CHARITY BEGINS AT HOME FOR $2.2M BOSS
The New York Post by JEANE MacINTOSH - October 27, 2008A charity set up by controversial photographer Robert Mapplethorpe has paid off handsomely for its largest beneficiary: the foundation's president. Michael Ward Stout, a Manhattan lawyer who heads the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation and estate, has raked in $2.2 million from the nonprofit for his firm since 1998 - more than the total $2 million the charity has shelled out in grants in the same period, tax records show. Stout has run the charity since the famed New York lensman - whose sexually erotic and explicit shots sparked massive controversy at exhibits in the 1990s - died of AIDS complications in 1989.
As president, Stout doesn't draw a salary, according to IRS tax forms. However, his Manhattan law firm, Stout & Thomas, collects massive fees from the charity, which is funded by Mapplethorpe's estate. Stout, a longtime friend of Mapplethorpe, was executor of the artist's $200 million-plus estate. The foundation's goals are to help support the arts and to fund AIDS charities and research. Stout's fees first came under scrutiny nearly a decade ago. Oliver Koppel, the state attorney general at the time, questioned the millions Stout drew in fees while the lawyer acted as both Mapplethorpe's executor and the attorney for the foundation. After Koppel's probe, Stout wound up being allowed to draw $3.7 million in executor fees and $1.9 million as the estate lawyer.
Today, Stout says his firm's take from the foundation is "legitimate, as it always has been." The large fees "may look like a lot," he said, because they represent work for both the charity arm and the estate, under the 2003 move that combined the two entities as one nonprofit. "The charity does not have a lot of liquid assets," said Stout, so it doesn't make large cash payouts. Stout said his fees largely reflect what his firm draws to run the estate, which includes 14 galleries. "The majority of our fees are related to running the estate business, not the nonprofit," he said. "Unfortunately, there is no way to show that breakdown on the 990s [IRS tax forms]." jeane.macintosh@nypost.com
If you want to get to the bottom of the real charity and foundation crimes throughout New York State, look into Laura Werner at the New York State, Attorney General, Charity Bureau. She's been allowing lawyers and bankers to get away with crimes worth billions, yes, billions. And she took her orders from one horny Governor who was protecting his own elite band of thieves. Get Laura Werner to talk and the whole house of cards comes crumbling down.
ReplyDeleteI filed a complaint with Laura Werner 5 years ago when I found out a NY attorney had ripped off our dad's estate by claiming he controlled everything and, of course, he got all the money from a bogus charity he set up that NO ONE every knew about. We're still waiting to hear from Ms. Werner. I think Werner is on the take and should be jailed.
ReplyDeletewith all the AIDS groups out thier that the money could be used to HELP people in need
ReplyDeleteYou are talking about almost 6M
how cn this guy claim almost 6 million for his work.
I thought most charities were handled by the family and friends of the deceased. Almost all work for free or close to that.
If the guy was not a lawyer he would be questioned about the spending as in the Aster case because he is a lawyer other lawyers are looking the other way.
Maybe someone should ask the FBI to look at this. When Spitzer was the AG he refused to investigate lawyers. When Milberg and Weiss was charged by the California AG
Spitzer did nothing but return few hundred thousand dolars the they gave him for his Gov campaign.
He did not offer his cooperation to help the Cal. AG even though Milbergs & weiss was based out of N.Y.C