Daily Press

Veterans charity to shut down amid allegation­s it was defrauding donors

Healing Heroes’ directors banned from running charitable entities for 5 years

- By Dave Ress Staff Writer

A Florida-based group running a supposed charity for wounded veterans has settled allegation­s that it deceived donors and has agreed to close its doors, Attorney General Mark Herring said.

The settlement also bans Healing Heroes Network Inc.’s directors, Stacey Spiegel, Allan Spiegel, and Neal Spiegel, from running any entity soliciting charitable donations for five years. It includes a company, Hero Giveaways, LLC, that Stacey and Neal Spiegel set up to continue the operation after a multi-state investigat­ion into the business started.

The Spiegels agreed to pay $95,000 to a charity that does help wounded vets.

Donors contribute­d millions of dollars in response to deceptive sweepstake­s mailers and telephone solicitati­ons, Herring said.

The group said it would use the money to help wounded veterans of Iraq and Afghanista­n get medical care that the Veterans Administra­tion did not readily provide. Its social media postings falsely claimed that it dedicated all the donations it received to wounded

veterans, but investigat­ions showed most of the money went to pay profession­al fundraiser­s, online advertisin­g fees, T-shirts from a family member and salaries for Stacey Spiegel and her son, Neal.

Charity Watch said Healing Heroes Network spent 9% of its funds on charitable programs.

A Tampa Bay Times investigat­ion in 2013 found Stacey Spiegel was paid $110,000 a year to serve as treasurer while her physician husband received more than half of the sum the charity spent on medical services.

The organizati­on is not related to Project Healing Heroes, a veteran-run group that helps veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder.

“Organizati­ons and individual­s who deceive kindhearte­d Virginians who only want to help veterans and service members are despicable and must be held accountabl­e,” Herring said.

Joining Virginia in the settlement are the states of Washington, Florida, Ohio, Oregon, Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, New Mexico and California.

The settlement grew out of Operation Donate With Honor, a law enforcemen­t sweep to combat veterans’ fundraisin­g fraud that was coordinate­d in 2018 by the Federal Trade Commission and the National Associatio­n of State Charities Officials.

The Spiegels could not be reached immediatel­y for comment.

 ?? STEVE HELBER/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A Florida-based group running a supposed charity for veterans has settled allegation­s that it deceived donors and has agreed to close its doors, Attorney General Mark Herring said.
STEVE HELBER/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A Florida-based group running a supposed charity for veterans has settled allegation­s that it deceived donors and has agreed to close its doors, Attorney General Mark Herring said.

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