Wounded Warrior Project Fires Top Execs After Reports of Wasteful Spending
Associated Press
10:02 AM ET
The CEO and COO were both fired
(JACKSONVILLE,
Fla.) — The board of Wounded Warrior Project, one of the nation’s
largest veteran support groups, has fired two top officials amid news
reports accusing the group of wasteful spending.
According to a
statement released late Thursday on behalf of Wounded Warrior Project,
chief executive officer Steve Nardizzi and chief operating officer Al
Giordano are no longer with the organization.
The Wounded Warrior
Project board of directors had hired outside legal counsel and forensic
accounting consultants to conduct an independent review of the
Jacksonville-based organization’s records and interviews with current
and former employees.
In late January, CBS News and The New York
Times reported the organization spent too much on its own staff.
According to those reports, Wounded Warrior Project spends 40 to 50
percent of its money on overhead — including extravagant parties — while
other veterans charities have overhead costs of 10 to 15 percent.
They
also interviewed former employees who accused the organization of
making money off their injuries. One former employee said the way
Wounded Warrior Project spends money is equivalent to “what the military
calls fraud, waste and abuse.”
The independent review found that
Wounded Warrior Project’s most recent audited financial statement showed
the organization spent 80.6 percent of donations on programming, and
that an employee conference at a resort reported to have cost $3 million
actually cost about $970,000, according to the board’s statement.
However,
the organization would cut back on events such as the employee
conference, as the review also found that some policies and procedures
“have not kept pace with the organization’s rapid growth in recent years
and are in need of strengthening,” the board said.
The
organization also is putting limits on employee travel and expenses, and
its financial statements will be independently audited and posted on
the Wounded Warrior Project’s website, the board said.
To help
restore trust and move forward with the changes, the board decided to
remove Nardizzi and Giordano and create an Office of the CEO to oversee
Wounded Warrior Project on an interim basis. The office will be led by
board chairman Anthony Odierno and senior members of the existing
executive team.
“It is now time to put the organization’s focus
directly back on the men and women who have so bravely fought for our
country and who need our support,” Odierno said.
According to the
board’s statement, participation in Wounded Warrior Project programs for
injured veterans, their caregivers and family members rose from 1,850
to 144,000 from 2010 to 2015.
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