I have never heard of any legit charitable organization that asks for copies of people's passports or IDs.
Well, do you know anything about the Brazilian government? It's very easy to be vaguely suspicious (I certainly am), but I know the organization which has expanded all over the world at this point and is opening a location now in Brazil, which is why I want to donate to the project.
Why do they need this, you ask? They have told me that regulations are very strict on non-profits in Brazil. Presumably during tax time to prove to the Brazilian government that, yes, an American really did make a donation in this amount to a Brazilian charity and they're not just a front for a drug smuggling operation.
Right on their Paypal donation page it says they need this info in order to accept the donation.
The fact that it says this right on their donation page is obviously going to hinder their ability to get donations from people like me who don't freely give that sort of information, but I do want to help them.
Again, this is a US Legal forum, so let me explain again how this is a US legal concern:
1. US Law covers international affairs. The US Passport is a US document. If something can possibly go wrong then I am liable, but what I might be liable for I have no idea.
2. I am not filing my taxes in Brazil and I am not even declaring my donation on my US taxes. The Brazilian regulation is for the donation's tax purposes. They can't accept my donation without it and I would like to help them. However, the idea of photocopying my ID and sending it to Brazil sketches me out because I don't know what could go wrong and what the legal ramifications for me could possibly be.
So, I am just trying to discern what US Law generally has to say about it since I can't be the first person to make a charitable donation in Brazil.