ABC News
On Monday, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman
and his office filed a lawsuit in state Supreme Court against the
National Children's Leukemia Foundation as well as its founder, Steve
Shor, who allegedly pocketed more than $1 million in salary and perks
while running the Brooklyn-based charity out of the basement of his
home.
In court documents, investigators accused the
organization of using "false and misleading materials to solicit and
collect millions of dollars from individuals and businesses all over the
country" since at least 2009.
Schneiderman said despite what professional telemarketers told
unsuspecting donors, the foundation did not have a bone marrow registry,
an umbilical cord blood bank or a cancer research center and it had not fulfilled the wishes of sick children since 2009.
Of the nearly $13 million that the foundation raised between April 2009
and March 2013, court papers said, less than 1 percent of the monies was
spent on young patients and "at most" 6 percent on its programs. In
court papers, investigators accused the foundation of not being a "large
and effective organization" as it presented itself to the office's
Charities Bureau, but a "one-man operation .... with three respondents
rubber-stamping Shor's decisions."
"If you're going to raise funds for children for what may be their last
wish, you better make sure you provide it," said Jim Sheehan of the
office's Charities Bureau.[...]
Steve Shor told ABC News today that the attorney general's accusations have "little merit."
"Our small organization helped many families over the past 20 years,"
Steve Shor said in a statement. "I launched NCLF after the death of my
teenage son to leukemia. I personally took no salary for over eight
years. I wanted to help as many families as I could who had children
suffering from cancer."
"We feel we are being used as an 'example' due to the telemarketing
fundraising laws and fundraising market over which we have no control.
Our fundraising contracts were all filed with the attorney general who
has long known their terms. We expect to be vindicated in court when the
full story is explained," Steve Shor said.
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