HELENA, Montana (AP) An insurance company will pay $1.2 million to a charity co-founded by "Three Cups of Tea" author Greg Mortenson in a settlement over the legal costs of a lawsuit and an investigation into Mortenson and his Central Asia Institute, attorneys involved in the settlement said.
The settlement, if approved, will mark an end to more than two years of legal troubles for Mortenson after "60 Minutes" and author Jon Krakauer published reports that alleged Mortenson fabricated parts of his best-selling books and mismanaged the institute.
After those reports, then-Montana Attorney General Steve Bullock launched an investigation into the charity. A settlement required Mortenson to repay $1 million and made fundamental changes to the institute's structure.
Four readers then filed a lawsuit that claimed Mortenson, co-author David Oliver Relin, publisher Penguin and the Central Asia Institute were involved in a fraud conspiracy by Mortenson lying in his best-selling "Three Cups of Tea" to boost sales and donations to the charity.
"Three Cups of Tea" and the sequel, "Stones Into Schools," recount how Mortenson started building schools in Pakistan and Afghanistan. "Three Cups of Tea" has sold about 4 million copies since being published in 2006.