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MOPH FOUNDATION FIRES EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR AND
ACCUSES HIM OF FRAUD -- "This investigation is
ongoing
and it's going to get bigger. It is outrageous
and unfair to
those who donate their hard earned money to help
veterans."

For previous stories about the problems at the
MOPH Foundation, use the VA Watchdog search engine ... click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearc
h.php?q=esau&op=and
For more about veterans' charities, use the VA
Watchdog search engine ... click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.
php?q=charity+charities&op=or
Story here...
http://abcnews.go.co
m/Blotter/story?id=5621272&page=1
Story below:
-------------------------
Wounded Vet Charity Accuses Own
Executive of Fraud
Military Order of the Purple Heart
Leader Allegedly Misused Charity Funds
By ANNA SCHECTER
The executive director of a charity for wounded veterans that pulls in
more than ten million dollars per year in donations has allegedly spent
tens of thousands of dollars of the charity's funds inappropriately to
benefit foundation executives and given out hundreds of thousands of
dollars of donated funds in exchange for family favors, according to
current and former executive board members of the Military Order of the
Purple Heart (MOPH).
Richard (Dick) Esau was fired from the MOPH Service Foundation after it
brought in a forensic auditor to investigate Esau and the charity's
finances, according to Henry Cook, outgoing national commander of the MOPH,
and Ray Funderburk, former national public relations director for the MOPH.
"This investigation is ongoing and it's going to get bigger," said Cook.
"It is outrageous and unfair to those who donate their hard earned money
to help veterans."
The findings of the audit by a forensic independent accounting firm thus
far warranted Esau's termination, according to Foundation President James
Blaylock. The Foundation's Executive Committee "authorized a continued
auditing process into any and all areas that the forensic auditor felt
were appropriate," Blaylock wrote in the letter to MOPH members alerting
them that Esau was fired.
Cook
said that there appeared to be a conflict of interest with regards to
several hundred thousand dollars that the Foundation allocated under Esau.
The Foundation gave $500,000 to the Intrepid Museum in New York right
before the daughter of a member of the Foundation's board of directors was
hired by the museum, according to Cook.
It gave another $100,000 to the Marine Corps Reserve Officers Association
where Esau worked prior to joining the Foundation and where his wife
worked at the time the money was given, according to Cook, who says Esau
told him that $50,000 of that money went to a personal friend who was
contracted to teach anti-terrorism classes to deploying National Guard
troops.
And last year the Foundation's tax forms show it paid the Washington
Redskins $685,000 in signage for radio and television advertisements,
which Cook said was completely inappropriate and should have gone to needy
veterans.
Cook said that while Foundation executive board members enjoyed box seats
at the football games, he could not even get the funds from the Foundation
to buy tickets for veterans.
Executives also enjoyed lavish parties, according to Cook, including one
black-tie dinner for a retiring official costing an estimated $40,000.
Esau has defended the Foundation's spending choices.
"I'm not sure that the guy who is living on an limited budget and sends
his money to help wounded vets would want it to go to that," said Cook,
who was voted off the Foundation board in April after telling ABC News
Good Morning America that he was "outraged" that the donations of generous
Americans were not going to needy veterans.
Cook said that all the MOPH board members who sat on the board of the
Foundation had been kicked off with him, leaving control of the $32
million worth of donated funds solely to the Foundation, with no influence
from the MOPH itself.
ABC News reported in November 2007 that the Foundation received an "F"
rating from the charity watchdog group American Institute of Philanthropy
(AIP) for their extremely high fundraising costs and relatively small
percentage of donations that actually went to help wounded veterans and
their families.
The Foundation hid millions of fundraising expenses, according to Daniel
Borochoff, President of AIP by netting them from their contributions in
2007: The Foundation's reported fundraising expenses of $14.8 million for
the fiscal year of 2006-2007 is actually $22.9 million when the
fundraising costs of a "donate your vehicle" campaign in fiscal 2007 are
added, according to Borochoff.
The Foundation could not immediately be reached for comment in response to
Borochoff's allegation.
Borochoff says the scandal surrounding Esau and the Foundation points to a
broader accountability problem for the non-profit field that allows for
this type of alleged manipulation: "Charities can massage their numbers to
appear better which makes it difficult for the donating public to know
whether or not their money is actually reaching the cause they intended to
help."
Congressman Henry Waxman, D-Calif, held a hearing on veterans charities
shortly after the initial ABC News report last fall.
Esau told MOPH members at a meeting two weeks ago for the National Purple
Heart Hall of Honor museum in New York that he had been wrongfully
terminated and asked the board to consider him to serve as their president
for another year, according to Cook who was at the meeting.
Esau told ABC News that he would not comment on this story at this time
because he is "negotiating [his] severance package."
Calls from ABC News to the Foundation requesting comment were not
returned.
Cook said the financial scandal has driven a wedge between the Foundation
and the MOPH and has affected MOPH at the local level, seriously hindering
their fundraising.
"The MOPH local chapters have unfairly become the objects of ridicule and
scorn, because the organization has been branded as one that doesn't help
veterans," said Cook, who said that local chapters of the MOPH provide
important services to wounded veterans and their families.
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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