The Predator in Sheep’s Clothing: Exposing the Truth Behind a Nonprofit’s Victim Act
“Some people will break you, then tell the world they’re the one bleeding.”
– Unknown
Kindness Between Friends has a troubling track record of playing the victim and blaming others whenever issues arise.
Initially, in response to public scrutiny, they pointed fingers at former tenants they had evicted:
Now, they’re targeting their current tenant they are evicting:
How many tenants have they actually evicted!?
The answer is clear: every vulnerable person they’ve used to collect tax-exempt rent in their so-called ‘veteran housing’ has ultimately faced eviction, often following questionable demands for fees and damages that aren’t supported by Pennsylvania tenant law or lease agreements.
Fast Facts:
- Veteran House Success Rate: 0%
- Evictions according to past tenants: At least 5 in the last 2 years
- Rent for their 841 sqft home: $2,300/month
- Rent Zestimate®: $1,794
- Late Fee: $50/day (Not stipulated in Lease)
- Lease Terms: Month-to-Month with ability to evict for any reason (Link)
- “Support” Provided: None
- Responsible for: All damages due to structural issues (Link)
Despite claiming they’ve “never had one real client unhappy with our services,” this is a blatant lie.
Multiple clients have come forward with negative experiences, sharing their stories publicly. When former tenants left honest reviews, Kindness Between Friends retaliated by exposing private court documents and even going so far as to threaten a former client’s mother.
This is shockingly unprofessional and unethical behavior, especially for a nonprofit.
Rather than addressing concerns, they’ve quietly scrubbed their website—deleting sections that once celebrated their “veteran housing program,” removing their mission and values, and hiding board member information.
Isn’t it strange that, when asked for transparency, they choose instead to erase their online footprint? What are they hiding?
While they vaguely reference tax filings on the IRS website, why not post financials, their mission, values, or an honest success rate for their veteran housing program directly on their own site?
Instead of transparency, the public is left with hidden information and hollow gestures of credibility.
For anyone seeking the truth, we encourage you to explore our website.
See for yourself the documented evidence—emails, text messages, threats, and eviction notices—that paints a clear picture of this organization’s practices. Kindness Between Friends is more focused on blaming others and retaliating against critics than on demonstrating the transparency and accountability that a true nonprofit should uphold.
Despite claiming to have served “1,600 clients” this year alone, nearly every positive review for Kindness Between Friends comes from friends, family members, volunteers, or vendors tied to the organization—not from actual clients.
If their work is so impactful, where are the voices of these supposed “1,600 satisfied clients?”
They outright claim, “not ONE real client has been unhappy with our services.” Yet, a single glance at their own Google reviews reveals at least one client voicing dissatisfaction. Think about the implications of such a blatant, easily disproven lie.
This was taken from ther Google Review Listing: