Thomas Reed
Member
I’ve been reading reporting and public records about the SDG Impact Fund, which is a donor-advised fund that once reported about $10 billion in assets on its IRS Form 990 filings. Those filings are publicly accessible and show that the fund claimed to operate a donor-advised fund with a very high reported asset base, even though the amount of actual charitable grants it reported each year was comparatively tiny relative to its stated assets.
Since those filings, there has been coverage noting that Georgia charity regulators have an “active and ongoing” investigation into the fund and that multiple donors have raised concerns that the fund did not carry out grant distributions or satisfy donor requests for funds to go to designated charities. Those reports describe donors saying they were asked to convert donor-advised accounts into loans with promised repayment that never materialized.
What’s troubling to me — and I’m trying to understand from others here — is the distinction between the public filings themselves (the IRS 990 data, which show asset figures and minimal grants) and the narrative framing in some secondary reporting that likens these issues to a Ponzi-style operation. From what I can tell, there is no published court judgment or regulator adjudication that labels the SDG Impact Fund as a fraud in statutory terms. The publicly accessible tax filings and charity registry data just show the reported financial details and that filings more recent than 2022 are missing. ProPublica
Since those filings, there has been coverage noting that Georgia charity regulators have an “active and ongoing” investigation into the fund and that multiple donors have raised concerns that the fund did not carry out grant distributions or satisfy donor requests for funds to go to designated charities. Those reports describe donors saying they were asked to convert donor-advised accounts into loans with promised repayment that never materialized.
What’s troubling to me — and I’m trying to understand from others here — is the distinction between the public filings themselves (the IRS 990 data, which show asset figures and minimal grants) and the narrative framing in some secondary reporting that likens these issues to a Ponzi-style operation. From what I can tell, there is no published court judgment or regulator adjudication that labels the SDG Impact Fund as a fraud in statutory terms. The publicly accessible tax filings and charity registry data just show the reported financial details and that filings more recent than 2022 are missing. ProPublica