The Clinton Foundation - A Textbook Lesson In How to Set Up Your Own Tax-Free Influence-Peddling Money-Laundering Scheme!

lustylad's Avatar
Hey, it's not all that complicated. All you need is political influence to sell and a limitless appetite for corruption. Here's how one observer explains it:


First, you create a separate foreign "charity." In this case, the Clintons set it up in Canada.

Foreign Oligarchs and Governments then donate to this Canadian charity. In this case, over 1,000 did - contributing mega millions. I'm sure they did this out of the goodness of their hearts, and expected nothing in return. (Imagine Putin's buddies waking up one morning and just deciding to send untold millions to a Canadian charity).

The Canadian charity then bundles these separate donations and makes a massive donation to the Clinton Foundation.

The Clinton Foundation and the cooperating Canadian charity claim Canadian law prohibits the identification of individual donors.

The Clinton Foundation then "spends" some of this money for legitimate good works programs. Unfortunately, experts believe this is on the order of 10%. Much of the balance goes to enrich the Clintons, pay salaries to untold numbers of hangers on, and fund lavish travel, etc. Again, virtually tax free, which means you and I are subsidizing it.

The Clinton Foundation, with access to the world's best accountants, somehow fails to report much of this on their tax filings. They discover these "clerical errors" and begin the process of re-filing 5 years of tax returns.

Net result - foreign money goes into the Clintons' pockets tax free and untraceable back to the original donor. This is the textbook definition of money laundering. Oh, by the way, the Canadian "charity" includes as a principal one Frank Giustra. Google him for more information. He is the guy who was central to the formation of Uranium One, the Canadian company that somehow acquired massive U.S. uranium interests and then sold them to an organization controlled by Russia. This transaction required U.S. State Department approval, and guess who was Secretary of State when the approval was granted?

As an aside, imagine how former Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell feels. That poor schlep went to jail because he and his wife took $165,000 in gifts and loans for doing minor favors for a guy promoting a vitamin company. Not legal but not exactly putting U.S. security at risk. Sarcasm aside, if you're still not persuaded this was a cleverly structured way to get unidentified foreign money to the Clintons, ask yourself this: Why did these foreign interests funnel money through a Canadian charity? Why not donate directly to the Clinton Foundation? Better yet, why not donate money directly to the people, organizations and countries in need?

This is the essence of money laundering and influence peddling. Now you know why Hillary's destruction of 30,000 e-mails was a risk she was willing to take. Bill and Hillary are devious, unprincipled, dishonest and criminal and they are Slick!
Yssup Rider's Avatar
No link.

SNICK
  • Tiny
  • 08-21-2016, 02:01 PM
I just looked at the most recent tax returns for the Clinton Foundation, and was startled. In 2014, the Foundation's expenses, not including depreciation, totaled $85.9 million. Of this, only $5.2 million were for grants and other assistance to charities!!! Most or all of the other $80.7 appear to be overhead and running costs. For 2013, total expenses less depreciation were $80 million, and grants and other assistance to charities were $5.5 million.

Furthermore, the Foundation's cost basis in land, buildings and equipments is $148 million, or $110 million net of depreciation. Most of this, $130 million, was for buildings. Why the crap did they spend $130 million on buildings? To have nice office space for Hillary, Bill and Chelsea?

In 2014, they took in $178 million, and only spent $86 million. The previous year, they took in $148 million and spent $63 million. The difference goes mostly to financial investments held by the Fund.

Going in, I figured the Foundation was about 50% legitimate and 50% slush fund. Now I think it's more like 5% legitimate and 95% slush fund.

No link.

SNICK Originally Posted by Yssup Rider
Yssup, here are links. You need to go to the Form 990 at the end of the files,

https://www.clintonfoundation.org/si...ublic_2014.pdf

https://www.clintonfoundation.org/si...13_amended.pdf
dilbert firestorm's Avatar
its also a pay to play system with a money laundering component added to it.
  • DSK
  • 08-21-2016, 05:21 PM
No link.

SNICK Originally Posted by Yssup Rider
I don't defend Trump - why do you defend Clinton and this scheme of hers?
dilbert firestorm's Avatar
No link.

SNICK Originally Posted by Yssup Rider
actually there is a link, yours... you can send your link to ekim's glory hole!!!

actually there is a link, yours... you can send your link to ekim's glory hole!!!

