US News

IT’S CHARITY – H’WOOD STYLE

THEY have good looks, but they could use some serious help straightening out their books.

George Clooney, Bono, Wyclef Jean, Petra Nemcova and a half-dozen other celebs have founded charities that have some eyebrow-raising business practices, The Post uncovered in a sweeping review.

Jean’s charity to help Haitians has failed to file tax returns for eight years. Bono’s mega-foundation chartered a plane to Africa and bought tickets for a U2 concert.

Poker lover George Clooney took in donations from a dubious online card-games company. And Giant Super Bowl hero Osi Umenyiora has dropped the ball when it comes to even registering his charity to benefit Africa and research into Alzheimer’s disease.

“You need to have people managing the organization that are well versed in the letter of the law,” said Bennett Weiner, chief operating officer of the Better Business Bureau’s Wise Giving Alliance. “Just because a celebrity is associated with a charity doesn’t mean they are doing any of this.”

Here are 10 celeb charities that raised red flags, according to a Post examination of federal tax forms and other records.

1.) Yele Haiti (Wyclef Jean Foundation)

Former Fugees member Wyclef Jean’s charity aims to address educational, environmental and emergency-relief issues in his native Haiti. It has a slick Web site and financial support from Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie but has not filed a US tax form since 2000. An insider at the charity told The Post that where the money goes in Haiti is a mystery, or if part of the haul went to purchase a television station in Port-au-Prince. Charity President Hugh Locke said, “We are in arrears in our filing.” He said that large donations go directly to projects in Haiti, where the organization is registered as a charity. He said the missing IRS documents would be filed by the end of the year. The forms are required to allow them to receive donations that can be tax deductible and to avoid paying taxes on their donations. The charity also has not completed the required New York state registration, according to Attorney General’s Office records. Meanwhile, Jean owes the state of New Jersey $183,172 in personal income tax, a sum Jean’s spokesman said last month the singer was in the process of paying.

2.) George Clooney’s Not On Our Watch

The “Ocean’s Eleven” star leads the Hollywood outcry against genocide in Darfur. His group also provides humanitarian aid and raises awareness of human-rights issues in Sudan and Burma. But Clooney’s charity, which lists Don Cheadle and Matt Damon as founders, has a contractual relationship with an offshore company that conducts poker games on the Internet to raise funds for the charity. The company, Rational Services Limited, is incorporated on the Isle of Man, off the coast of England. Such companies operate in a legal gray area. In registration documents filed last year with the New York attorney general, Not On Our Watch requested its contract with the gaming company “not be subject to public inspection.” Although the AG does not require such information, one expert on charities and IRS law said he had never seen a tax-exempt organization list an offshore gambling enterprise as a donor. The charity’s executive director, Alex Wagner, would not reveal the nature of the relationship with Rational Services Limited, other than to say it donated $1 million to Not On Our Watch. “They were very generous to us and gave us a donation that has gone on to do a lot of good in Darfur,” Wagner said.

3.) Osi Umenyiora’s Make Plays for Africa, Strike 4 a Cure

The Giant star defensive end started a foundation called Make Plays for Africa and a sister group, Strike 4 a Cure, to raise money for research into AIDS and Alzheimer’s disease two years ago. But their annual celebrity bowling tournaments were financial failures, and it came to light in news reports last summer that the groups did not have tax-exempt status, as it claimed. Umenyiora’s brother, Jim, director of Make Plays for Africa, has said he would cancel further events and shut down the Web site. Until recently, however, Umenyiora’s personal Web site solicited “sponsorship packages” for Strike 4 a Cure, and the charity’s Web site still solicits donations. The Make Plays for Africa site has been shut down. Umenyiora’s manager did not return calls for comment.

4.) Tyra Banks’ TZONE Foundation

The supermodel and talk-show host recently set up this Los Angeles-based organization to help disadvantaged teenage girls – starting with running “self-esteem camps,” then shifting focus to funding other groups that empower young women. But in 2006, the group blew more cash on salaries and internal costs ($34,611) than it gave out in grants to community groups ($31,900). Meanwhile, it listed a questionable expense of $4,255 as “benefits paid to or for members” on its tax forms. The charity said that it was in a transition period in 2006 and that the $4,255 benefits expense was misidentified on the form and was actually money for employee benefits.

