Regional nonprofit fraud circus keeps rollin' along

 
 

Thirty-four. That's how many felonies with which the fired boss of the scandal-plauged SF SAFE nonprofit was recently charged. Allegations include  misappropriation of public money, submitting fraudulent invoices, theft, wage theft and check fraud. Recent state and federal audits have also daylighted irregularities with South Bay-based non profits regarding taxpayer-funded housing programs. SF Standard continues to show how local news should be covered. 

The fired former executive director of a San Francisco nonprofit has been arrested and charged with 34 felonies related to the misuse of more than $700,000 in public funds.

The San Francisco district attorney’s office said Worthy is accused of failing to pay more than $500,000 to subgrantees of a city contract, embezzling more than $100,000 from SF SAFE for personal use and committing wage theft against employees.

Prosecutors allege that Worthy’s mismanagement led to the 48-year-old charity ceasing operations in January, despite receiving millions in public and private funds over five years.

The charges stem from a months-long investigation involving 25 search warrants and interviews with more than two dozen witnesses.

Worthy allegedly spent lavishly on parties and events, even as the nonprofit struggled financially. Prosecutors say she spent more than $350,000 on luxury gift boxes in 2022-23 and nearly $100,000 on a single event called “Candy Explosion” in October 2023.

In 2018, she allegedly paid her landlord $8,000 using three nonprofit cashier’s checks, telling accountants the funds were for community events.

Court documents state Worthy spent more than $90,000 of nonprofit money in 2019 and 2020 on a home healthcare worker for her parents in North Carolina. She reportedly created vague invoices and categorized these payments as community meeting expenses and a District 10 safety project.

Prosecutors further allege Worthy stopped paying payroll taxes for 27 employees from September 2023 to January, when SF SAFE shut down. Court documents say she continued issuing regular paychecks, leading employees to believe taxes were being paid.

The alleged wage theft totaled about $80,000 over four months. Worthy is accused of falsely claiming that full wages and taxes were paid when submitting invoices for a city contract.

Read the whole thing here.

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Jax Oliver