Originally Posted by dilbert firestorm
EKIM'S glory hole is featuring dildo firestorm on his knees sans teeth. He is running a special this next week either end same price.
  • DSK
  • 08-21-2016, 07:20 PM
EKIM'S glory hole is featuring dildo firestorm on his knees sans teeth. He is running a special this next week either end same price. Originally Posted by i'va biggen
Why didn't you name your gloryhole Ekim008's?
I wonder if Web Hubble's daughter knows her ass might get caught up in this shit when all of this hits the fan
lustylad's Avatar
I just looked at the most recent tax returns for the Clinton Foundation, and was startled. In 2014, the Foundation's expenses, not including depreciation, totaled $85.9 million. Of this, only $5.2 million were for grants and other assistance to charities!!! Most or all of the other $80.7 appear to be overhead and running costs. For 2013, total expenses less depreciation were $80 million, and grants and other assistance to charities were $5.5 million.

Furthermore, the Foundation's cost basis in land, buildings and equipments is $148 million, or $110 million net of depreciation. Most of this, $130 million, was for buildings. Why the crap did they spend $130 million on buildings? To have nice office space for Hillary, Bill and Chelsea?

In 2014, they took in $178 million, and only spent $86 million. The previous year, they took in $148 million and spent $63 million. The difference goes mostly to financial investments held by the Fund.

Going in, I figured the Foundation was about 50% legitimate and 50% slush fund. Now I think it's more like 5% legitimate and 95% slush fund.


Yssup, here are links. You need to go to the Form 990 at the end of the files,

https://www.clintonfoundation.org/si...ublic_2014.pdf

https://www.clintonfoundation.org/si...13_amended.pdf Originally Posted by Tiny

Asswipe is a pig so he can't understand any of that financial gobbledygook. But luckily, there are folks out there who analyze and rate charities and let clueless piggies like asswipe know whether they're a scam or not...


Charity Navigator, which rates nonprofits, recently refused to rate the Clinton Foundation because its “atypical business model . . . doesn’t meet our criteria.”

Charity Navigator put the foundation on its “watch list,” which warns potential donors about investing in problematic charities. The 23 charities on the list include the Rev. Al Sharpton’s troubled National Action Network, which is cited for failing to pay payroll taxes for several years....

It seems like the Clinton Foundation operates as a slush fund for the Clintons,” said Bill Allison, a senior fellow at the Sunlight Foundation, a government watchdog group where progressive Democrat and Fordham Law professor Zephyr Teachout was once an organizing director.



http://nypost.com/2015/04/26/charity...-a-slush-fund/

OINK, OINK!
.
dilbert firestorm's Avatar
OINK, OINK!
. Originally Posted by lustylad
assywipe is certain to be baconated!!!
Munchmasterman's Avatar
Asswipe is a pig so he can't understand any of that financial gobbledygook. But luckily, there are folks out there who analyze and rate charities and let clueless piggies like asswipe know whether they're a scam or not...But only people smart enough to understand what they're saying. Or honest enough to include everything they say.
Looks like you're 0 for 2.


Charity Navigator, which rates nonprofits, recently refused to rate the Clinton Foundation because its “atypical business model . . . doesn’t meet our criteria.”
Typical cherry picker.

Charity Navigator put the foundation on its “watch list,” which warns potential donors about investing in problematic charities. The 23 charities on the list include the Rev. Al Sharpton’s troubled National Action Network, which is cited for failing to pay payroll taxes for several years....So if getting put on the list is such a big deal then Charity Navigator taking them off the list means...........


“Charity Navigator … [has] placed the Clinton Foundation on a watch list,” Willis said. “They think there are problems with this nonprofit. They don’t like the way it runs itself. They say the money is not spent wisely.”
She said Charity Navigator concluded the Clinton Foundation “does not meet their criteria as an organization that does charitable work.”
But that’s not what Charity Navigator said.
Here’s what the Charity Navigator site actually states:
Charity Navigator: We had previously evaluated this organization, but have since determined that this charity’s atypical business model can not be accurately captured in our current rating methodology. Our removal of The Clinton Foundation from our site is neither a condemnation nor an endorsement of this charity. We reserve the right to reinstate a rating for The Clinton Foundation as soon as we identify a rating methodology that appropriately captures its business model.
What does it mean that this organization isn’t rated?
It simply means that the organization doesn’t meet our criteria. A lack of a rating does not indicate a positive or negative assessment by Charity Navigator

