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Facebook Teams With Charter Group on Free School Software

The Silicon Valley giant announced a partnership Thursday with a nonprofit charter-school network to build educational software that will be offered to public schools at no charge, USA Today and The New York Times write.

Tampa Homelessness Charity to Shut Down Following Raid

A nonprofit serving the homeless that is pursuing a legal challenge to the Florida city’s panhandling ban faces closure next week after a raid by police and code-enforcement officials, reports The Tampa Tribune.

Sale of $500-Million Taubman Art Trove to Boost Foundation

The A. Alfred Taubman Foundation will reap some of the proceeds from a Sotheby’s sale of the collection owned by the late shopping-mall magnate and philanthropist. The art collection could be among the most valuable ever brought to private auction, The New York Times and the Detroit Free Press report.

Refugee Charities See Giving Surge After Syrian Boy’s Death

The drowning of a Syrian toddler whose family was trying to reach Europe has spurred a surge in support for aid groups and charities focused on migrant issues, reports The Independent.

Land-Mine Charity Whose Board Angelina Jolie Resigned From Faces British Inquiry

Britain’s charity regulator is evaluating a complaint about land-mine-clearance group the Halo Trust paying more than $180,000 to two board members for leading an internal review of its governance, The Guardian reports. The actress left the board last year, reportedly because she felt “uncomfortable” that the trustees were essentially paying themselves.

Heritage Foundation Donor Data Possibly Taken in Hack Attack

The conservative think tank was hit this week with a data breach that it said may have compromised donor information, Politico reports.

Sweet Briar Fundraisers Hit $12-Million Goal to Save College

The nonprofit charged with raising $12 million to keep Virginia’s embattled Sweet Briar College open has hit its target and made the final installment payment due to the college under a state-mediated agreement, reports the Associated Press.

Big Global Charities Hiring Their Own Fraud Investigators

Dogged by growing public mistrust and calls for greater transparency, nonprofits active in corruption-prone crisis zones are retaining their own criminal investigators to ferret out fraud, according to Reuters.

N.J. Church’s Former Accountant Admits to $4-Million Scam

A California certified public accountant faces more than 20 years in prison after pleading guilty Tuesday to defrauding Agape Family Worship Center while managing the Rahway, N.J., megachurch’s books for nearly seven years, NJ Advance Media reports.

La. Delays Bid to End Planned Parenthood Funding

The state put off implementation of Gov. Bobby Jindal’s order to revoke Medicaid contracts for the women’s health group until September 15 during a hearing Wednesday in which a federal judge raised questions about the reasoning for the move, Bloomberg News writes.