Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison has shut down a St. Paul nonprofit that allegedly misspent thousands of dollars in donations intended to fund school supplies for children in need.
Under an enforcement action filed Wednesday in Ramsey County District Court, Welch Charities must dissolve and its president, Arturo Eguia, is banned from operating a charity, having access to charitable assets or soliciting donations in Minnesota.
Eguia, 46, of St. Paul, started the all-volunteer nonprofit in 2013 to provide school supplies to low-income children. It raised money through Indian Bike Week, an annual motorcycle ride and festival.
Welch Charities must turn over its assets to another nonprofit before dissolving. In an interview Thursday, Eguia said he is giving the money to a Native American church in South Dakota.
Eguia denied misspending the charity's funds and said he was unable to access documentation from years ago to prove the expenses were for charitable costs.
"It wasn't used for any personal funds," he said.
Eguia said he was in the process of dissolving the nonprofit on his own before the state took action.
His attorney, Ferdinand Peters, said the state couldn't prove the allegations because the investigation by Ellison's office was incomplete. As part of the settlement, Eguia and Welch Charities neither admit nor deny the allegations.