Charities Deceive Donors Unaware Money Goes to a Telemarketer
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-09-12/charities-deceive-donors-unaware-money-goes-to-a-telemarketer.html
Carol Patterson was waiting for a call from her doctor. When the phone rang on that afternoon in August 2011 at her home in Cortland, Ohio, it wasnt a physician on the other end. A woman named Robin said she was representing the American Diabetes Association.
Robin didnt ask for money. She asked Patterson to stamp and mail pre-printed fundraising letters to 15 neighbors. Both of Pattersons parents and one grandmother had been diabetic, so she agreed to do it, Bloomberg Markets magazine reports in its October issue.
I thought since it does run in the family, it wouldnt hurt for me to help, says Patterson, 64, a retired elementary school teacher. She guessed, based on what she knew about charity fundraising, that about 70 to 80 percent of the money she brought in would be used for diabetes research.
The truth was almost the exact opposite. The vast majority of funds Patterson, her neighbors and people like them throughout the country would raise -- almost 80 percent -- would never be made available to the Diabetes Association. Instead, that money collected from letters sent to neighbors would go to the company that employed Robin and an army of other paid telephone solicitors: InfoCision Management Corp.
InfoCision telemarketers at work in one of the company's Ohio offices.