Wyclef Jean denies personally benefitting from his Yele Haiti charity


Musician Wyclef Jean held an impassioned press conference and posted a video on YouTube denying misdoings by his charity, Yele Haiti. The Smoking Gun posted documents on Friday showing that the charity has been dissolved four separate times by the Florida Division of Corporations for failing to file necessary annual reports. Yele Haiti also filed three years of overdue tax returns for 2005, 2006 and 2007 all at once in August, 2009. What’s more is that large sums of money went to questionable expenses that only benefited Jean and his partner, like $250,000 for television production expenses using Jean’s own company and $100,000 straight to Jean for performing at a charity benefit.

Wyclef Jean defended his Haitian relief fund Monday against critics who say there are more reputable charities to give to – especially in light of some questionable spending and his failure to file with the IRS.

“My dad always told me, ‘If you’re a man with a clear conscience, speak with a clear conscience and the world will know,’ ” the superstar singer said.

“Have we made mistakes before? Yes. Did I ever use Yele money for personal benefit? Absolutely not.”

The scrutiny of the Wyclef Jean Foundation, also known as the Yele Haiti Foundation, comes as the son of Haiti has raised some $2 million since the quake struck.

A 2006 tax return surfaced on the TheSmokingGun.com last week showing that Yele spent $250,000 on television production for Telemax, a company that Jean owns with Yele board member Jerry Duplessis.

An additional $31,000 was spent on rental space for Platinum Sound, a Manhattan-based company Wyclef also owns with Duplessis.

And $100,000 of Yele’s funds were used to pay Wyclef after he sang at a benefit concert in Monte Carlo, Monaco, the documents show.

Hugh Locke, president of the Wyclef Jean Foundation, admitted the Telemax deal and others were mistakes.

He said criticism that Jean’s foundation was too closely intertwined with Jean’s businesses is valid – and won’t happen again.

Jean promised his donors, thousands who’ve donated $5 through text messages, that their money will be spent on saving lives.

“Yele’s books are open and transparent,” he said, despite the group’s failure to file several years of reports with the IRS until recently.

[From NY Daily News]

It’s to be expected that charities are questioned, especially now that so much money is pouring in from people who genuinely want to help the victims in Haiti. After watching his press conference, above, I can see that Jean really cares about his country and genuinely wants to help. I donated to a more established charity, though, because it just doesn’t make sense to give money to a charity that’s poorly managed. You want your money to help people and not go to overhead.

Jean should have hired someone to help file taxes and annual reports every year when they were required and he should have made sure the books were in order. He may not have profited from Yele Haiti, but the charity was dissolved four times by the state. That’s damning enough on its own. The sad thing is that this scandal over Jean’s charity has distracted from the real crisis. There are people dying who need our help. Let’s hope that people who want to donate are not discouraged from giving to established charities.

You can donate to Haitian earthquake relief through Global Giving, which gives to established, vetted organizations that are helping on the ground.

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17 Responses to “Wyclef Jean denies personally benefitting from his Yele Haiti charity”

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  1. Essie says:

    I wondered why Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie donated $1M to “Doctors Without Borders” and not to Yele Haiti. They are/were very involved with Yele Haiti (remember they both went to Haiti with Jean a few years back) and it seems they would have put their money there first. I bet they have been suspicious about this charity for some time now.

    I know Jean is dedicated to helping his home country but, why in the world would he not pay more attention to what’s going on? Why would he PAY HIMSELF for appearing at a charity event? Did he not think that would look strange? I’m glad these things have come out but I’ll give my money to the Red Cross.

  2. BitterBetty says:

    Did he explain why almost half a million dollars of donation money went to his pocket and personal use between dramatic pauses and crocodile tears? I zoned out

  3. Firestarter says:

    Simple, donate to another charity and not his.

  4. Charity is Chic says:

    This is a perfect example of why I hate the charity chic crowd.

    Sorry to say this, but these celebrities ALL benefit from their charities in one way or another. Either they benefit financially with paying themselves appearance fees or with tax write-offs or they benefit from the good publicity.

    Just give your money to a charity that is well organized and where the founder isn’t giving a press conference every five seconds to talk about how charitable they are.Unfortunately, that means sticking with the Red Cross, Doctors without Borders etc. and staying away from most celebrity charities. There is a ridiculous level of narcissism and self-congratualatory masturbation these people can’t seem to stay away from.

