Fraud, because you called it a charity.
If you tell them openly to donate for you personally, then it isn’t fraud, but is simply a business (and you have to pay taxes)
Wouldn’t that still be money laundering?
Money laundering is falsifying financial info to disguise the source of the money. People are allowed to give you money and you are allowed to take it, as long as you report accurately and pay taxes it’s fine. Where you might run into trouble is the school or people/orgs attached to the school giving you money on the condition of you going out staying there. Basically the money has to be donated without any agreements being made and it would be fine. As I understand things, I am not an expert or even particularly knowledgeable, but you ask strangers on the Internet and you get what you get 🤣
Yea but I thought college players couldn’t get money or gifts to pick a certain school or team? Kind like Pay 2 Play
In most jurisdictions, part of the definition of a not-for-profit (of which a charity is a more restricted subset) is that it doesn’t exist for the benefit of the members / shareholders, or a specific person.
So creating a charity / NFP and asking people to pay into it is usually okay, but the purpose of that charity can’t be to enrich you, and it is a separate legal identity (i.e. taking a charity’s funds and giving it to yourself would be embezzling). Many jurisdictions allow for sports clubs to exist as not-for-profits, but they’d generally need to be for the purpose of organising a whole team to practice, compete and so on.
Generally charities can employ people to do work for them and pay them, but (varies by jurisdiction) they generally need to be not paid above a fair market rate for the work they actually do to advance the goals of the charity.
If the goal is to help a legitimate cause, you could also ask them to donate to an existing not-for-profit for the cause.
Disclaimer: IANAL, and anyway all of this would vary by jurisdiction - not legal advice!
So then wait. So why not just make a charity, then employ myself as manager or something.
Look, you can keep pointing out obvious loopholes and people can keep answer with increasingly obscure examples of laws or of people getting convicted trying just that until the cows come home, but that’s missing the bigger picture.
The rich don’t want people to get rich easily. For legal loopholes to go unpatched, they have to be complicated enough that politicians can plausibly deny blame and they have to require enough wealth to begin with that rich people see it as a tool rather than as a threat. Or they have to be something that has genuinely escaped notice so far despite millions of people searching for it. A lay person free-associating from nothing is very unlikely to come across something that hasn’t been tried yet.
make a charity, then employ myself as manager or something.
Such a stunt is usually done with a “foundation” instead of a normal charity.
Depending on your legislation, this may indeed become a loophole to receive donations and avoid taxes.
In most countries charities have reporting requirements and rules to follow to stop exactly this method of fraud.
Calling it a charity may be illiegal if its not registered. Maybe you want your own PAC where people could donate.
That’s the way; study political science in university and set up a PAC towards your election for some far off date. Have anyone interested donate to the PAC, and then spend years trying to get elected after you graduate, using those funds for your campaign — many different types of activities can count as campaigning.
A charity implies your giving out to someone else. I’d stick with an honest gofundme that explains that the money is for your personal use.
Even then, I don’t think the school is going to be willing to “donate” to it in order to avoid illegally paying you directly.
Do your initials happen to be NCAA?
No but time to time you hear about Athelets betting on games or Pete Rosing it. What would stop a player from setting up a so called charity and take the donations go to a bookie throw a game or two. Reap all the winnings? How would anyone find out unless said athelete told someone? Basically getting paid to play through a charity that was setup by her or him people make donations like to schools but just to charity? I think the NCAA would not be able to do anything sinces its out of their perview?
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Let’s assume you’re not pissing off the IRS in some way.
Illegal? No. Against NCAA rules? Maybe.


