instead of giving the money to the charity to which he had planned to give it?
This morning I read that he would give the money to a charity in Jacksonville. Tonight I read that he is considering the option to return it to the Stanford company as requested by the lawyers for that company. Is that what is usually done with such donations? I wouldn't think so.
Nelson may not donate tainted $$ to charity after allWASHINGTON -- Earlier today, U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Florida, said he would donate nearly $46,000 to the Jacksonville charity Dignity U Wear in order to purge $45,900 from his campaign that he received from the firm of financier R. Allen Stanford, who has been accused of a massive investment fraud.
That may no longer be the case. Lawyers assigned to recoup losses from the $8 billion fraud case have encouraged lawmakers, including Nelson, to give their tainted money back to them. Nelson spokesman Dan McLaughlin said the office was reviewing the request to decide what to do.
"We've selected a charity to send an amount equal to $45,900 in campaign contributions associated with Stanford. But we're also seeking guidance on whether it can be returned to the Stanford company's court-appointed receiver," he wrote in a statement.
Here is the PDF request from the Stanford Group with instructions:
Returning contributionsHere is another article mentioning this quandary in which Bill Nelson finds himself as possibly the largest recipient of donations from them.
Nelson holds off on charitable contributionAt the urging of a court-appointed receiver, Senator Bill Nelson’s staff this afternoon decided to hold off on his decision to send the campaign donations he had gotten from accused financier Allen Stanford to a Florida charity.
Nelson, like many politicians who received money from Stanford and his company, had promised to send an equivalent amount to charity. Nelson picked Dignity U Wear of Jacksonville to get the $45,900 that Stanford and company had sent to his campaign since 2000.
But a federal judge in Texas issued an order freezing Stanford’s assets and appointed a receiver to keep track of the money. The receiver issued a statement this afternoon urging recipients of campaign cash to send it to the court-appointed body.
Nelson’s office is seeking guidance on what to do with the money.
What advantage would there be to giving the money back instead of to charity?