|
How This Charity Spent $6.5 Million on Luxury
|
|
Lawsuit alleges a charity turned into a wallet Minnesota Attorney… |
|
Lawsuit alleges a charity turned into a wallet Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison has sued We Push for Peace, founder Trahern Pollard, and former director Jaclyn McGuigan. The state says the group, created in 2016 to help reduce violence in Minneapolis, treated nonprofit money like a private account. The lawsuit claims more than $6 million was steered toward Pollard's personal benefit, including trips, vehicle purchases, business support, and even payments tied to child support. The irony is thick enough to need its own filing system. A nonprofit is supposed to serve the public, not act like a speed bump on the way to someone's side hustle. The money trail runs through cars, clubs, and side businesses The complaint says funds went to Las Vegas trips, Harley-Davidson purchases, a used-car business, Merwin Liquors in north Minneapolis, and a $35,000 "Chicago Payroll" payment that prosecutors say was really money for Pollard's friends. Ellison says McGuigan allegedly moved $1,000 a week into her own account and also tapped government grant money for "administrative" costs. Bureaucracy loves a tidy label, especially when it is covering something messy. Prosecutors also say Pollard used nonprofit money to pay child support and settle a personal IRS bill,…
|