For years, an Eden Prairie nonprofit was praised by the community for making a difference, bringing low-income, high-achieving students from inner cities to attend the suburb's high school.
But on Thursday, the state attorney general sued A Brighter Day Foundation, accusing it of financial mismanagement and its executive director, Gardner Gay, 52, of spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on personal extravagances such as gyms, shopping and travel despite the program essentially being defunct since 2012. The first hearing for the lawsuit, filed in Hennepin County District Court, is Friday morning.
"Minnesotans are generous with their charitable giving, and a charity should spend funds to further its charitable mission, not for personal gain," Attorney General Lori Swanson said in a statement.
The lawsuit alleges eight violations of state charitable and nonprofit laws. The state is seeking to recoup the money Gay spent on personal expenses, such as $1,163 at Life Time Fitness and $904 at the Mall of America, and thousands of dollars on air travel, car repairs and restaurants. The state is also seeking a temporary restraining order to stop him and the foundation from spending any more money from the charity's bank accounts.
Neither Gay nor his attorney returned messages Thursday.
Since its beginnings in 1995, the program brought in five to 14 girls a year to live and attend high school in Eden Prairie. Fundraisers such as a 5K race brought in tens of thousands of dollars for the program. Community leaders donated thousands of dollars, clothing, computers or other items.
"These are kids that never would have had opportunities coming from L.A., New York … it was a great program to give a new life, new opportunities to these kids," said Joe Stoebner, founder of AVI Systems in Eden Prairie.
Brighter Day started as a unit of the national A Better Chance (ABC) organization, which also has chapters in Edina and Rochester. In 1997, a business donated two homes valued at $1 million to house the students.