Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc. Expels Whistleblower,Refuses to
Cooperate with Federal Investigation
| One year after WJLA-TV, aired a series of stories
regarding financial irregularities in Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc, the
Board has expelled the member held responsible for circulating the
documentation on which the story was based. |
| |
By Edda R. Pittman
Feb 16, 2007 23:33:40 |
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(PRLog.Org) – One year after WJLA-TV, an ABC affiliated TV station
aired a series of stories regarding financial irregularities occurring in
Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc., the National Executive Board (chaired by
Sheryl Underwood) has expelled the member being held responsible for
circulating the documentation on which the WJLA story was based.
Mrs. Natasha Stark, a resident of Atlanta, Georgia and a former member of
the National Executive Board, was expelled on February 8, 2007 for violating
her duty of loyalty to the sorority, engaging in conduct injurious to the
sorority or its purposes, and unsisterly conduct.
“The bottom line here is that folks hard earned money has been stolen and
the law has been broken," states Stark.
“Expelling me from the sorority for fulfilling my fiduciary duty to the
members of Zeta and informing them that their dues and other contributions
are being spent on clothes, shoes, furs, jewelry, fast food, and liquor,
will not change the fact that money has been stolen and the law has been
broken. The law doesn’t magically change because you’ve thrown me out.”
Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc. is a 501(c) 7 exempt organization founded
January 16, 1920 on the campus of Howard University, and headquartered in
Washington, D.C.
Following the February 5, 2006 WJLA story, the IRS, FBI and United States
Attorney launched an investigation into the alleged financial irregularities
occurring in Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc. in order to determine the means by
which its National President, Mrs. Barbara C. Moore, obtained funds from the
organization.
The reports detailed the unauthorized use of the organization’s corporate
American Express card use by the sorority’s president, and called into
question the legalities of using the sorority’s tax-exempt funds for
personal gain.
Moore subsequently admitted to the membership that she had, in fact, used
the sorority’s funds for her own personal gain, but disputed the figures
being reported by WJLA. Despite this admission, however, the National
Executive Board refused to remove Moore from office as required by the
sorority’s internal fiscal management procedures, and worked to suppress the
information reported by WJLA.
In addition, Moore and the members of the board withheld from the sorority’s
general body the details of the federal investigation, and refused to
cooperate with federal investigating authorities.
Internal correspondence from Mr. Thomas Zeno, Assistant United States
Attorney to the sorority’s General Legal Counsel (R. Jonathan Charleston)
documents the efforts of Moore and the National Executive Board to obstruct
justice in this case. “Our office and the FBI frequently investigate cases
of this type involving public and tax-exempt organizations," writes Zeno.
“Rarely have we encountered the kind of resistance shown by Zeta Phi Beta
into disclosing what has occurred.”
Moore and the National Executive Board have also refused to report to the
sorority’s membership the state of the sorority’s business affairs. “We
haven’t received anything of substance from this administration for three
years," state members of the sorority. “It is the duty and responsibility of
the National Executive Board to report to the members the state of the
sorority, but we haven’t received any reports from our officers since 2004.
We couldn’t even get something as simple and as basic as a bank balance at
our 2006 national convention. We continue to wait for the minutes from that
convention, due 90 days after its close, as well as the annual audit of the
treasurer's records. How are the members supposed to make intelligent
decisions if we aren’t informed?”
When questioned about what she plans to do next, Stark is surprisingly
matter-of-fact about the situation. “I pretty much plan to keep on keeping
on. I have two jobs, a dissertation to finish, a family to care for, a child
to raise, and bills to pay. Zeta Phi Beta Sorority may be a part of my life
but it isn’t my whole life, and “sisterhood” does not include helping
someone break the law. At the end of the day, the IRS, FBI and U.S. Attorney
don’t want to hear about our supposed duty of loyalty, they want to know if,
as a tax-exempt organization, we are handling our financial affairs in
accordance with the laws of the land.”
When asked how she is feeling about being expelled from the sorority, Stark
laughed gently and shook her head. “I know I’m supposed to be upset by this,
but in the grand scheme of things, this is pretty much a non-starter. If
I’ve got to choose between being a member of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, and
doing time in a federal prison for aiding and abetting the commission of a
felony, that’s pretty much a no-brainer. As much as I love my sorority, I’m
not going to throw away the rest of my life over some St. John knit suits,
especially when they aren’t hanging in MY closet.”