Hillary Clinton reportedly charged a Boys and Girls Club chapter $200,000 for an appearance, then left the premise without saying hello to children who benefit from the program.

The massive fee, which she donated back to her family foundation, was the largest the Long Beach, California, organization had ever paid a public figure for a speech, Politico reports.

By contrast, the club made $106,000 off the lunchtime, charity event - its lowest yield in 25 years. A contributing factor to the diminished proceeds: Clinton's large entourage. It reportedly took up seats that would have otherwise been sold to donors.

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Hillary Clinton, pictured here on Monday at a forum, charged a Boys and Girls Club chapter $200,000 for a 2014 appearance, then reportedly left the premise without saying hello to children who benefit from the program

Clinton is pictured here at another Boys and Girls Club event in December of 2000 as the Senator-elect from New York. She was on hand to watch Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates, right, announces Microsoft's $100 million donation to the organization

The details of the 2014 closed-press event were published in a Politico report today that cites a volunteer with the group as the source of the unflattering information.

Normally, speakers donate much of their honorariums back to the small, non-profit that has an annual operating budget of just $3 million.

The former secretary of state redirected her check to the Clinton Foundation, which raked in $262 million in 2013, according to a Washington Post assessment released earlier this year following the group's latest disclosures.

That puts them in the 'top ranks' of non-profits when it comes to fundraising, expert Steven Lawrence of the Foundation Center told the Post.

That year, the global charity had an operating budget of nearly $84.6 million,CNN reported, with nearly 10 percent, $8.1 million, going toward travel and a sliver, $9 million, going to direct aid.

'It seems like the Clinton Foundation operates as a slush fund for the Clintons,' Bill Allison, a senior fellow at the Sunlight Foundation, a non-profit watchdog, told the New York Post in April.

Another oversight organization, Charity Navigator, has the Clinton Foundation on a watch list over its spending.

In 2007, when Bill Clinton headlined the Boys and Girls Club's annual luncheon, he charged the group $150,000 and kept the money for himself, Politico found.

That compares to former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, the 2009 guest, who asked for $60,000, most of which she donated back to the Boys and Girls Club.

Her event, which was open press, reportedly raised more than twice as much, $258,000, as Hillary Clinton's did. And she arrived early to tour the club's facilities and meet with disadvantaged youth who participate in the program.

'With Hillary, it was more businesslike,' the volunteer who spoke to Politico told the publication. 'She did acknowledge what we do for the community, but it felt like a little bit of hypocrisy because her speaking fee was higher than anyone we’ve ever had, and she didn’t donate anything back.'

The source said Hillary's behavior was 'a little less offensive' than 'writing a check to them and having them profit from it' the way Bill did- but it still 'felt more like a pay-to-play type thing.'

Bill Clinton recently estimated that he gives 10 percent of his paid speeches - 'a little more actually' to the charity, 'and Hillary gave even more of her paid speeches to the foundation.'

They set aside a combined $25 million in 2014 for themselves as income, financial records released by Hillary's presidential campaign last month, in line with federal election law, revealed.

Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is pictured here meeting with students at the Peninsula Boys and Girls Club in 2007. When she spoke to executives of the group in 2009 she asked for $60,000 and donated most of it back. She also arrived early to visit with program participants

Clinton, pictured here yesterday in New Hampshire, redirected her $200,000 check from the Boys and Girls Club to the Clinton Foundation

In 2007, when Bill Clinton headlined the Boys and Girls Club's annual luncheon, he charged the group $150,000 and kept the money for himself. He's pictured here on Saturday with his wife at her campaign kick-off rally in New York City

Politico's article was the latest in a string of reports questioning the fundraising practices of the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation in the wake of the former first lady's declaration that she's seeking the Democratic nomination for president in 2016.

Hillary Clinton joined the board of the charity in 2013 after she left the State Department. The organization's name was changed at that time to reflect her involvement.

She's personally come under scrutiny in the last year for taking large checks from universities as payment for speeches and depositing them in the foundation's bank account.

The foundation as a whole has raised as much as $11.7 million on the backs of other non-profit institutions since its founding in 2001, Politico surmised.

Bill Clinton only agreed to speak at a 2014 gala benefiting the Happy Hearts Fund, the disaster relief charity founded by Czech model Petra Nemcova, at which he was being honored with a lifetime achievement award after he it agreed to donate $500,000 to the Clinton Foundation, the group's former executive director told the New York Times last month.

'The Clinton Foundation had rejected the Happy Hearts Fund invitation more than once, until there was a thinly veiled solicitation and then the offer of an honorarium,' the former executive, Sue Veres Royal, claimed.

Other examples include gifts of more than $100,000 from Chicago House, an non-profit that provides housing assistance, employment services and HIV prevention services to the impoverished, and Public Counsel, the largest pro-bono law firm in the world.