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@sindera039: #stephen #sindera Bitte folgt und liked meine Fanseite! Ich hab euch alle lieb.
Stephen sindera fan page
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Wednesday 25 February 2026 22:39:23 GMT
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Kars4Kids ads are banned in California after a judge ruled that the charity violated false advertising and unfair competition laws by using donations to pay for teenagers' trips to Israel and a $16.5 million building there. The years-long court case began in 2021, when Bruce Puterbaugh sued Kars4Kids, saying he "felt taken advantage of" when he learned his donation would not go to "underprivileged kids from all over the U.S.," according to court documents. Puterbaugh said he decided to donate a broken-down car left at his home after hearing the charity's ad "over and over" again on the radio. Viewing himself as a "charitable person," Puterbaugh donated the car with the understanding that the funds would go to children in need, specifically in California. After making his donation, he learned that the funds went to Oorah, a company dedicated to Jewish heritage and summer camps in New York and New Jersey. In a testimony that the judge described as "strikingly candid," the company's chief operating officer, Esti Landau, said her organization does not primarily focus on helping economically disadvantaged kids, according to court documents. She testified that Kars4Kids is the primary funding source for Oorah. She admitted that the donations funded "matchmaking programs" for young adults and trips to Israel for 17 and 18-year-olds, according to court documents. In her testimony, she added that the company spent $437,000 on Middle East outreach and used the funds to purchase a $16.5 million building in Israel. Kars4Kids blasted the ruling, saying in a statement that they expect to win their appeal and describing the case as a "lawyer-driven attempt to siphon off charitable funds for their own gain."
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