM violated Minnesota’s Nonprofit Corporations Act, Supervision of Charitable Trusts and Trustees Act, and Charitable Solicitation Act. 

In Minnesota, nonprofit executives owe fiduciary duties to act in the best interests of the charities that they serve, including putting the interests of the nonprofit above any personal financial interests. The Attorney General’s office provides additional information about these fiduciary duties, as well as other resources to help nonprofit leaders properly serve their organizations, on its web site at www.ag.state.mn.us/Charity/InfoNonProfits.asp.   

Otto Bremer’s 3 Paid Trustees Face State Charges of Violating Their Trustee Role

Trustees of the Otto Bremer Trust will once again be in court to face state charges. In August, NPQ reported on the accusations against the Trust, a $2 billion private foundation formed to help people and communities with grants for mental health and housing, crisis care for victims of domestic violence, and job placement for people with disabilities.

Among the alleged misdeeds are a 300-percent increase in salaries of three trustees and the purchase of an opulent office from which a trustee runs a for-profit company. Most alarming, though, is a plan by the trustees to sell voting stock in the trust to 19 out-of-state hedge funds. A separate board runs the bank that generates the profits for the trust, and that bank’s board sued the parent nonprofit last November, alleging that such a sale would amount to a “hostile takeover that would replace the board and set up the bank for sale,” reports Frederick Melo for Pioneer Press. Now the state of Minnesota is pursuing its own legal action.

The structure of the Bremer trust and its ownership stake in the bank is unusual in the US context. The Otto Bremer Trust owns 92 percent of Bremer Bank, the only US bank owned by a nonprofit. (Employees own the other eight percent.) For decades, dating back to 1949, this arrangement worked largely as intended; bank profits generated ongoing funding of the philanthropy, as founder Otto Bremer intended. In the last eight years alone, the foundation has provided $400 million to nonprofits in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and North Dakota.

In the US, having foundations own banks is nearly unheard of. Foundations were actually prohibited from owning businesses by law in 1969, and the Bremer Bank arrangement only persists because it was grandfathered in. But as NPQ noted last year, internationally, foundation ownership of companies is common. For instance, in Denmark, 20 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product is generated by foundation-owned businesses, and these businesses constitute an estimated 68 percent of the market capitalization of the Copenhagen stock market.

But there is always the temptation to do what in the co-op world is called demutualization. In other words, it doesn’t take a genius to realize that the trustees could earn far more money if their compensation weren’t limited by their mission. In Canada, right now, for example, Mountain Equipment Co-op—the Canadian equivalent of the 19-million-member US cooperative REI—is facing exactly this risk as trustees seek to cash out by selling the company to an outside US investor. (A member revolt may or may not succeed at stopping them).

In a different form, this appears to be the dynamic too with Otto Bremer. Specifically, it is alleged that the trustees are attempting to sell the bank and dissolve the 70-year affiliation. Ramsey County District Court Judge Robert Awsumb has received a request from the Minnesota attorney general to temporarily remove the trustees under suspicion. The attorneys for S. Brian Lipschultz, Daniel Reardon, and Charlotte Johnson, who are all listed as the Trust’s co-CEOs, filed a legal memorandum on September 21, 2020, refuting each allegation, denying self-dealing.

Voting members of a nonprofit, whether they are called directors or trustees, are generally not paid for their positions. Staff members who are also trustees, even at the CEO position, are demonstrating a conflict of interest, as the board of a nonprofit is critical in its governance. The board determines the salary for the president, CEO, or executive director. In effect, the three CEOs are voting for their own salaries.

In 2000, the trustees received a base pay of $42,000. Now, their three salaries come to $1.4 million according to the tax filing. Reviewing several years of tax filings does not reveal any other trustees or governance structure—Lipschultz, Reardon, and Johnson are the same three trustees listed on every 990PF since 1998. (1999 was the only tax filing not available).

Trusts and foundations, who must spend five percent of their assets to provide grants to charities, expect and demand those charities be responsible with the funds. Foundations are required by the IRS to receive reports from grantees on how the funds are spent. The granting foundation should live up to the guidelines it sets for its grantees, with transparency and accounting for expenses.

Five years of tax filings show that between 2013 and 2017, the Bremer Trust gave away the required five percent of their assets, averaging about $48.6 million. Now that the assets have grown to $1 billion, the Trust will have to distribute $100 million, which is the reason cited for raising cash by selling the bank.

