The Schultz Family Foundation’s filing says that the family also directs charitable donations through the Silicon Valley Community Foundation, but does not disclose an amount. The $2-billion Silicon Valley charity is a donor-advised fund, which is not required to disclose who its donors are or where they direct their funds.

Schultz may have given to other charities, as well, but his representatives did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Schultz, who served as CEO and executive chairman of Starbucks until 2018, this weekend catapulted into the political world when he revealed on Twitter his interest in running for president as an independent.

“I love our country, and I am seriously considering running for president as a centrist independent,” Schultz tweeted. He has since begun hiring political operatives.

The thrust of his campaign so far has been to denigrate Democratic proposals to reduce income inequality. On Tuesday he dismissed Warren’s proposed wealth tax as “ridiculous.” He has called Ocasio-Cortez’s pitch to raise top marginal tax rates to 70 percent “misinformed” and said he doesn’t think America would approve. A recent Fox News poll showed 70 percent of registered supporters favor the plan.

Schultz, who has described himself as a “lifelong Democrat,” was met with skepticism by many who thought his candidacy would hand the election to President Trump.

On Monday, Ralph Nader, who ran as an independent during the Bush-Gore battle in 2000, told Fox Business that a Schultz candidacy would be “a nightmare for the Democrats.”

Schultz told Forbes in 2016 that America had “lost our conscience” and he wanted Starbucks to “elevate citizenship and humanity.”

The magazine reported that the $100 million Schultz Family Foundation, founded in 1996, held “only a thin slice” of his wealth at the time, but that Schultz said it would become much bigger.

The Schultz Family Foundation’s publicly available tax filings do not name its recipients. The group’s website lists a number of veterans’ and youth groups that benefit from its largesse. One document on the Starbucks website lists amounts given to youth groups in 2016. The donations are mostly five-figure amounts to local organizations. The group that received the most was a San Francisco United Way chapter, which got $100,000.

If Schultz does run, he would likely come under intense pressure to release his tax returns — something every major presidential candidate prior to Trump has done for decades. Those returns could shed light on the full extent of Schultz’s giving.

Most of Schultz’s disclosed giving to his family foundation has come in the form of stocks. In the most recent year available, Schultz and his wife’s gifts to their foundation included several high-profile tech stocks:

2,691 shares of Apple worth $298,486

220 shares of Amazon worth $171,036

4,082 shares of Microsoft worth $247,675

He also donated some well-known Wall Street stocks:

6,079 shares of Bank of America worth $124,194

2,159 shares of JP Morgan Chase worth $129,622

All but one of Schultz’s 19 donations in 2016-2017 were reported as being made on Nov. 23, 2016, just over two weeks after the presidential election.

Jonathan Larsen is TYT's managing editor. You can find him on Twitter @JTLarsen.

Ken Klippenstein is a senior investigative reporter for TYT. He can be reached on Twitter @kenklippenstein or via email: [email protected].

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