RPT-Charities hit hard as Madoff losses mount
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By Jason Szep
BOSTON, Dec 15 (Reuters) - Outraged philanthropists worldwide nursed wounds on Monday from the alleged $50 billion fraud by former Nasdaq chairman Bernard Madoff, forcing some charities to shutter and hitting others with massive losses.
The scandal rippled far beyond the multimillion-dollar private foundation run by Madoff that channeled money into hospitals and theaters, and swept up charities large and small, directly and indirectly, along with wealthy Jewish investors Madoff personally advised.
The allegations of massive fraud by one of Wall Street's best-known brokers and money managers came at a difficult time with many charities already struggling from losses in financial markets and facing growing demand for their services in the year-long U.S. recession.
"Sometimes we have seen this wrongdoing happen, and it cuts into endowment funds. But I have been working here for 10 years and I haven't seen a situation where organizations simply disappeared," said Michael Nilsen, a senior director at the Association of Fundraising Professionals.
U.S. prosecutors and regulators have accused Madoff, 70, a former chairman of the Nasdaq Stock Market, of running the fraud through his investment advisory business. Banks and investment funds around the world lined up on Monday to disclose they had invested billions of dollars with him.
As of Monday, at least three foundations had closed or planned to shut. The JEHT Foundation, which supports reform of the criminal and juvenile justice systems, said it will close next month because its donors, Jeanne Levy-Church and Kenneth Levy-Church, were investors in the Madoff business.
The Chais Family Foundation, which gives about $12.5 million annually to Jewish causes mostly in Israel and the former Soviet Union, also shuttered and let go its five staff after losing $8 million with Madoff.
"The entire fund was invested through Mr Madoff, and as a result the fund has been completely obliterated," Chais Family Foundation president Avraham Infeld told Reuters by cell phone from Jerusalem, where the foundation is headquartered.
"I find this man's immorality almost as great as the Chais's generosity," he said.
'IT'S HORRIFYING'
Workers at the Salem, Massachusetts, offices of the Robert I. Lappin Charitable Foundation, which financed trips for Jewish youth to Israel, said they were stunned after the Madoff scandal ended its 12 years of work.
"It was business as usual and then it was suddenly closed. It's horrifying," said Amy Powell, the foundation's former public relations director. We served some 2,000 people in our community. That made a difference in their lives."
Some charities such as the Gift of Life Bone Marrow Foundation suffered indirectly because donors who invested money with Madoff scaled back contributions.
"We've seen financial supporters who were personally invested in him no longer having the capacity to give charitable donations because of what happened," said the foundation's founder and executive director, Jay Feinberg. Continued...