  5. lucy2 says:

    I very much agree that it was poorly managed and there are some questionable actions there, and they should have known better than to mix the charity with his other business ventures. And the $100K payment to himself for performing at a fundraiser bothers me. I know other celebs do it too, but for heaven’s sake, perform for free when it’s a good cause, especially if it’s your OWN charity!
    However I do believe he is sincere in his efforts to help and that any money raised now will be better managed. But I also chose more established charities. (Docs w/out Borders, Red Cross, Americares, Partners in Health, and Unicef) These are some of the groups who are not only doing everything they can now, but work all over the world all the time, not just in disasters.
    charitynavigator.org has a list and full ratings for a bunch of them.

  6. texasmom says:

    I think Wyclef means well, but may have made rookie mistakes with his charity. His grief is certainly real.

    I’m with Firestarter — simple, give to another charity. Our family went with Partners in Health. They were already well-established in Haiti before the crisis, and have been updating donors with information about what is happening, what they are doing, etc.

  7. bros says:

    I did the same, celebitchy-to doctors without borders, because i think someone pointed to a NY post article written last year on this charity-I think it was a poster on this site. I decided better safe than sorry-I do not want my money going to line his pockets.

  8. nana says:

    ive read, although yele reserved airspace for goods yet, have not spent any single dollar to haiti earthquake until now.

  9. CaramelKiss14 says:

    It’s sh*t like this that makes folks hesitate in donating. I already donated money to this charity and thought that he would be more of an advocate for this cause as his roots are Haitian. *shakes head*. The thing is I don’t give to causes in general as most of them use the 90/10 split. 90 percent for “administrative costs” and 10 percent for the actual cause.
    My bad, should’ve done my due diligence first. Last time I’ll donate just because someone may have ties to that cause. He has no one to blame but himself if people are slow to donate to his “charity” in the future. Apparently, it didn’t matter to him when he charged $100k.

  10. tot_p says:

    bullshit!

  11. la chica says:

    if Wyclef wasn’t personally benefitting from the charity, then can he explain how he has been paying his bills since the Fugees dissolved? when was the last time he put out a CD that sold anything? he did a song a couple of years ago with Shakira — has the revenue from that single been sustaining him all these years?

    i think not. i think that he has been royally busted and is very embarassed. that said, i do think that he cares passionately about his island. but he also cares about his image as a Haitian who has made it in the US. these two factors are so intermingled that i’m not sure they can be teased apart.

    i’m glad he got busted. and there are many longstanding institutions that do help such as the Red Cross. none of them are perfect but you want your money to go where you sent it, not to pay somebody’s personal bills!! shame on you Wyclef. double, triple shame.

  12. Solveig says:

    CaramelKiss14:
    January 19th, 2010 at 11:53 am

    It’s sh*t like this that makes folks hesitate in donating.
    _____

    And this is the saddest thing.
    Sadder than the fact that someone can take advantage of others’ woe.
    I hope that Jean is sincere and that there’s no fraud in this story.

    PS, this costs nothing:
    http://one.org/international/actnow/haiti/?rc=haitifb

  13. hatsumomo says:

    well, this is a bummer, I already donated to his and the American Red Cross. Hopefully some oversight is in place to save whats left. 🙁

  14. Well, this is horrible news. I used to like him…

  15. d says:

    one other reason I didn’t donate to his charity was because they weren’t really set up for disaster relief, whereas Doctors Without Borders and other similiar organizations (I assumed) would be better prepared to handle the medical and relief support (logistics, supplies, etc.). All bookkeeping mess aside, when I read about his charity, I didn’t get the impression that they’d really be able to help as well as the other organizations could and whose focus is disaster relief (more so than his anyway). So aside from all that, I agree, I’m sure he means well, and I don’t doubt his intentions, but when you run a charity, you have GOT to run a tight ship on EVERYTHING and EVERYBODY. It’s like, sometimes it’s not a good idea to work with friends because you may not hold them as accountable as others. That said, I’m hearing about mismanagement of funds in other organizations like the REd Cross too, so…maybe Smoking Gun should start looking all ALL of these known charities. You know, to be fair.

  16. JohnnieR says:

    I too donated to Doctors Without Borders – a very viable, well run, and much needed organization in this world of ours.

  17. lanette says:

    I am down w/Yele.

    Wyclef knows what this is really about.