Utah is a great probe to school-Fitness-Stiftung
The Utah Attorney General’s Office is biding time before the opening of a national survey on school Fitness Foundation, a nonprofit organization, which failed in June, amid accusations that their devices Fitness school curriculum was not as charitable profession.
The Agency is, however, you expect a decision of Minnesota’s Attorney General’s Office, the investigation has been the cornerstone of several months.
The Foundation arranges to sell $ 77.5 million in stationary bicycles, weight machines, cassette player and other devices to more than 600 schools in 20 countries. What schools and former president of Cameron Lewis dispute is whether schools has been said, they would be reimbursed for the full cost of the equipment by donations and grants from NSFF requested.
The Foundation has stopped reimbursement payments to schools in April Lewis Minnesota Attorney General Mike Hatch charged with operating a pyramid system with money from new schools - gifts or transfers - to repay schools already in the program. During the month of May was a civil action was filed in Minnesota for the U.S. Attorney’s Office denounced wire and mail fraud.
Tell below
Utah Assistant Attorney General Neal Gunnerson said he contacted the Minnesota Attorney General’s Office, and that all the information they need to charge.
Gunnerson said, if so, it will not file charges in Utah, Minnesota has already gathered all the information to follow.
“You obviously, all the information that we have not, without detour through a doubling of all their discoveries,” said Gunnerson. “I am tempted to contact the Federal Attorney General, to find out what happens, because if it is in their criminal law, we are not. You can by then our victims as well as we could by
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