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Mark Rubin

Name:
Mark Rubin

AIPAC Role:
AIPAC Secretary/Treasurer, Board of Directors, and Officer

Professional Profile/Associations:

Harvard Business School MBA who founded Maric Inc. in 1984, a Boston-area commercial real estate investment firm he led as President for four decades before relocating to Palm Beach Gardens, Florida. Made a transformational gift to Jewish Family & Children's Service of Greater Boston that created the "Lauren & Mark Rubin Visiting Moms" program. Political contributions demonstrate AIPAC's bipartisan influence strategy: donated $4,800 to Representative Eliot Engel (D-NY) through Pro-Israel America PAC during his contested 2020 primary against Jamaal Bowman, while also contributing to Senator Susan Collins (R-ME) and Representative Kay Granger (R-TX), who served on the House Foreign Operations Appropriations Subcommittee overseeing military aid to Israel.

Accountability:

As a member of AIPAC's Board of Directors, Mark Rubin bears individual legal responsibility for the organization's conduct. Under U.S. nonprofit law, board members hold fiduciary duties to ensure organizational compliance with applicable legal standards, implement oversight systems for core activities, and respond to credible information about organizational wrongdoing. In Stern v. Lucy Webb Hayes (1974), the federal district court held that nonprofit directors who fail to supervise organizational decisions breach their fiduciary obligations. In In re Lemington Home for the Aged (3d Cir. 2015), the Third Circuit upheld $2.25 million in damages against nonprofit directors who ignored red flags and failed to exercise reasonable oversight. In addition, as an officer of AIPAC, Mark Rubin bears additional individual legal responsibility for the organization's conduct. Under D.C. Code § 29-406.42, officers with discretionary authority must act in good faith, exercise ordinary prudent-person care, and affirmatively report material information and potential legal violations to the board. While the DC Nonprofit Corporation Act provides automatic liability protection for directors of charitable corporations, it extends no such protection to officers—meaning executive officers face potential personal liability for conduct that would be shielded if committed by a director. Federal courts have sustained punitive damages against nonprofit executives while vacating them against directors, and federal tax law treats executive officers as "disqualified persons" subject to personal excise taxes on excess benefit transactions. 

The information in these profiles is drawn primarily from AIPAC's most recent IRS Form 990, supplemented by publicly available sources including news reports, official announcements, and public records. As a 501(c)(4) social welfare organization, AIPAC is legally required to file Form 990 annually with the Internal Revenue Service, and these filings are public documents.

However, IRS regulations allow organizations up to eleven months after their fiscal year ends to submit these forms, meaning publicly available data typically lags by approximately one year. This inherent delay underscores why AIPAC—like most major organizations of its size and influence—should maintain a current, public-facing leadership page identifying its board members and senior executives. The absence of such transparency from AIPAC necessitates this project. We are committed to accuracy and will update these profiles as new information becomes available. If you have corrections, updates, or additional sourced information, please contact us at advocacy@dawnmena.org.

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