On its 2012 tax return, GOP strategist Karl Rove’s dark money
behemoth Crossroads GPS justified its status as a tax-exempt social welfare group
in part by citing its grants of $35 million to other similarly aligned nonprofits.
(Here’s
the tax return itself, which we detailed
last week.)

The return, signed under penalty of perjury, specified
that the grants would be used for social welfare purposes, “and not for
political expenditures, consistent with the organization’s tax-exempt mission.”

But that’s not what happened.

New tax documents, made public last Tuesday, indicate that at
least $11.2 million of the grant money given to the group Americans for Tax
Reform was spent on political activities expressly advocating for or against
candidates. This means Crossroads spent at least $85.7 million on political
activities in 2012, not the $74.5
million
reported to the Internal Revenue Service. That’s about 45 percent of
its total expenditures.  

The transaction also provides a window into one way social
welfare nonprofits work around the tax code’s dictate that their primary
purpose cannot be influencing elections.  Grants sent from one nonprofit to another
may be earmarked for social welfare purposes, but sometimes end up being used
to slam or praise candidates running for office.

“They have a bad grantee here,” said Marcus Owens, the
former head of the IRS’ Exempt Organizations division, who looked at the
documents at ProPublica’s request. “My question would be, ‘What has Crossroads
done to recover that money?’ That’s what the IRS would expect.”

Crossroads spokesman Jonathan Collegio
did not respond to questions from ProPublica about Americans for Tax Reform’s
use of the grant or whether Crossroads would ask for it to be refunded.

Instead, Collegio wondered whether Americans for Tax Reform
could have used resources carried over from 2011 to fund the 2012 election
spending, rather than money from Crossroads. “Were resources carried over from
2011?”  he asked in an email to
ProPublica.

But after consulting with tax experts, ProPublica determined
Americans for Tax Reform couldn’t have used resources from 2011 for the
political spending.

“That’s called bullshit with a serving of horseshit on the
side,” Owens said.

Americans for Tax Reform reported a total of $10.3
million
in assets in the beginning of 2012. Of those assets, $8.2
million
was only available on paper, an amount due from a related charity, the
Americans for Tax Reform Foundation. The rest –$2.1 million – was a
combination of equipment, leasehold improvements, cash holdings, net accounts
receivable, prepaid expenses and deferred charges. None of those amounts
changed significantly by the end of 2012. In other words, the only known source
for the money Americans for Tax Reform spent on politics was donations from
Crossroads and others.  

Collegio didn’t respond to an email from ProPublica last
Wednesday outlining how some of the Crossroads’ grant had to have been spent on
election activities.

John Kartch, the spokesman for Americans for Tax Reform, also
didn’t respond to ProPublica questions about the use of the Crossroads grant
for politics.

Social welfare nonprofits, also known as dark money groups
because they don’t have to report their donors, are allowed to spend money on politics
as long as their primary purpose is social welfare. The groups often count so-called
issue ads that stop short of advocating for or against a candidate and grants
toward that social welfare mission. Since the Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens
United decision allowed corporations and unions to spend directly on election
ads, these nonprofits have turned into the vehicle of choice for anonymous
spending, dumping more than $254 million into the 2012 elections.

Of the 150 or so social welfare nonprofits that reported spending
to the Federal Election Commission during the 2012 election cycle, Crossroads
was king, the biggest anonymous spender by far. Americans for Tax Reform came
in fourth, with $15.8 million.

On its 2012 tax return, made public
last
week, Crossroads said it gave its
biggest grant, $26.4
million
, to Americans
for Tax Reform
for “social welfare.”

In the last part of 2012, Americans for Tax Reform told the
FEC it spent repeatedly
on ads
and mailers
, $15.8
million
altogether on so-called “independent expenditures,” mostly in the
month before the election, opposing Democrats and supporting Republicans
running for Congress. (Independent expenditures tell people they should vote
for or against a certain candidate.) Most of that money, more than $10.7
million, was for media buys, to purchase air time on TV and radio for various
ads. More than $1.6 million went to designing, producing and sending mailers. Most
of the rest of the money went to ad production and phone banks. (Herearesomeexamplesofthoseads.)

