IRS forms show charity's money isn't going to disabled vets
The Disabled Veterans National Foundation,
based in Washington, D.C., and founded in 2007, received about $55.9
million in donations since it began operations in 2007, according to
publicly available IRS 990 forms.
Yet according to the DVNF's tax filings with the IRS, almost none of that money has wound up in the hands of American veterans.
Instead, the charity made
significant payments to Quadriga Art LLC, which owns two direct-mail
fundraising companies hired by the DVNF to help garner donations,
according to publicly available IRS 990 forms.
Those forms show the
charity paid Quadriga and its subsidiary, Brickmill Marketing Services,
nearly $61 million from 2008 until 2010, which was the last year public
records were available.
The independent group CharityWatch
gave the DVNF an "F" grade. More than 30 veterans charities were rated
by the independent group by the amount they spend on fundraising
compared to actual donations, and two-thirds were given either a D or F
grade, according to CharityWatch president Daniel Borochoff.
"Up to $2 billion is
raised in the name of veterans in this country and it's so sad that a
great deal of it's wasted," Borochoff said. "Hundreds of millions of
dollars of our charitable dollars intended to help veterans is being
squandered and wasted by opportunists and by individuals and companies
who see it as a profit-making opportunity."
On its website, the DVNF posted a "news bulletin" announcing
that the charity had sent badly needed goods "by the truckload" to
veterans centers in Birmingham, Alabama, in the wake of last year's
devastating tornados.
DVNF specifically cited a
small veterans charity called St. Benedict's. But the charity's
executive director said most of the donations from DVNF could hardly be
classified as "badly needed."
"They sent us 2,600 bags
of cough drops and 2,200 little bottles of sanitizer," J.D. Simpson
told CNN.
"And the great thing was, they sent us 11,520 bags of coconut
M&M's. And we didn't have a lot of use for 11,520 bags of coconut
M&M's."
Simpson said the DVNF
also sent him more than 700 pairs of Navy dress shoes, which he said he
can't use. He has put them up for purchase at a yard sale.
In its tax filings, the
DVNF also claims to have sent millions of dollars of so-called "Goods In
Kind" to smaller veterans-related charities around the nation.
In one instance, the DVNF claimed more than $838,000 in fair market value donations to a small charity called US Vets in Prescott, Arizona.
CNN obtained the bill of
lading for that shipment, which showed that, among other things,
hundreds of chefs coats and aprons were included in the delivery, along
with a needlepoint design pillowcase and cans of acrylic paint. The
goods listed in the two-page shipping document were things "we don't
need," a US Vets spokesman said. And at the bottom of the bill of
lading, the DVNF itself estimated the value of the shipment at around
$234,000 -- significantly less than the $838,000 it reported to the IRS.
CNN has attempted to get
a comment from the DVNF for more than a year, but has received no
specific replies, even after submitting several questions in writing.
When approached by a CNN
crew at the Veterans of Foreign Wars hall in Baton Rouge, Louisiana,
Disabled National Veterans president Precilla Wilkewitz rebuffed
questions.
"Well, this is the
Veterans of Foreign Wars and I really didn't think you'd do something
like this and we've agreed to talk to you ... answer your questions,"
she said, standing in the entranceway to her office.
Wilkewitz is the former
national legislative liaison for the VFW, which is not directly tied to
the Disabled Veterans National Foundation.
She said she would answer questions only in writing, but so far CNN has received no response.
When asked about
Quadriga's relationship with DVNF, spokesman Ron Torossian told CNN in
an e-mail that the company is privately owned and "we do not discuss
specific client relationships." But according to IRS filings, Quadriga
has been paid for direct-mail services by DVNF since the charity was
founded in 2007.
Torossian did say in his
e-mail, "At times, Quadriga chooses to invest money in partnerships
with non-profit organizations. Sometimes it is a successful business
venture, while others it is not."
In a subsequent e-mail, Torossian said Quadriga had lost $7 million investing in veterans nonprofit organizations.
When CNN asked whether
that included the Disabled Veterans National Foundation, he said "your
facts remain woefully inadequate," but he declined to elaborate in a
later e-mail exchange. He also threatened to sue CNN on behalf of
Quadriga.
At the small house in
Birmingham where J.D. Simpson operates St. Benedict's, he said his main
goal is to provide beds to homeless and disabled veterans.
He characterized the DVNF operation in harsh terms.
"I ask myself what the
heck are these people doing stealing from our veterans. because that's
what they are doing," Simpsons said. "I don't care how you look at it.
These people have sacrificed for our country. And there are some people
out there raising money to abuse 'em and that just makes me mad."
See the CNN report here:
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