QUOTE(dogbiscuit @ Mon 3rd March 2008, 4:04am)

I'm pretty sure that in the UK the charity commission would be breathing all over him by now.
I'm not sure there's an analogue to the UK Charity Commission in the United States - rather, the IRS, and to a lesser extent state-government tax agencies, handle almost all issues regarding use and misuse of charitable contributions, and whether or not an organization qualifies for charitable status. And generally speaking, their definition of what's acceptable seems to be a lot broader than the UK's definition. That inevitably leads to more scandals, but I guess the theory is that it's better to have scandals than to destroy people's faith in the system.
As for the auditor(s) themselves, I doubt they have anything to worry about - at least as long as they can plausibly claim that they weren't lying on the WMF's behalf, and I can't imagine the WMF managing to get a reputable auditor to do that for them. (That doesn't mean the WMF didn't try to mislead the auditors in some way, of course - and it's not like they could expected to conduct some sort of heroic super-sleuth investigation of their own client in order to bring them into disrepute... that's certainly not what they're hired for, obviously.)
So if anything is going to happen to the foundation's charitable status (which I personally have always considered rather bogus), it's going to require not only a lot of number-crunching with a limited set of figures (basically their public financial reports and tax returns only), but also a US-based person or group willing to go to the trouble and expense of registering a formal complaint with the IRS. I don't see the IRS initiating something like that on their own, unless the number of sex scandals reaches some completely unreasonable number, whatever that might be. Ten? Twenty?
What would be involved in registering such a complaint, anyway? I mean, if it's just a matter of filling out the appropriate forms...
