Company type | Non-profit |
---|---|
Founded | Yogesh K. Gandhi |
Defunct | 1999[1] |
Headquarters | Orinda, California |
Products | Mahatma Gandhi Humanitarian Award |
Gandhi Memorial International Foundation, also known as the Mahatma Gandhi International Foundation, was a controversial non-profit organization run by Yogesh K. Gandhi, born Yogesh Kathari,[2] who claims to be related to Mahatma Gandhi.[3] However, an immediate descendant of Mahatma Gandhi, publicly stated that Yogesh K. Gandhi was a "scam artist", and "interested primarily in enriching himself."[2] Yogesh Gandhi described the organization as dedicated to "social betterment through nonviolence."[4] The organization gave out the "Mahatma Gandhi Humanitarian Award".[5][6]
The organization's business dealings were investigated by the United States Senate, in March 1998.[2] Mother Jones referred to the organization as: "a shadowy non-profit enterprise devoted in principle to 'promoting the philosophy of non-violence'."[7] On March 8, 1999, Yogesh Gandhi was charged by the United States Department of Justice with "tax evasion, mail and wire fraud and perjury" for dealings related to the Gandhi Memorial International Foundation.[8] He had previously been indicted by the Justice Department's Campaign Financing Task Force in August 1998.[8] In 1999, Yogesh Gandhi entered a guilty plea to the charges of mail fraud, tax evasion and violating federal election law over his contributions involving the Gandhi Memorial International Foundation and the Democratic National Committee in 1996.[9] The Foundation was reported to have ceased its activities in 1999.[1]
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