Home Venture Capital Venture capital fund DEMI sues Denver, alleging violation of contract

Venture capital fund DEMI sues Denver, alleging violation of contract

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A venture capital fund hired by Denver to invest in minority and women-owned businesses has sued the city, alleging it has failed to provide the $15 million in funding promised. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

An equity venture capital fund investing in minority-owned and women-owned firms has sued Denver, alleging the city has violated its contract by cutting off funding and leaving disadvantaged businesses at risk.

“I am out of pocket for nearly $800,000 of my own money to pay other subcontractors,” said Danielle Shoots, managing director and founder of the Denver-based Domestic Emerging Market Investments or DEMI Fund. “I need to be reimbursed to keep the overall work going.”

In October 2022, Denver created the Herman Malone Fund using revenues from a 1% tax on marijuana sales. The fund was dedicated to investing in and supporting Black, Indigenous and People of Color or BIPOC entrepreneurs.

In October 2022, after issuing a request for proposals, the Denver Economic Development & Opportunity office hired the New Community Transformation Fund, which does business as DEMI and is led by Shoots, the former chief financial officer of the Colorado Trust. The city in its contract pledged to provide $15.2 million through June 2025, adding to the $9 million Shoots raised from other investors including Xcel Energy, Bank of America, and the Colorado Housing and Finance Authority.

The goal was to help 1,000 disadvantaged businesses initially and eventually double the fund’s size through the return of capital and future renewals from Denver, creating a self-sustaining pool of capital.

Besides finding qualified businesses to support and investing in them, DEMI was tasked with providing mentoring and support services through nonprofits and subcontractors.

The city’s involvement, however, was complicated from the get-go. A public entity, Denver couldn’t act as a limited partner in a venture capital fund because it put taxpayer funds at risk. That forced Shoots to create a workaround whereby Denver directed its money into the nonprofit Impact Charitable via a donor-advised fund. Impact Charitable became a limited partner, maintaining compliance with securities laws.

Limited partners normally take a passive role, and even though it was one step removed, DEDO started requesting what Shoots described as “unnecessary” contractors, reducing how much money could go to support businesses. In one case, DEDO asked that DEMI hire a subcontractor based in Houston, which Shoots refused to do.

She argued that supporting an out-of-state firm violated the terms of the contract and misused Denver tax dollars. She filed an open records request with the city and learned the person in question was a relative of a city employee.

After that confrontation, the city stopped meeting capital calls and reimbursing expenses, citing insufficient documentation, even though each invoice was accompanied by hundreds of pages of documentation, Shoots said.

Shoots said she hoped Mayor Michael Johnston would revere course, only to be told that the Herman Malone Fund was out of money. Cannabis sales are down, but the city has yet to provide an explanation as to why the fund is out of money.

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