Attorney General Keith Ellison’s office issued a 31-page reply on Thursday to the trustees’ attorneys’ statement. “Trustees minimize their conduct, fail to address the harm, and generally take no responsibility for the conduct demonstrated by the attorney general,” it reads. “Not a single unnecessary day should pass with trustees continuing to act as fiduciaries for the trust while defending their own interests.”

Bremer, a $13 billion bank, is the largest lender for farms in Minnesota. Its funding region also includes Wisconsin and Montana. The legal troubles, as noted above, go back to last November, when the bank board sued the foundation for trying to sell bank stock to out-of-state hedge funds in order to set up a hostile takeover. If the bank board was replaced as the result of a takeover, it would ease the way to selling the foundation’s major asset—the bank.

The Bremer Financial Corporation, parent company for the bank, states through their attorneys that selling the shares to out-of-state investors betrays the original documents and the stated trustee fiduciary responsibilities, even in the event of “unforeseen circumstance”—with the foundation in control of the bank—that that founder, Otto Bremer, established almost 80 years ago.

Ellison’s office has also charged that the Trust employees work in an emotionally toxic environment, with no complaint structure and the threat of retaliation for voicing objections, with an employee describing a text message between Reardon and Lipschultz that referred to a female employee as a “doorknob.” The filing states, “Current and former trust employees testified that they feared retaliation by trustees.” The attorneys for the trustees say human resources issues must be addressed in separate legal action. Other employees and former employees indicated that there have been statements within the office regarding anti-Muslim and anti-Native American giving policies.

The Bremer Trust attorneys have requested a trial date by early 2021. The Minnesota attorney general will likely request more time. The judge could rule that the trustees temporarily step down, or the lawsuit “discovery” can go on for an extended period with the trustees in place. It appears there are more governance questions to ask this private foundation.—Marian Conway

Five Ways to Avoid Wildfire Donation Scams – Oregon Department of Justice

Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum wants the public to be aware of a potential for charitable scams as wildfires continue to burn across the state of Oregon.

“The ongoing wildfires in Oregon are tragic and many are suffering. Kind and generous Oregonians are stepping up to help out by making donations,” said AG Rosenblum. “Unfortunately, we know there are some bad actors out there who will try to prosper off any disaster. I encourage Oregonians to give, but I want to help make sure your donations get to the right place and are used for their intended purpose.”

To help with that, several of Oregon’s leading charities have joined together to create the 2020 Community Rebuilding Fund.  Oregonians are encouraged to give to that organization or to similar organizations they know are actively involved in relief efforts, including local United Ways in the counties that have been most impacted by the wildfires. For more information on how to give to the 2020 Community Rebuilding Fund, please visit https://oregoncf.org/oregon-wildfire-relief-recovery/.If you are interested in other giving options, give wisely and avoid potential scams by following these five tips:

  1. Do your research.
    There are more than 1 million charities registered with the IRS. Find the best charities for you by visiting one of the following websites:
    Guide Star
    Charity Navigator
    Better Business Bureau
  2.  Only give to registered charities.
    Before you give, check the Oregon Department of Justice database or call 971-673-1880 to confirm the organization is properly registered with the Oregon Department of Justice.
  3. Monetary donations are usually preferred.
    Organizations can usually accomplish the most with financial donations. Managing and storing gifts of clothing, food, and household items can often strain limited resources. Before donating those kinds of supplies, check in with the organization to make sure they can make use of those donations. Monetary gifts are always appreciated.
  4. Be wary of telephone, email or door to door solicitations.
    Some scam artists may take advantage of current circumstances by soliciting you in these ways. Resist high-pressure appeals for donations and don’t send cash or respond to requests to purchase and send gift cards.
  5. Remember that not all gifts are tax-deductible.
    Only gifts to charities that have IRS 501(c)(3) status are tax-deductible. Check the IRS website to ensure your gift is to a qualified organization. Make sure the charity provides written confirmation of your donation. Then keep your records. Gifts to individuals through GoFundMe and similar platforms are not tax-deductible.

For additional giving tips, please visit Wise Giving Guide and After The Disaster Handout (English | Spanish | Russian).  If you have concerns about a solicitation, please file a complaint online or call the Charitable Activities Section at 971-673-1880.