An organization that declared its intent to bring
transparency to charitable donations in Syrian Sephardic Jewish communities has
gone silent three years after its inception.
Shortly after the July 2009 arrests of three prominent
Sephardic rabbis who had used charity funds in a money-laundering scheme, the
Sephardic Community Federation instituted a compliance plan for charitable
organizations and announced that nearly 20 groups had adopted the guidelines or
were considering doing so.
But the organization declined to comment on how the
committee was progressing. Over the course of weeks, multiple calls to the
SCF’s executive director, Avi Spitzer, were not returned, nor were calls and
e-mails to Eli Greenberg, who is a partner at the law firm Wolf Haldenstein
Adler Freeman & Herz and a driving force in the initiative.
New York City Councilman David Greenfield, a former SCF
executive vice president, would not speak on the record about the SCF and
suggested contacting current SCF members. Shortly after the arrests, Greenfield
proclaimed that the SCF would take unprecedented steps to certify that
Sephardic charities operate at the highest legal and ethical standards.
“I would hope that they have a very good reason for their
actions,” said Mark Charendoff, former president and CEO of the Jewish Funders
Network, referring to SCF. “But certainly, if their purpose is to bring greater
responsibility and greater sincerity, one would say, minimally, they should
start by modeling that behavior themselves.”
Rabbi Saul Kassin, chief rabbi of Congregation Shaare Zion,
in Brooklyn, was the most prominent figure arrested in the 2009 federal sting
known as Operation Bid Rig. After pleading guilty in March 2011, Kassin was
eventually sentenced to two years of probation.
In all, 46 people were arrested,
including a host of rabbis — among them a pair of New Jersey Sephardic rabbis:
Edmond Nahum, rabbi of Deal Synagogue, and Eliahu Ben Haim, leader of
Congregation Ohel Yaacob, in Deal — plus politicians and even a trafficker of
human organs.
Kassin’s arrest shook the Sephardic communities of both Deal
and Brooklyn, which are known for their wealth and extensive charitable
donations.
As a result, Greenberg was tasked with leading an independent
committee to oversee not-for-profit organizations in those Sephardic Syrian
communities. The accounting firm of Loeb & Troper was to certify guidelines
set forth by Greenberg’s committee. Representatives from the firm did not
return calls from the Forward.
By April 2010, between four and six Sephardic organizations
had adopted the guidelines. At the time, Greenberg said 15 others were
considering them and that he hoped to eventually have 40 groups.
The guidelines
included a code of ethics, as well as policies relating to conflicts of
interest, document retention and the protection of whistleblowers. The
initiative also aimed at diminishing cash transactions between charities and
donors; however, there were no clear legal ramifications for not abiding by
these rules.
Read more at: Forward
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