It is beyond dispute that former President Clinton has been directly involved in helping foundation donors and his personal cronies get rich. Even worse, it is beyond dispute that these very same donors and the Clintons political allies have won the focused attention of presidential candidate Hillary Clinton when she served as Secretary of State. Democrats and Clinton apologists will write these accusations off as conspiracy mongering and right-wing propaganda, but its an open secret to anyone remotely familiar with accounting and regulatory requirements for charities that the financial records are deliberately misleading. And not coincidentally, those records were long filed by a Little Rockbased accounting firm called BKD, a regional auditor with little international experience.
Its odd that a small Arkansas-headquartered firm would handle the books for a giant entity like the Clinton Foundation, and even odder given that BKD has been implicated in a variety of misconduct. For example, last year the Securities and Exchange Commission sanctioned BKD for violating auditor independence rules when they prepared the financial statements of brokerage firms that were their audit clients.
It brings to mind Bernie Madoff, who also used a small accounting shop when he was running his notorious Ponzi scheme. And its worth emphasizing here that smaller firms are typically far less likely to challenge major clients, and the Clinton Foundation was one of BKDs major sources of revenue.