Dallas Donors Fume As Hunger Busters Hauls In Cash While Meals Dry Up

Dallas donors poured more than six figures into Hunger Busters last year at the same time the nonprofit’s campus meal deliveries had largely ground to a halt, leaving local families and funders wondering what happened. The disconnect between money coming in and meals not going out has now triggered a lawsuit from a neighborhood foundation and fresh scrutiny of the small but once high-profile charity.

A CBS News Texas investigation reported that the Tyler Street Foundation says it awarded Hunger Busters $116,200 in 2024 to purchase a van and a parcel of land, then filed suit after reviewing records the foundation argues do not line up. According to the lawsuit, photos submitted as proof relied on a rental vehicle, a vehicle identification number in the paperwork traced back to a 20‑year‑old Dodge Ram pickup, and Dallas County appraisal records did not show the land changing hands. The complaint accuses the nonprofit’s CEO of forging a deed and title insurance documents and notes that the station’s I-Team located documentation of at least $175,000 in grants and donations to Hunger Busters in 2025, as reported by CBS News Texas…

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