Giving Compass' Take:
- Joanne Florino discusses donor intent developments, examining how nonprofits can conduct due diligence and make decisions about accepting donations.
- How can nonprofits go about making decisions about whose donations to accept or reject? What is the role of donors in supporting these due diligence efforts?
- Learn more about best practices in philanthropy.
- Search our Guide to Good for nonprofits in your area.
What is Giving Compass?
We connect donors to learning resources and ways to support community-led solutions. Learn more about us.
In 2023, following passage of the Donor Intent Protection Act in Kansas, Philanthropy Roundtable launched a monthly series on donor intent developments and controversies nationwide to better inform you about this important topic. The Donor Intent Protection Act has now passed in Kentucky and Georgia as well, and efforts on behalf of this legislation continue in additional states.
This Donor Intent Watch includes a discussion of prospect research regarding donor intent developments designed to uncover potentially “toxic” donors.
We encourage donors to contact us with any questions about our featured items and consult additional resources on donor intent at the Roundtable’s Donor Intent Hub. We also welcome any news about donor intent we may have missed.
In Fall 2023, Planned Giving Today published an article I wrote on “toxic donors.” Beginning with Michael Milken in the 1980s and closing with Jeffrey Epstein, the article explored the various ways grantees of such donors had responded to disclosures of behavior which rendered donors “tarnished” and their gifts “tainted.” At that time I noted, “No matter how much due diligence organizations apply to prospective donors, they are not likely to uncover questionable activities from generations past, nor can they predict the occurrence of such activities in the future.”
Now, however, the Robb Report has revealed the emergence of companies “putting donors under a microscope, trawling their pasts for everything from criminal connections to money laundering to legal compliance—and even gray areas such as political associations and distasteful, if legitimate, business interests.” Some of these companies were once the resources nonprofits utilized for donor prospect research. Now they are advising potential recipients whose money they should refuse.
One such company is Xapien, founded in 2018 by an expert in financial crime with the fortuitous name of Dan Secretan. Clients include universities in the United States and the United Kingdom. At the University of Pennsylvania, a senior prospect analyst said Xapien produces more comprehensive donor profiles in less time than the work can be done internally.
Read the full article about donor intent developments by Joanne Florino at Philanthropy Roundtable.