IRS Form 990 Schedule I report

Neville Roy Singham Network: tax-exempt grant recipient analysis

This report turns the IRS XML scan into a readable account of who reported grants, which listed organizations received them, how much was reported, and how strong each match is.

Read findings Open evidence table Download JSON data

The scan found reported Schedule I grants to 8 of the listed tax-exempt or context organizations.

The matched rows total $131,417,012 in reported cash grant amounts across 131 recipient rows and 86 distinct IRS filings. Exact EIN matches and name-only matches are separated throughout the report.

8targets with matches
35donor/filer entities
4,871,504XML filings scanned
Important limitation: this site reports public IRS filing evidence only. A matched Schedule I row does not by itself prove control, coordination, legal affiliation, or the purpose of the grant beyond what the filer reported.

What a reader should take away first

Which listed organizations appear as grant recipients

Cards are ranked by reported cash grant amount. Organizations with no matched Schedule I recipient rows are still shown so the absence is visible.

The same evidence, shown as patterns

These charts are designed for quick reading: where the money concentrates, when filings appear, which donors recur, and how much of the match set is exact EIN evidence.

Recipient share of reported cash grants

Each bar shows the target's share of the matched cash total.

Match confidence

Exact EIN rows are stronger evidence than name-only rows.

Donor concentration

Top donor/filer entities by reported cash amount.

Year-by-year pattern

Stacked by recipient target using IRS XML posting year.

Donor-to-recipient heatmap

Darker cells mean larger reported cash totals between a donor/filer and target recipient.

Where the reported grants came from

The report groups donors by the filing organization in the IRS return header, not by paid preparer. This prevents accounting firms from being mistaken for donors.

Reported grant volume by posting year

Posting year is the IRS XML release year, not necessarily the grant year. Tax year is available in the detail table.

How to interpret match strength

Exact EIN + name

Highest-confidence row: the recipient row includes the listed EIN and an organization-name alias.

Exact EIN only

Strong match by tax ID, but the recipient name may be omitted, abbreviated, or placed elsewhere in the row.

Name only

Useful lead, but lower confidence. Review the row before relying on it because an EIN may be missing or may differ from the supplied target EIN.

Matched Schedule I rows

Use this table to inspect source filings. Every row retains the IRS object ID, source ZIP URL, and XML SHA-256 in the JSON dataset.

Donor/filerRecipient targetYearAmountReported purposeMatchIRS object

Coverage and reproducibility

Sources scanned: IRS Form 990 XML ZIPs reachable from the current IRS public download patterns. Reachable years: 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026.

Unavailable historical years: 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 returned no reachable IRS/AWS XML ZIP or index source during probing.

Source exceptions: five ZIP archives advertised XML members but failed extraction with the available Apple ZIP tools. Those exceptions and SHA-256 hashes are preserved in report-data.json.

Generated: 2026-05-01T16:25:27+00:00. Open machine-readable data.