And douche-bag that you are, of course you somehow "overlooked" this. I knew you would want it included if for no other reason than to keep it from looking like you had seen it but knew that it shot down most of your post

Charity watchdog removes Clinton Foundation from its watch list

December 22, 2015
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/...ts-watch-list/


It seems like the Clinton Foundation operates as a slush fund for the Clintons,” said Bill Allison, a senior fellow at the Sunlight Foundation, a government watchdog group where progressive Democrat and Fordham Law professor Zephyr Teachout was once an organizing director.


http://nypost.com/2015/04/26/charity...-a-slush-fund/

The post article shows they know as little as you do about foundations. But at least they didn't try to conceal the fact the foundation had been taken off the list like you did. Questions or stupid statements? Read the factcheck article as many times as you need to.
Squish, squish, douche-bag.
OINK, OINK! Strange. I expected more of a high pitched squeal out of you
.
Originally Posted by lustylad



Charity watchdog removes Clinton Foundation from its watch list






By Rosalind S. Helderman Post Politics
December 22, 2015



Charity Navigator, one of the nation's two largest watchdog groups for charities, has removed the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation from its "watch list," lifting a cloud from the global philanthropy.
The organization had placed the foundation has its watch list in April. The foundation contested the ranking at the time, and Charity Navigator indicated that an organization's appearance on the list did not necessarily indicate problems. Instead, it said that charities are placed on the list if media coverage raises questions about their operations that might be of interest to potential donors.
Even so, the Clinton Foundation's ranking on the list served as a black eye on the time, coming in the weeks just after Hillary Clinton announced she was stepping down from the charity's board to run for president. Increased scrutiny showed overlaps between Bill and Hillary Clinton's personal and political supporters and donors to the charity. In addition, The Washington Post revealed in February that the foundation had accepted millions of dollars in donations from foreign governments while Clinton was secretary of state, including one donation that came in violation of an ethics agreement with the Obama administration.
[Foreign government dollars continued to flow to foundation while Clinton at State Department]
In a note posted to its website, Charity Navigator indicated that tax information made available by the Clinton Foundation, including four years of returns amended by the organization last month, as well as a public memo submitted by the group, met Charity Navigator's requirements for removal.
Charity Navigator will continue its practice of offering the Clinton Foundation no formal rating, indicating that it has an "atypical business model" that cannot be "accurately captured" by the group's current rating methodology. However, the Clinton Foundation received an "A" earlier this year for financial performance from the American Institute of Philanthropy's Charity Watch, the nation's other leading watchdog organization for charities.

http://www.factcheck.org/2015/06/whe...tion-money-go/
Where Does Clinton Foundation Money Go?

  • By Robert Farley
  • Posted on June 19, 2015 | Corrected on June 19, 2015

3.2K

Republican presidential candidate Carly Fiorina says that “so little” of the charitable donations to the Clinton Foundation “actually go to charitable works” — a figure CARLY for America later put at about 6 percent of its annual revenues — but Fiorina is simply wrong.
Fiorina and others are referring only to the amount donated by the Clinton Foundation to outside charities, ignoring the fact that most of the Clinton Foundation’s charitable work is performed in-house. One independent philanthropy watchdog did an analysis of Clinton Foundation funding and concluded that about 89 percent of its funding went to charity.
Simply put, despite its name, the Clinton Foundation is not a private foundation — which typically acts as a pass-through for private donations to other charitable organizations. Rather, it is a public charity. It conducts most of its charitable activities directly.
Fiorina Attacks

Fiorina has been shadowing Hillary Clinton on the campaign trail in order to contrast herself with her Democratic rival. In a Fox News interview, Fiorina was asked about a New York Times story about Sen. Marco Rubio’s finances, and Fiorina responded that she wished the New York Times would do more to investigate the Clintons’ finances, and particularly “what they’ve been doing with their donors’ money to the Clinton Global Initiative.”
Fiorina, June 10: I mean, honestly, the question, I think, now for the Clintons is, ‘What else don’t we know? What don’t we know about your donors? What don’t we know about the conflicts of interest that those donors represent when Mrs. Clinton is serving as Secretary of State?’ We are now finding out that so little of those charitable donations actually go to charitable works.

