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La asociación Heal The Kids puede verse envuelta en problemas legales debido a varias negligencias.
Heal The Kids, fundada por Michael en enero del 2001, aun no ha reportado su informe de gastos/ingresos, actividades, etc., requeridos por ley. Esto fue comunicado en febrero mediante una carta y HTK dispone de 30 días para remitir los informes solicitados, en el caso de no recibirse estos, se podria multar a la asociación desde 10$ por día a 1.000$.
No hay ningún número de telefono disponible y tampoco se reciben respuestas a los emails. El website de la asociación no se actualiza desde el 2001 y encima no se encuentran en los archivos las firmas requeridas para acceder a información financiera.
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State says Michael Jackson's foundation neglected law
ALBANY, N.Y. -- Michael Jackson's children's foundation "to break the cycle of neglect" is now in jeopardy because it neglected to file any of the required financial disclosure firms.
Heal The Kids, created in January 2001 by the self-proclaimed King of Pop, failed to report any of its basic spending, fund raising, activities and pay roll as required under state law, said Paul Larrabee, spokesman for state Attorney General Eliot Spitzer.
In a February letter, Spitzer's office notified the Jackson charity that it failed to comply with the law aimed at protecting those who donate to a charity and those who are supposed to benefit from it.
"That report would have been due in 2002," Larrabee said. "They have been given 30 days to comply and at that time penalties begin to accrue if they fail to comply."
Fines would be $10 a day up to $1,000.
No phone number was available for the charity at its New York City office and there was no immediate response to an e-mail sent through the charity's Web site.
The charity's Web site, apparently not updated since 2001, states: "The aim of Heal The Kids is to educate adults on the importance of reprioritizing their lives in order to bring children into the main focus in order to imbue them with the love and devotion which they so badly need and to break the cycle of neglect."
The charity's goals included developing "a campaign that will help parents and adults around the world make their children their most important priority ... help at-risk children receive more consideration and support from all sectors of society."
Among the specific programs were to be one in which "key hotel chains" and phone companies would provide free calls for parents to contact their children while away on business, discounted children's books, and discounted Internet service.
Jackson plans a two-hour special on Fox television Feb. 20 to respond to a recent British-made documentary that drew huge ratings in the United States. Jackson was angry at how he was depicted in the documentary, which showed him as an eccentric man-child who says he sometimes innocently lets children sleep in his own bed, but with no sexual contact.
Heal The Kids, fundada por Michael en enero del 2001, aun no ha reportado su informe de gastos/ingresos, actividades, etc., requeridos por ley. Esto fue comunicado en febrero mediante una carta y HTK dispone de 30 días para remitir los informes solicitados, en el caso de no recibirse estos, se podria multar a la asociación desde 10$ por día a 1.000$.
No hay ningún número de telefono disponible y tampoco se reciben respuestas a los emails. El website de la asociación no se actualiza desde el 2001 y encima no se encuentran en los archivos las firmas requeridas para acceder a información financiera.
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State says Michael Jackson's foundation neglected law
ALBANY, N.Y. -- Michael Jackson's children's foundation "to break the cycle of neglect" is now in jeopardy because it neglected to file any of the required financial disclosure firms.
Heal The Kids, created in January 2001 by the self-proclaimed King of Pop, failed to report any of its basic spending, fund raising, activities and pay roll as required under state law, said Paul Larrabee, spokesman for state Attorney General Eliot Spitzer.
In a February letter, Spitzer's office notified the Jackson charity that it failed to comply with the law aimed at protecting those who donate to a charity and those who are supposed to benefit from it.
"That report would have been due in 2002," Larrabee said. "They have been given 30 days to comply and at that time penalties begin to accrue if they fail to comply."
Fines would be $10 a day up to $1,000.
No phone number was available for the charity at its New York City office and there was no immediate response to an e-mail sent through the charity's Web site.
The charity's Web site, apparently not updated since 2001, states: "The aim of Heal The Kids is to educate adults on the importance of reprioritizing their lives in order to bring children into the main focus in order to imbue them with the love and devotion which they so badly need and to break the cycle of neglect."
The charity's goals included developing "a campaign that will help parents and adults around the world make their children their most important priority ... help at-risk children receive more consideration and support from all sectors of society."
Among the specific programs were to be one in which "key hotel chains" and phone companies would provide free calls for parents to contact their children while away on business, discounted children's books, and discounted Internet service.
Jackson plans a two-hour special on Fox television Feb. 20 to respond to a recent British-made documentary that drew huge ratings in the United States. Jackson was angry at how he was depicted in the documentary, which showed him as an eccentric man-child who says he sometimes innocently lets children sleep in his own bed, but with no sexual contact.
Gracias JR www.mjhispano.com
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