Amid Financial Chaos, Stacey Abrams’s Nonprofit Flouts Federal Law
ATLANTA — It’s been a rough few months for the New Georgia Project.
The nonprofit founded by Stacey Abrams and once helmed by Sen. Raphael Warnock (D., Ga.) dismissed most of its leadership over the summer. A former executive told the Washington Free Beacon that the group’s top accountant was fired after saying he couldn’t do his job without violating the law. Now the group missed a crucial IRS filing deadline, an error that puts it on the wrong side of federal law.
Such chaos is now commonplace at the New Georgia Project, which Abrams founded in 2013 to register non-white voters in the Peach State. The group, and its affiliate New Georgia Project Action Fund, appear to have fallen into dire financial straits since the June dismissal of chief financial officer Randall Frazier. Although the groups raised a combined $37 million in 2020, their human resource director claimed in an October video call terminating three top employees that the New Georgia Project could no longer afford to pay their salaries.
The New Georgia Project’s Form 990 financial disclosure, which was due to the IRS on Tuesday, would shed light into what the two groups did with their millions in 2021. The forms offer a detailed picture of a nonprofit’s finances, including how much was paid to top officials and contractors. But New Georgia Project Legal Affairs Director Tangi Bush told the Free Beacon on Wednesday that the group’s “finance department” was still preparing the disclosures. Nonprofits and charities must provide their 990s to the public within 24 hours of an in-person request.
The former executive who spoke to the Free Beacon says that the New Georgia Project’s lack of staff and culture of secrecy are to blame for the groups’ missed IRS filing. Bush could not even say who works in NGP’s finance department when asked by the Free Beacon, citing a “personnel issue.”
According to National Legal and Policy Center counsel Paul Kamenar, the groups’ failure to file the Form 990 on time suggests “serious financial irregularities that should be audited.” With no known leadership in its accounting division, the New Georgia Project seems unable to comply with federal laws governing nonprofits, and faces potential fines or other penalties.
The New Georgia Project could also face sanctions from state authorities for failing to disclose its finances. Black Lives Matter group was temporarily barred from raising charitable funds in
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