Civil rights leader's charities investigated
by The Associated Press
February 15, 2010 01:00 AM | 375 views | 1 1 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Ohio charities operated by a national civil rights leader have received thousands of tax dollars with little government oversight, a newspaper reported Sunday.

A battered women's shelter and a food pantry associated with the Rev. Raleigh Trammell both received government money last year even though they had closed, according to a review of public financial documents.

Trammell is chairman of the Atlanta-based Southern Christian Leadership Conference, which has been trying to remove him over allegations that he and another official embezzled $596,000 from the group. Trammell has denied the allegations.

FBI agents on Thursday raided the SCLC's Dayton office and the homes of Trammell and his daughter. The FBI declined to say what it was looking for and no charges were announced.

Sevell Brown, a former SCLC chapter president in Florida, said in a statement Sunday the FBI raid was related to a complaint he filed in June with the U.S. Justice Department over financial irregularities. FBI spokesman Mike Brooks declined comment, citing a decision by a federal court in Dayton to seal search warrants in the case.

The SCLS and the Interdenominational Ministerial Alliance, which Trammell also serves as chairman, have received about $3.7 million in public money since 1999. An investigation found incomplete and contradictory financial accounting.

For example, the closed women's shelter owned by Trammell's church got $11,500 in stimulus money last year, on top of $23,000 for the shelter given by the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

"I think it is unconscionable that they did not contact us when they closed," said Jayne Klose, senior vice president of United Way of Greater Dayton, which administers the money.

Government and civic leaders also reportedly failed to scrutinize what Trammell's charities were doing.

In one case, a program that provides counseling services to poor families had no oversight in 2008 and 2009, when it received $184,260. As a result, the SCLC has little proof that it provided the service, said Montgomery County Administrator Deborah Feldman.

Feldman said the SCLC will be dropped from the program, and the Dayton Urban League, which oversaw the taxpayer money, will not be paid for monitoring activities until it develops a new oversight plan.

Feldman defended the county's decision to fund programs headed by Trammell, who was convicted of stealing from the county welfare department when he was deputy director in the 1970s.

"He went to jail. He served his time," Feldman said. "He has since then been a very active member of the community representing an extremely important organization in this community and this country."

The Southern Christian Leadership Conference, founded by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights leaders in 1957, claims about 10,000 members in nearly 80 chapters in 17 states from Georgia to California.
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Indian Joe
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February 15, 2010
Sounds like the jobs created in non-existant zip codes, and stimulus money for "saving" more jobs than the total work force. But then, it's not the government's money so why worry about a few hundred thousand here or there, with no oversight, accounting and no one answerable.
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