CHARGES
PROMPT AG (Attorney General) REVIEW OF CHARITY
DENMARK
CALLS GROUP A `FRONT'
Boston Globe,
Sept 17th 2002
Author(s): Farah Stockman
The state attorney general's office has said that it is reviewing
the case of a Massachusetts-based charity run by a group that is accused in
Denmark of setting up charities as "front organizations" for
commercial businesses.
The charity, Planet Aid, says its two area stores, which sell
used clothing to benefit the homeless, don't take a profit and continue to raise
substantial sums for the poor. Planet Aid, with stores in Harvard Square and on
Newbury Street in Boston, is run by members of the Teachers Group, an informal
network of activists that Danish prosecutors say set up a rain forest
conservation project that turned out to be a commercial sawmill and funneled
millions of dollars for their leaders' personal use.
Ester Neltrup, a general manager at Planet Aid, said she and
Planet Aid's board of directors are members of the Teachers Group, but said the
charges in Denmark against eight Teachers Group leaders have nothing to do with
the used-clothing charity. She also said the Danish government unfairly
scrutinized the liberal group for political reasons.
"The Danish government holds the activities of people in the
Teachers Group to a higher standard than people who are not in the Teachers
Group," she said.
Neltrup called the accusations against her fellow Teachers Group members "odd"
and "explosive".
The Teachers Group is a network of a few hundred activists who
make a life commitment to the group and donate their salaries to a common pool.
Started in Denmark in 1970 by a man named Mogens Amdi Petersen, Teachers Group
members have founded schools and development projects around the world under the
banner Humana People to People Movement. In recent years questions about
their finances have prompted authorities in England and Belgium to take action
against charities run by members of the group. French authorities have
classified them as a nonreligious cult.
Teachers Group members have run nonprofit organizations in the
United States for more than a decade, with Massachusetts as the headquarters of
both Planet Aid and the Williamstown-based International Institute for
Cooperation and Development. Planet Aid collects used clothing across the
country and resells it, donating the profits to charity. The International
Institute sends volunteers overseas. Teachers Group members also run US'Again, a
profit used-clothing business based in Atlanta, and Garson & Shaw, the
wholesale used-clothing broker that buys and resells most of Planet Aid's
clothes.
The Teachers Group did not stir controversy in the United States
until last February, when the FBI arrested Petersen on an Interpol warrant from
Denmark. Seven other Teachers Group members, including one who worked for the
International Institute, have been charged in Denmark with tax fraud and
embezzlement. In a separate case, Belgian authorities have accused Teachers
Group members of money-laundering.
According to documents filed by assistant US attorney Mathew E.
Sloan, the charities that one Teachers Group fund donated to were "little
more than front organizations to funnel back money to the Teachers Group and the
defendants for their own personal gain."
Planet Aid officials say the Teachers Group is a personal choice,
not a formal organization, and have distanced themselves from Petersen.
"He has nothing to do with Planet Aid," said Neltrup,
"and his situation has no consequences for Planet Aid."
Yet three of Planet Aid's five board members, including Neltrup,
submitted affidavits in support of Pedersen during his extradition proceedings,
attesting to the fact that they had "knowingly, intentionally, and
voluntarily entered into a eleven-year obligation to donate money directly"
from their salaries to the fund that Pedersen is accused of mismanaging. About
140 Teachers Group members submitted similar affidavits from all over the world.
Neltrup said she gave money to the fund only for a short time, as
a personal choice, and that the funds, as far as she knew, were used for
humanitarian purposes.
Mikael Norling, Planet Aid's president who is also a founder of
the International Institute, appeared on Petersen's witness list as someone who
would testify that one of the Teacher Group's alleged "front"
companies was, in fact, a humanitarian project. Norling could not be reached for
comment.
Doug Bailey, who works for Rasky/Baerlein Group, a Boston public
relations firm that Planet Aid hired after Pedersen's arrest, said Petersen was
simply "a friend" of Planet Aid officials.
Poul Gode, a deputy prosecutor in Denmark's Division of Serious
Economic Crimes, said he had no evidence that Teachers Group members had done
anything illegal in Massachusetts.
Sarah Nathan, a spokeswoman for the attorney general's office,
said she could neither confirm nor deny an investigation, but acknowledged that
her office is "reviewing the situation."