The ex-director of a shuttered Los Angeles anti-poverty nonprofit, and a well-known Democrat fundraiser pleaded guilty Tuesday to embezzling money from the nonprofit, which received federal funding, prosecutors announced. 

Prosecutors charged Howard Dixon Slingerland with embezzling and misappropriating thousands of dollars from the federally-funded Youth Policy Institute, which provided education, job training and other services to reduce youth poverty in Los Angeles.

Slingerland spent roughly $71,000 the organization’s funds on lavish dinners and other personal expenses. 

He pleaded guilty to one count of “conversion and intentional misapplication of funds from an organization receiving federal money,” and one count of lying on tax return. 

The organization received more than $281 million in federal grants from 2009 to 2019, the year Slingerland was ousted as its executive director, a role he held since 1996. The nonprofit closed in 2019.  Federal grants constituted the bulk of the Youth Policy Institute’s funding, according to the plea agreement. 

Slingerland faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison for the embezzlement count, and three years for the tax count, according to the Department of Justice. 

Fine dining

According to the plea agreement, Slingerland spent $71,533 from the Youth Policy Institute on “unauthorized expenditures” between Jan. 2015 and Feb. 2019. 

The spending included: 

  • $14,703 to pay the property tax on Slingerland’s home in May 2017. 
  • $6,131 on a family dinner at Momofuku Ko, an upscale, two-star Michelin restaurant in New York City, in Nov. 2017.
  • $10,805 on tutoring for a family member in early 2018. 
  • $1,979 on a computer and software in Feb. 2019.

Slingerland also misspent part of a $1.5 million federal grant his organization received to put toward a job opportunity program for young adults who had had run-ins with the criminal justice system, according to the plea agreement.

  • $401,561 on Youth Policy Institute’s payroll, unauthorized under the grant, in July 2019. 
  • $201,466 to make payments on Youth Policy Institute’s credit cards, which included charges incurred by Slingerland.