The Sussexes set up the non-profit foundation in 2020 after stepping down as senior royals, but according to their lawyers a bank account for the charity was not opened until January 2021. Filings to the IRS in the US obtained by the Daily Mail show Archewell received its first deposit the following month.Harry and Meghan’s charity this month told the IRS its gross receipts for 2020 amounted to less than $US50,000 ($A69,000), the outlet reports, despite news of their venture making headlines around the world.Sources close to the Sussexes last year told The Telegraph they were yet to “properly” launch Archewell, and were waiting until “the time is right” due to the Covid pandemic.Describing how a public launch was “off the cards” in mid-2020, a source said: “What’s absolutely clear is that they want to get it right and there’s no point in rushing.“They are settling into a new life, a new era. This is about getting it right and making sure they are able to make the difference they want to make.”To put that into comparison with some of the top non-profits in the US, Johns Hopkins, Stanford and Harvard universities each amassed $1.52 billion, $1.28 billion and $1.22 billion in 2020, respectively, according to The Chronicle of Philanthropy.Filings also reveal the couple forked out more cash on legal fees for their charities than how much they raised in 2020.Documents for their now-defunct UK charity Sussex Royal show at least $77,000 was spent on lawyers that year, and UK Companies House filings show it had more than $525,000 in its accounts in 2020.Meghan and Harry founded the outfit in 2019 and called it Sussex Royal – The Foundation of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex.But they were told they couldn’t trade on their royal titles after they announced they were stepping back from court life and they changed the name to MWX Foundation.They appointed liquidators more than a year ago, and a report by Smith & Williamson filed in September 2021 revealed the concern had $540,714 held in an account with Coutts & Co when they were called in.It said the body had a wholly-owned subsidiary – Harry and Meghan’s trading arm MXH Trading Ltd – which is also being wound-up voluntarily by the couple.The document said that $48,000 will go to Harbottle & Lewis for legal representation and $19,000 to liquidators. Harry and Meghan previously aced criticism for spending $561,000 to start their Sussex Royal foundation only to quit 12 months later.The organisation spent half the money on legal and admin fees setting it up and closing it down.This article originally appeared on The Sun and was reproduced with permission
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