Amid scandal, audit into Baltimore non-profit’s work ordered
Baltimore’s acting leader has ordered an audit of a non-profit’s management of a city youth fund with $12 million set aside from property tax revenue after the organization was tied to embattled Mayor Catherine Pugh’s hard-to-find illustrated books for children.
The audit of Associated Black Charities’ work and a freeze of legislation that would renew its management of the taxpayer-financed fund comes as the first-term mayor is embroiled in a scandal that threatens her political career.
“I want to ensure that the fund is being well-managed and that there are no conflicts of interest,” acting Mayor Bernard “Jack” Young wrote in a letter sent to the non-profit’s CEO.
A longtime city councilman, Young took over Pugh’s day-to-day responsibilities April 1, the same day Maryland’s governor asked the state prosecutor to investigate her alleged “self-dealing” book sales. As the scandal focused on her “Healthy Holly” paperbacks escalated, Pugh went on an indefinite leave, citing deteriorating health from pneumonia.