Amazingly, this very same university board remains in place.

I mean, minus Bernie and Ezra …

The [fraud] charge [against Merkin] highlights the dangers charities face if they overlook governance practices and conflicts of interest, like investing with businesses run by board members. Deep losses incurred by charities invested through Merkin reveal how several boards fell down on their job.

Yeshiva University invested $110 million, or 8% of its endowment, with Merkin’s Ascot Partners LP, which had the bulk of its assets invested in Madoff. Both Madoff and Merkin served on boards at the university, Merkin as chairman of the board’s investment committee.

“No member of a nonprofit board should benefit in a financial way from serving a charity,” said Marian Stern, a nonprofit consultant and adjunct assistant professor at the George Heyman Jr. Center for Philanthropy and Fundraising at New York University. …

Excellent Use of Quotation Marks

Scathing Online Schoolmarm hates quotation marks. But she knows there are times when you’ve simply got to use them.

Here’s a perfect example, from an article in Forbes giving advice about philanthropy.

Inquire about whether or not there is a conflict of interest policy in place. Is the investment manager on the board of the organization (i.e., Bernard Madoff was on the board of Yeshiva University and “managed” their investments)?

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