Asked for backup, the CARLY for America super PAC noted that the Clinton Foundation’s latest IRS Form 990 shows total revenue of nearly $149 million in 2013, and total charitable grant disbursements of nearly $9 million (see page 10). That comes to roughly 6 percent of the budget going to grants. And besides those grants, the super PAC said, “there really isn’t anything that can be categorized as charitable.”
That just isn’t so. The Clinton Foundation does most of its charitable work itself.
Katherina Rosqueta, the founding executive director of the Center for High Impact Philanthropy at the University of Pennsylvania, described the Clinton Foundation as an “operating foundation.”
“There is an important distinction between an operating foundation vs. a non-operating foundation,” Rosqueta told us via email. “An operating foundation implements programs so money it raises is not designed to be used exclusively for grant-making purposes. When most people hear ‘foundation’, they think exclusively of a grant-making entity. In either case, the key is to understand how well the foundation uses money — whether to implement programs or to grant out to nonprofits — [to achieve] the intended social impact (e.g., improving education, creating livelihoods, improving health, etc.).”
Craig Minassian, chief communications officer for the Clinton Foundation, said the Clinton Foundation is “an implementer.”
“We operate programs on the ground, around the world, that are making a difference on issues ranging from poverty and global health to climate change and women’s and girls’ participation,” Minassian told us via email. “Many large foundations actually provide grants to the Clinton Foundation so that our staff can implement the work.”
Asked for some examples of the work it performs itself, the Clinton Foundation listed these:
  • Clinton Development Initiative staff in Africa train rural farmers and help them get access to seeds, equipment and markets for their crops.
  • Clinton Climate Initiative staff help governments in Africa and the Caribbean region with reforestation efforts, and in island nations to help develop renewable energy projects.
  • Staff at the Clinton Health Access Initiative, an independent, affiliated entity, work in dozens of nations to lower the cost of HIV/AIDS medicine, scale up pediatric AIDS treatment and promote treatment of diarrhea through life-saving Zinc/ORS treatment.
  • Clinton Health Matters staff work with local governments and businesses in the United States to develop wellness and physical activity plans.
To bolster its case, CARLY for America noted that the Clinton Foundation spent 12 percent of its revenue on travel and conferences and 20 percent of its revenue on salaries. That’s true. But the Form 990 specifically breaks out those travel, conference and salary expenses that are used for “program service expenses” versus those that are used for management or fundraising purposes.
For example, nearly 77 percent of the $8.4 million spent on travel in 2013 went toward program services; 3.4 percent went to “management and general expenses”; and about 20 percent went to fundraising.
As for conferences, nearly 98 percent of money spent was tabbed as a programming expense. And when it comes to salaries — which includes pension plan contributions, benefits and payroll taxes — about 73 percent went to program service expenses.
“I am not the expert on what portion of the Clinton Foundation activities are truly charitable,” Vince Stehle, executive director of Media Impact Funders and a board member of the Center for Effective Philanthropy told us via email. “But I can say that it is not appropriate to simply calculate that based on what portion goes out in grants. Certainly all types of foundations are able to engage in direct charitable activities in any event. But as I understand it, the Clinton Foundation is a public charity, despite the name. Many charities call themselves foundations, which can be confusing, as they might seem like private foundations.
“The organization carries out programs,” Stehle said. “I am not intimately familiar with those programs, but assuming they are genuine, those would be considered charitable activities.”
Charity Evaluators

Fiorina isn’t the only one making this charge about the Clinton Foundation. Fox Business Network’s Gerri Willis, for example, also claimed only 6 percent of the Clinton Foundation’s 2013 revenue “went to help people.” Willis claimed that charity experts have looked into whether the Clinton Foundation “wisely spen(t) charitable dollars” and weighed in with a “resounding no.”
“Charity Navigator … [has] placed the Clinton Foundation on a watch list,” Willis said. “They think there are problems with this nonprofit. They don’t like the way it runs itself. They say the money is not spent wisely.”
She said Charity Navigator concluded the Clinton Foundation “does not meet their criteria as an organization that does charitable work.”
But that’s not what Charity Navigator said.
Here’s what the Charity Navigator site actually states:
Charity Navigator: We had previously evaluated this organization, but have since determined that this charity’s atypical business model can not be accurately captured in our current rating methodology. Our removal of The Clinton Foundation from our site is neither a condemnation nor an endorsement of this charity. We reserve the right to reinstate a rating for The Clinton Foundation as soon as we identify a rating methodology that appropriately captures its business model.
What does it mean that this organization isn’t rated?
It simply means that the organization doesn’t meet our criteria. A lack of a rating does not indicate a positive or negative assessment by Charity Navigator.

