NGO trustees are liable for repaying stolen grant money
An NGO is a non-government organization.
They are run by a Board of Trustees.
According to the State Department, as of last month, 1.5 million NGOs are operating in the U.S.
How many receive federal grants?
Yesterday, President Donald J. Trump signed an Executive Order to find out.
The order requires an audit of every NGO receiving federal funds.
The Federal Register has not published it for the public.
https://www.federalregister.gov/presidential-documents/executive-orders/donald-trump/2025
Examples of illegal expenditures are funding:
terrorist groups
stolen elections
“non-partisan” political activities
They also include other criminal activities like:
theft
fraud
laundering money to themselves through other NGOs
President Donald J. Trump and Pam Bondi, U.S. Attorney General
Who will make NGO Trustees pay for their crimes?
Pam Bondi’s Justice Department can.
She heads the world’s largest firm.
It has 122, 241 which includes 20,321 investigators
Bondi is in charge of enforcing federal civil and criminal RICO cases.
RICO stands for Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations
Besides trustees, co-conspirators in NGO RICO cases include their:
attorneys
accountants
advisors
consultants
state attorney generals
State AGs are responsible for enforcing non-profit statutes in their state.
When they don’t, they are liable, too—personally.
Attorneys in private practice can bring civil RICO actions, too.
The defendants in civil RICO lawsuits pay their fees.
Details of the differences between civil and criminal RICO cases are in this story:
Get paid for cleaning up fraudulent elections