Confidence Man, Unmasked, and
Asked to Answer to the IRS | Wayne Pacelle: A Humane Nation
The Confidence Man, Unmasked, and Asked to Answer to the IRS
02
Nov 2012
It's an old and familiar story, the confidence man with his
bag of tricks, working his scams until the cold light of day shines and
unmasks him for all to see. That's where Richard Berman finds himself today
-- exposed as the black bag artist for hire, a man who has made a hefty gain
attacking charities, including The HSUS, on behalf of his industry patrons.
Bloomberg News, in a story that broke this morning, has recapped
Berman's long career as a public-relations hit man -- attempting to twist
charity laws to further the goals of his corporate clients, and not
inconsequentially, reaping enormous personal financial rewards. The news
account also disclosed that
The HSUS has filed an exhaustive complaint with the Internal Revenue
Service, an action taken on behalf of our interests and those of other
reputable charities.
In today's
Bloomberg story, Marcus Owens, a former director of the exempt
organizations department at the IRS, said in an interview that Berman's "web
of organizations clearly, in my view, is operating for his private benefit
and for the private benefit of his clients." That's "a clear violation of
the requirements for tax-exempt status."

Corporate lobbyist Rick
Berman's mansion in McLean, Va. Berman's for-profit PR company received
the vast share of money funneled through some of his charities.
"This mess of Berman and his empire of non-profits has gone on for too
long," added Frances Hill, a professor of law at the University of Miami and
author of "Taxation of Exempt Entities." Hill told Bloomberg reporters Mark
Drajem and Brian Wingfield it "seems like an appalling abuse of tax-exempt
status."
IRS proceedings are private, and that is how we handled the
filing of our 200-page legal complaint. But now that it has been brought to
public attention, I can share some details on this blog.
Accompanied
by more than 7,000 supporting documents, the
complaint details how Berman's syndicate of phony tax-exempt front
groups, all of which are registered charities under section 501(c) of the
Internal Revenue Service code, operate essentially as a scheme to defraud
the U.S. Treasury and taxpayers of tens of millions of dollars.
Collectively, these entities present a pattern of abuse with respect to
their formation, receipt and disbursement of grants, and interconnectedness
that is characteristic and indicative of abusive tax shelters. It's a
swindle.
The documents, which include Berman's own statements, show
that his for-profit PR firm, Berman and Co., received the vast share of
money funneled through some of his charities -- in two cases, more than 90
percent. Astonishingly, Berman signed a contract both on behalf of his
charity and on behalf of his public relations company. Imagine if the CEO of
a real charity signed a contract with his private company and took 90
percent of the incoming donations?
The complaint could cost Berman's
syndicate of non-profit shells tens of millions in tax liability, including
back taxes and penalties, revocation of tax-exempt status, and other legal
penalties.
As most people already know, our federal government has
long favored the work of charitable enterprises by giving them tax-exempt
status under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. This exemption
is the cornerstone of American philanthropy, enabling many of the core
activities of our civil society, including faith and worship, education at
all levels, public health and disease prevention, feeding the hungry and
sheltering the needy, protecting the environment, enhancing culture through
the arts and humanities, and, yes, protecting animals from cruelty. Where
would we be in our society without these good works?
This section of
our tax code was certainly not meant to favor the self-interest and
profit-seeking impulses of men like Richard Berman, nor their miserly view
on the care and well-being of others. Most assuredly, it's also not meant to
provide a tax advantage to corporations in quest of their business goals,
including their attacks on charitable institutions while hiding behind a
phony front-group with anonymity.
But the complaint to the IRS sets
forth a comprehensive case that Berman did exactly these things. He set out
to undermine the work of The HSUS on behalf of financial interests who had a
stake in preserving the mistreatment of animals for commercial ends. His
absurdly misleading and fatuous advertising and web attacks served no
non-profit purpose, the complaint says. Other charities and public interest
individuals and causes suffered similar attacks on behalf of corporate
clients. Remember, this is a guy who learned his trade defending tobacco
companies against those who wanted to restrict smoking in restaurants, and
he's subsequently put those tactics and others to work in targeting not just
The HSUS, but also Mothers Against Drunk Driving, the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, and a host of other groups and entities that make
this world a more livable place for people and for animals.
If factory
farmers and their apologists, or puppy millers or seal clubbers want to
defend their conduct, let them stand up in public and speak, and hire
lobbying firms and public relations agencies; they are well-equipped to do
so. They shouldn't join Berman in manipulating the charity tax laws and hide
behind him as a front man. Tax advantages properly belong to the best of
human labors, not the worst of them.
Think about it. At a time when
our country can least afford it, our nation is, in effect, unwittingly
subsidizing Berman's sumptuous lifestyle, and, in the process, enabling him
to erode the network of philanthropic activities that becomes even more
critical when government services are constricted or eliminated and when we
have an epidemic of animal cruelty, obesity, drunk driving, and other
problems that weaken society and diminish the quality of life. His
self-enrichment scheme deserves only our moral disgust, and it most
certainly deserves no safe harbor in the Internal Revenue Code.
Because IRS proceedings are confidential, and no outcome or timeline is
certain, The HSUS will be calling on state attorneys general and other
government agencies and watchdog groups to independently determine the
extent to which Berman has undermined federal and state charity statutes and
to present findings to the public. The integrity of our tax code and
philanthropic system should not be breached in this way. Berman's conduct is
shadowy and corrosive, and only sunlight and transparency, combined with
adherence to the rule of law, can make things right.