Americans for Tax Reform told the IRS in its tax return,
obtained and made public by the watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and
Ethics in Washington (CREW), that it raised and spent about $31
million
in 2012. Since the group got $26.4 million from Crossroads, only
$4.6 million of its revenue came from other donors. At least $11.2 million of
Crossroads money had to go toward the political ads reported to the FEC.

That means Americans for Tax Reform spent about 51 percent
of its money on political ads reported to the FEC in 2012.

But the group also told the IRS on its tax return, signed
under penalty of perjury, that it spent only $9.8
million
on direct and indirect campaign activity in 2012, defining that
spending as “engaged
solely in the making of independent expenditures supporting and opposing
candidates for federal office.”

Last Tuesday, CREW filed a complaint
with the IRS and the tax division of the Department of Justice against
Americans for Tax Reform and its president, Grover Norquist, alleging they
deliberately provided false information to the IRS in the tax filing.

ProPublica
and others have documented how such groups often minimize their political
spending to the IRS. Although the IRS has been hesitant to establish any so-called
“bright lines” for campaign activity, campaign finance and tax lawyers say
independent expenditures reported to the FEC definitely qualify as political
spending under the tax code.

Crossroads GPS itself counted all of its independent
expenditures reported to the FEC in both 2010 and 2012 as part of its political
spending reported to the IRS.

“Clearly, ads that tell people who to vote for or against
are campaign intervention,” said a Congressional Research Service report on IRS rules on political ads
prepared for Congress in August 2012. Last summer, the IRS told social welfare
nonprofits that wanted to expedite their approval that political expenditures
included administrative and overhead
costs, and any
expenditure
on printed, electronic or oral statements supporting or
opposing the election or nomination of any candidate for public office.

Lloyd Hitoshi Mayer, a law professor and associate dean at the
University of Notre Dame who specializes in nonprofits and campaign finance,
reviewed the Americans for Tax Reform documents at the request of ProPublica
and said it was possible that the group was allocating overhead or other costs
differently in its tax return than in its FEC filings.

“I do not see how any reasonable allocation differences
could result in such a large disparity, however,” Mayer said.

Owens, the former IRS official, said it was possible that
some of the media buy money reported to the FEC was later refunded by the TV
stations. But even that money wouldn’t account for such a large gap, he said.
Owens speculated that Americans for Tax Reform might have determined that some
of its ads wouldn’t qualify for reporting to the IRS.

 “There’s just no
way that could withstand scrutiny under the laws that exist,” Owens said. “What
you have is two documents from the same group, one for the FEC and one for the
IRS, both submitted under penalty of perjury. At least one is incorrect.”

Still, on Tuesday, Kartch insisted the $9.8 million figure on
Americans for Tax Reform’s tax form, known as a 990, was correct, while
ignoring requests from ProPublica to explain how it was derived.

“The correct number to use here is the $9.8 million figure as reported
on our 2012 990, not the number you cite from an FEC report,” Kartch wrote. “ATR
meets or exceeds the requirements of the FEC and the IRS according to their
standards.”

He also scoffed at the CREW complaint, saying, “This attack is
political and CREW knows it is nonsense.”

It’s not clear how the IRS might respond to the apparent
misuse of the Crossroads grant or to the fact that Americans for Tax Reform seems
to have underreported its political spending.

Complaints
to the IRS about the tax-exempt status of Crossroads and other political social
welfare nonprofits have been made since 2010,
but they are still pending. So is an earlier
CREW complaint
against Americans for Tax Reform for its spending in 2010. A
scandal that erupted in May
over the IRS targeting the applications of Tea Party and other conservative
social welfare nonprofits may have also made the IRS more likely to take a hands-off
approach
to the groups, experts say.

“They’re going to keep their heads down,” Owens said.

Update: The Center for Responsive Politics also wrote about Americans for Tax Reform using the Crossroads GPS grant for politics on Nov. 18.