As a result, Feld Entertainment, which owns Ringling Bros.*and*Barnum & Bailey, brought a federal racketeering lawsuit*against*activists, resulting in*HSUS and the other animal extremists writing a $15.75*million check that covered Ringling*s*legal fees, wreaked by the prolonged crusade. (ASPCA, another organization named in the suit had already settled its*part for $9.3 million.)
HSUS seems to think that animal lovers shouldnt be phased by its settlement. In a*letter responding to*the Times editorial, HSUS spokesman*Alan Heymann*explained that the*lawsuit was*settle[d] earlier this year, and that the group continues to be transparent about where donor dollars go.
This insistence on transparency is surprising, given*HSUSs statement following the settlement.*HSUS claimed that no donor dollars from The HSUS will go to Feld. That seems to be misleading at best, and perhaps outright false.*HSUSs insurance company denied it coverage*regarding the RICO suit. HSUS has sued its insurer to try to get coverage, but theres no guarantee HSUS will winand the RICO lawsuit settlement was already paid in May.
Our*polling*also contradicts HSUSs*claims of ongoing transparency and good stewardship of donations. Last year, over 1,000 self-identified donors to the Humane Society of the United States reported that they supported the group to help HSUS care for animals in shelters. Upon learning that only 1% of the HSUS budget is used for this end, 84% of HSUSs benefactors agreed HSUS misleads people into thinking that it supports local humane societies and pet shelters.*That doesnt exactly sound like transparency and good stewardship.
If you dont take our word for it (or the words of the groups very own donors), consider the evaluations of objective third-parties: Charity Navigator pulled HSUSs rating and replaced it with a*warning to donors.*And the charity evaluator*CharityWatch routinely gives*HSUS bad grades on its report cards.
This isnt Heymanns first flop, either. Last year we*told Bloomberg News*about a complaint we filed with the IRS due to HSUSs apparently filing of incorrect tax returns for years. HSUS had been wrongly inflating its finances against IRS instruction. Heymanns brainless response in the story was The only thing I would ask is that you consider the source of these allegations. Well, Bloomberg did consider the sourceand the factsand ran the story. And in its*most current tax return HSUS has changed the way it*reports some of its*incomepresumably as a response to our allegations.
HSUS claims*the Times*is*issuing ad-hominem, false attacks at the*allegedly*respected*HSUS. But the facts speak for themselves, and a group that trades on the generosity of others to*attack farmers or*pay legal bills*doesnt earn any respect in our book.
More from HumaneWatch...
The $16 Million Elephant in the Room
0 commentaires:
Enregistrer un commentaire