5.) Bono’s DATA (Debt, AIDS, Trade, Africa) Foundation

The U2 frontman lends his megawatt star power to this advocacy group to help bring an end to AIDS and poverty in Africa. The Washington, DC-based group – now known as One – took in an eye-popping $31 million in 2006 but spent just $6 million on its work. Among its outrageous expenses were a $272,700 bill to charter a plane, a $117,838 tab for “transportation and security” and $8,740 for U2 tour tickets. Kathy McKiernan, a spokeswoman for Bono’s organization, said the group chartered the 737 to fly journalists and others on a 10-day “learning and awareness-raising trip” to seven African countries in May 2006. DATA was reimbursed for the majority of the costs from the media, she said. “Our policy is to take security and a camera crew to shoot video for use in our advocacy work with us on all Africa trips we do,” she added. She said the concert tickets were distributed to DATA’s supporters and elected representatives in Washington. McKiernan said the lawmakers were asked to reimburse the charity if the ticket price was more than $50, to comply with congressional ethics rules. Most of the $31 million raised was in grant form and will be paid over several years, with just $8 million coming in 2006, McKiernan said. Bono has never disclosed how much he gives to his own charity, but McKiernan said the rock star covers all of his own travel-related expenses.

6.) Petra Nemcova’s Happy Hearts Fund

After surviving the 2004 tsunami in Thailand by clinging to the top of a palm tree, the supermodel wanted to pay it forward by founding a charity to build schools in Latin America and Indonesia. Instead, it seems an outrageous portion of the donations have gone for lavish parties at Cipriani. Bruce Willis, Uma Thurman and Eva Mendes have attended the black-tie affairs. According to the most recent tax filing, for 2006, the organization spent more than half of its funds on administration and fund raising, including its annual star-studded Heart of Gold ball, and gave nothing in aid. Glen Nordlinger, a director of Happy Hearts Fund, said the group raised $4.5 million in 2007 and spent $2.1 million on programs, including building schools – though the charity has not filed its 2007 paperwork yet. But even those figures raise red flags with charity watchdog groups, which use the almost universal standard that a well-run charity should spend 65 to 75 percent of its donations helping people. Still, in November, Happy Hearts will host a Masquerade in Venice dinner at Cipriani Wall Street and will honor “His Excellency” Wyclef Jean, according to the invitation.

7.) Larry King Cardiac Foundation

The CNN talk-show host and heart-attack survivor raises funds for heart operations for poor patients. But the charity spent $2.3 million on salaries, supplies, advertising, program expenses and gala dinners in LA and Washington, DC, in 2006, much more than the industry standard of 10% for fund-raising. Meanwhile, King employs his son, Larry King Jr., as the organization’s CEO at a $200,000 salary – a hefty raise from the $66,667 he was paid when first appointed in 2004. Junior’s current salary blows away the standard 3 percent of total expenses recommended as the ceiling for a CEO salary. Family members on charity boards are also a red flag. “I’m afraid that this just doesn’t pass the smell test,” said Sandra Miniutti, vice president of marketing for Charity Navigator, a leading charity watchdog group. King Jr., 46, said that the charity has only three employees and that he wears many hats. “I am not your typical CEO or president,” he said. “I do everything, and I agreed to take this on because I really wanted to help my father.” The group didn’t respond to requests for financial information from the charity division of the Better Business Bureau, which asked for it after receiving calls from potential donors who wanted more details on the organization.

8.) Gary Payton Foundation

The retired Seattle SuperSonics point guard established this Seattle-based charity to give out scholarships to needy children. But the organization gave out only $12,937 – while it spent $101,620 on management and administration in 2006. It spent more than half of its donations on the salary of its executive director – $65,000 – that year. A spokesman for the charity would not comment.

9.) Dyan Cannon’s Operation Outlook

The aging actress is the “international executive spokesperson” of this Everett, Wash.-based group that tries to find runaways and missing children. The charity spends 68 percent of its $2.4 million budget on its relentless telephone solicitations – but workers have been accused of posing as representatives of a better-known child-finding agency to raise funds. The accusations say phone solicitors misrepresented the group in telephone solicitations as the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, a highly regarded charity. “One overanxious caller can make statements like that, and we just can’t be responsible for everything,” said a spokeswoman for Operation Outlook. The charity has also rebuffed repeated requests to provide its financial information to the Better Business Bureau.

10.) Magic Johnson Foundation

The retired basketball legend raises AIDS awareness and helps patients. But the group has spent large amounts on administrative costs ($712,825 in 2006) that are almost equal to the amount it gives to the cause ($714,029). The foundation’s president, Towalame Austin, acknowledged the issue and said the group had looked to reorganize. She said new filings should reflect a turnaround in the amount going to the needy.