Nature Conservancy Under Investigation, Suspends Operations After Post Exposure

Posted on Freedom Advocates on May 30th 2003 

SUMMARY: The Nature Conservancy is coming under fire after the Washington Post described how the $3 billion environmental charity may have played loose with IRS laws to benefit supporters, including corporations that have paid millions in environmental fees. This story provides a comprehensive overview of how your taxes and donations have been used by The Nature Conservancy, provides links to the Washington Posts “Big Green” series and to a library of supplementary stories.

FULL TEXT:

The Nature Conservancy is coming under fire after the Washington Post described how the $3 billion environmental charity may have played loose with IRS laws to benefit supporters, including corporations that have paid millions in environmental fees.

Questionable practices

In a three-part series, Washington Post Staff Writers Joe Stephens and David B. Ottaway detailed questionable practices at the worlds richest environmental group like the following:

  • Acquiring raw land, attaching development restrictions, then reselling the properties to supporters at greatly reduced prices.
  • Selling ecologically sensitive land at reduced prices to the organization’s trustees for use as home sites.
  • Conducting land deals that coincide with charitable contributions to the Conservancy from the buyers, who then benefit from significant tax breaks.
  • Drilling for oil under the breeding ground of endangered species.
  • Buying land from corporations whose executives sat o­n the nonprofit’s governing board.
  • Accepting cash payments for roughly the amount of a discount that is then written off the buyers’ federal income taxes.

Conservancy takes steps to hold off external investigation

To shore up its image The Nature Conservancy hired a PR agency and has put outa call for its supporters to write letters to the editor to protest the Post series, the Post reported. In attempt to head off an outside investigation, like the o­ne that the Post reports is brewing in Congress, the Conservancy has hired a team of lawyers. Meanwhile, the Conservancy has suspended all “conservation buyer” transactions until its board of directors can investigate [itself], according to the Post.

“Big Green” Series

Following is the three part “Big Green” series by Washington Post Staff Writers Joe Stephens and David B. Ottaway:

“Big Green” supplementary stories

Following are supplementary stories to the “Big Green”.

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