Former President Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton are under fire over their charity organization's decision to reportedly keep a $250,000 donation from disgraced film producer Harvey Weinstein.

The Clinton Foundation told the DailyMail.com that it will not return money received from Weinstein, who has been accused of sexually assaulting or harassing more than 30 women, including actresses Angelina Jolie, Ashley Judd, Rose McGowan, Gwyneth Paltrow, Kate Beckinsale, Rosanna Arquette and Mira Sorvino. The foundation says it already spent money received from Weinstein on charitable purposes.

"Suggesting @ClintonFdn return funds from our 330,000+ donors ignores the fact that donations have been used to help people across the world," foundation spokesman Craig Minassian said on Twitter over the weekend.

The Clinton Foundation, which is currently run by Bill and Chelsea Clinton, said it last received a contribution from Weinstein in 2014. The Hollywood mogul also backed Hillary Clinton in 2016 and reportedly donated more than $35,000 to her presidential campaign.

Hillary Clinton condemned Weinstein several times last week, saying she was "shocked and appalled" by the allegations.

"This kind of behavior cannot be tolerated anywhere, whether it's in entertainment, politics," she told the BBC, before attacking President Donald Trump. "After all, we have someone admitting to being a sexual assaulter in the Oval Office."

When asked about allegations of sexual misconduct against her husband, Hillary Clinton said "that has all been litigated... in the late '90s... That was clearly in the past."

But Fox News reports criticism is escalating for Clinton, who is on tour promoting her new book "What Happened," after Democratic politicians, including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, Sen. Al Franken, Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Sen. Cory Booker, all vowed to donate money from Weinstein to women's rights organizations.

"What other people are saying, what my former colleagues are saying, is they're going to donate it to charity, and of course I will do that," Clinton told CNN earlier last week. "I give 10 percent of my income to charity every year, this will be part of that. There's no - there's no doubt about it."

"Know what Hillary Clinton is NOT? She's not stupid. Or unsophisticated about the world. The Weinstein stories had been out there for years," CNN host Anthony Bourdain wrote on Twitter. The celebrity chef is dating Asia Argento, an Italian actress who says Weinstein raped her at the Cannes Film Festival in 1999.

Bill and Chelsea Clinton have not commented on questions about donations from Weinstein, according to the Daily Mail.

Weinstein has publicly apologized for any pain he had caused, but his representative Sallie Hofmeister told The New Yorker that "any allegations of non-consensual sex are unequivocally denied by Mr. Weinstein."

Weinstein has been condemned in public by President Barack Obama and stars who worked with Weinstein including Ben Affleck, George Clooney, Meryl Streep, Matt Damon, Leonardo DiCaprio, Jennifer Lawrence, Bob Iger, Jeffrey Katzenberg, Judd Apatow, Judi Dench, Glenn Close, Kevin Smith, Ryan Gosling and more.

Weinstein was fired Sunday by the Weinstein Co., which he co-founded, and the film studio has dropped his name from upcoming projects and is expected to change the company name altogether. He's also been removed from the Academy, which votes on the Oscars, and may have his honorary SUNY doctorate of humane letters revoked by the University at Buffalo.