I'd be interested to see the financials of that charity.
Again, I'm not saying that Oher is entitled to millions of dollars. There are few people more creative than Hollywood accountants, who can show that an amazingly successful movie didn't make any money.
At the same time, the conservatorship, the inaccurate statements about adult adoption, the funneling of Oher to Mississippi for football, and then to a personal friend as Oher's agent, the profiting off of Oher's story and giving 80% of the profits to "the family" as opposed to the guy who became a success, hiring a big time Hollywood attorney whose billing is likely to exceed hundreds of thousands -- if not millions -- of dollars, etc. are at least yellow flags.
It just presents a narrative of this being largely a one-way relationship. If Oher made it big, they'd profit off him (way more than a $30 bubble wand). If he became a failure, it was easy for them to cut ties with him, with absolutely no family relationship (despite public claims to the contrary).