Tha AP is
reporting that Sen. Bill Frist's AIDS charity paid nearly half a million dollars to political consultants. Furthermore, the $4.4 million raised by the charity, World of Hope, was donated mostly by corporations with business before the Senate. And if that's not bad enough, most of the money has gone not to health organizations but to Christian evangelical groups.
Make the jump...
The returns for World of Hope Inc., obtained by The Associated Press, also show the charity raised the lion's share of its $4.4 million from just 18 sources. They gave between $97,950 and $267,735 each to help fund Frist's efforts to fight AIDS...The donors included several corporations with frequent business before Congress, such as insurer Blue Cross/Blue Shield, manufacturer 3M, drug maker Eli Lilly and the Goldman Sachs investment firm.
What kind of charity only gets donations from 18 sources? I suppose the kind that only your rich corporate friends know about. Clearly, World of Hope doesn't believe in broadscale fund-raising campaigns.
World of Hope gave $3 million it raised to charitable AIDS causes, such as Africare and evangelical Christian groups with ties to Republicans -- Franklin Graham's Samaritan Purse and the Rev. Luis Cortes' Esperanza USA, for example.
The rest of the money went to overhead. That included $456,125 in consulting fees to two firms run by Frist's longtime political fundraiser, Linus Catignani. One is jointly run by Linda Bond, the wife of Sen. Christopher "Kit" Bond, R-Mo.
The charity also hired the law firm of Vogel's wife, Jill Holtzman Vogel, and Frist's Tennessee accountant, Deborah Kolarich.
Kolarich's name recently surfaced in an e-mail involving Frist's controversial sale of stock in his family founded health care company. That transaction is now under federal investigation.
Jill Holtzman Vogel, who is raising money for a run for the state Senate in Virginia in 2007, has received thousands in contributions this year from Catignani & Bond and from her husband, among numerous other sources, according to data released by the Virginia Public Access Project.
Alex Vogel said Frist picked people to work on his charity whom he trusted and knew, such as Vogel's wife, and was proud that overhead costs amounted to less than $1 of every $5 raised. "It's leaner than the average charity," Vogel said.
So Frist is paying off not only the fundies but political cronies Catignani, Bond, Vogel and Kolarich. Despite Vogel's claims that the charity is "lean" How much money has actually done anything to help AIDS victims and how much has gone to Franklin's and Cortes' "abstinence only" programs? Every time I think my outrage meter has pegged, something like this comes along.