We spoke by phone with Sandra Minuitti at Charity Navigator, and she told us Charity Navigator decided not to rate the Clinton Foundation because the foundation spun off some entities (chiefly the Health Access Initiative) and then later brought some, like the Clinton Global Initiative, back into the fold. Charity Navigator looks at a charity’s performance over time, she said, and those spin-offs could result in a skewed picture using its analysis model. If the foundation maintains its current structure for several years, she said, Charity Navigator will be able to rate it again.
The decision to withhold a rating had nothing to do with concerns about the Clinton Foundation’s charitable work. Further, Minuitti said citing only the 6 percent of the budget spent on grants as the sum total spent on charity by the foundation — as Willis and Fiorina did — is inaccurate.
She referred us to page 10 of the 2013 990 form for the Clinton Foundation. When considering the amount spent on “charitable work,” she said, one would look not just at the amount in grants given to other charities, but all of the expenses in Column B for program services. That comes to 80.6 percent of spending. (The higher 89 percent figure we cited earlier comes from a CharityWatch analysis of the Clinton Foundation and its affiliates.)
“That’s the standard way” to measure a charity’s performance, Minuitti said. “You have to look at the entirety of that column.”
Minuitti said it is also inaccurate to assume all money spent on travel and salaries does not go toward charity. Depending on the nature of the charity, she said, travel and salary could certainly be considered expenses related to charity.
It’s true, as Willis said, that Charity Navigator put the Clinton Foundation on its “watch list,” but not because of concerns about insufficient funds going toward charity. Mainly, it was put on the watch list due to questions raised in the media about foreign donations to the foundation and the potential for quid pro quo when Hillary Clinton was secretary of state. The site also linked to a story about the abrupt resignation earlier this year of the foundation’s CEO. (Go here to see a full list of articles that led to the decision by Charity Navigator to place the foundation on its watch list.)
According to the Charity Navigator site, it “takes no position” on the allegations raised in the media reports, nor does it “seek to confirm or verify the accuracy of allegations made or the merits of issues raised.” Minuitti said the watch list was more like “news to know” for potential donors.
None of the articles cited by Charity Navigator has anything to do with a low percentage of funding going to charitable work.
Another philanthropy watchdog, CharityWatch, a project of the American Institute of Philanthropy, gave the Clinton Foundation an “A” rating.
Daniel Borochoff, president and founder of CharityWatch, told us by phone that its analysis of the finances of the Clinton Foundation and its affiliates found that about 89 percent of the foundation budget is spent on programming (or “charity”), higher than the 75 percent considered the industry standard.
By only looking at the amount the Clinton Foundation doled out in grants, Fiorina “is showing her lack of understanding of charitable organizations,” Borochoff said. “She’s thinking of the Clinton Foundation as a private foundation.” Those kinds of foundations are typically supported by money from a few people, and the money is then distributed to various charities. The Clinton Foundation, however, is a public charity, he said. It mostly does its own charitable work. It has over 2,000 employees worldwide.
“What she’s doing is looking at how many grants they write to other groups,” Borochoff said. “If you are going to look at it that way, you may as well criticize every other operating charity on the planet.”
In order to get a fuller picture of the Clinton Foundation’s operations, he said, people need to look at the foundation’s consolidated audit, which includes the financial data on separate affiliates like the Clinton Health Access Initiative.
“Otherwise,” he said, “you are looking at just a piece of the pie.”
Considering all of the organizations affiliated with the Clinton Foundation, he said, CharityWatch concluded about 89 percent of its budget is spent on programs. That’s the amount it spent on charity in 2013, he said.
We looked at the consolidated financial statements (see page 4) and calculated that in 2013, 88.3 percent of spending was designated as going toward program services — $196.6 million out of $222.6 million in reported expenses.
We can’t vouch for the effectiveness of the programming expenses listed in the report, but it is clear that the claim that the Clinton Foundation only steers 6 percent of its donations to charity is wrong, and amounts to a misunderstanding of how public charities work.






LexusLover's Avatar
http://www.guidestar.org/FinDocument...0b0083da-9.pdf

Making the money to support one's family. The Stockholm Connection!
all of this is very clintonian
LexusLover's Avatar
And she wants to talk "off shore"!!!

Over the top hypocrisy!!!