Black Lives Matter leaders doled out lucrative contracts to family and friends, new documents reveal



Leaders of the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation doled out lucrative contracts to family members and friends, new documents show.

The Black Lives Matter organization reaped $80 million during the George Floyd riots of 2020. However, the figure plummeted to under $29 million by the end of the 2023 fiscal year, the group's tax form reveal.

Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Cullors resigned from the organization in 2021. However, friends and family of Cullors have received massive contracts from the charity with a supposed mission to "eradicate white supremacy and build local power to intervene in violence inflicted on black communities by the state and vigilantes."

Paul Cullors – the brother of the BLM co-founder – received $200,000 in 2023 as Black Lives Matter's head of security. His company – Black Ties LLC – raked in an additional $1.6 million for allegedly providing professional security services for Black Lives Matter.

The Washington Free Beacon reported that Paul Cullors and his companies have accumulated more than $4.2 million for allegedly protecting Black Lives Matter since 2021.

Since 2020, Black Lives Matter has demanded a "national defunding of police." Last July, BLM celebrated a "Defund the Police Week."

Shalomyah Bowers – board member for BLMGNF and an associate of Patrisse Cullors – stated last year, "This week we are demonstrating that one of the main pillars of progress in our short 10 years as a modern-day civil rights movement is that we have made our demand, to defund the police, politically popular and achievable, and a mainstream demand.

Black Lives Matter paid Bowers' consulting firm $2.6 million for staffing and management services in the 2023 fiscal year, according to a tax return.

BLM also handed out money to Damon Turner – the father of the only child of Cullors. The Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation granted $778,000 to Turner's art firm, Trap Heals, for work done at a concert series in early 2022. Turner reportedly no longer works with the charity.

As Blaze News previously reported, BLM paid Turner's company $969,459 for "live production, design and media," according to group's 2021 fiscal year.

According to the organization's 2023 fiscal year tax return, a combined $1.1 million was doled out to former Black Lives Matter director of operations Raymond Howard and New Impact Partners – a consulting firm owned by Danielle Edwards, who is Raymond Howard's sister.

Blaze News also previously reported that Patrisse Cullors "secretly bought a $6 million house" in southern California in October 2020 using funds donated to the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation.

In July 2021, BLM reportedly funded the purchase of a $6.3 million mansion in Canada that was formerly the headquarters of the Communist Party of Canada.

Charity Watch Executive Director Laurie Styron told the Daily Caller that Black Lives Matter "has no independent oversight."

"Whether a person loves this charity’s mission or hates it, they should be angry that significant amounts of charitable dollars are being channeled to interested parties without adequate oversight in place," Styron said. "Charities are expected to avoid both real and perceived conflicts of interest to maintain public trust. This charity is doing the opposite. The optics here are really, really bad."

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Cousin of BLM co-founder who fled police following hit-and-run died from enlarged heart and cocaine use: Coroner's report



Keenan Anderson, the cousin of BLM co-founder Patrisse Cullors, died on January 3, hours after a confrontation with police involving the use of a taser.

During the incident, Anderson claimed, "They're trying to George Floyd me."

Anderson's estate later sued the City of Los Angeles and its police force for $50 million, alleging wrongful death and civil rights violations — a suit that was later denied.

The Los Angeles County Medical Examiner-Coroner published its findings Friday concerning the cause and manner of Anderson's death, revealing that an enlarged heart and cocaine use were to blame.

What's the background?

TheBlaze previously reported that around 3:30 p.m. on January 3, police responded to reports of a traffic accident and a man walking on the road, causing a disturbance, at the intersection of Venice Boulevard and Lincoln Boulevard.

Police found Anderson, an English teacher at Digital Pioneers Academy and a driver involved in the accident, in the road "exhibiting erratic behavior."

The officer who made initial contact with Anderson noted that Anderson might have been under the influence.

Anderson initially cooperated with some of the officer's instructions but insisted that some unidentified people were "trying to kill" him.

Despite the officer's repeated requests that he remain seated, Anderson reportedly kept standing up and wandering about.

When the officer requested backup for a DUI investigation, Anderson attempted to flee, running back into the street, reported the Los Angeles Times.

Officers reportedly attempted to subdue Anderson and get him back on the ground, but he resisted, refusing to comply with orders that he turn onto his stomach. Although officers managed to restrain Anderson, he allegedly continued resisting.

Anderson began repeating that "they're trying to kill" him and begging passersby for help, further stressing, "They're trying to George Floyd me."

Eventually, after several more warnings, police tased Anderson.

Los Angeles Police Department Chief Michel Moore indicated the taser was "activated" 10 times, but that not all deployments were "effective," reported the Guardian.

After being tased, Anderson was treated by responding fire department personnel, around which time he lost consciousness and exhibited labored breathing.

He was taken to a hospital, where he was declared dead several hours later.

Moore indicated Anderson suffered a "medical emergency," noting a preliminary blood test revealed cannabis and cocaine in his system.

L.A. Mayor Karen Bass said on January 11, "Full investigations are underway, and I pledge that the City's investigations into these deaths will be transparent and will reflect the values of Los Angeles. I will ensure that the City’s investigations will drive only toward truth and accountability. Furthermore, the officers involved must be placed on immediate leave."

Patrice Cullors, the multimillionaire co-founder of BLM, said after watching the LAPD footage of the incident, "My cousin was asking for help, and he didn’t receive it. He was killed. ... Nobody deserves to die in fear, panicking and scared for their life. My cousin was scared for his life. He spent the last 10 years witnessing a movement challenging the killing of Black people. He knew what was at stake and he was trying to protect himself. Nobody was willing to protect him."

Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) tweeted, "We must not shrink from the need for justice for Keenan Anderson. ... Accountability must be transparent and swift."

Coroner's report and response

The coroner's report stated that the cause of death was "effects of cardiomyopathy (enlarged heart) and cocaine use (death determined hours after restraint and conducted energy device [CED] use)," noting that the "manner of death is undetermined."

According to the County of Los Angeles Department of Medical Examiner-Coroner, an undetermined designation is applied "when there is inadequate information regarding the circumstances of death" and/or "where known information equally supports or conflicts with more than one manner of death or, in cases of unnatural death, when a clear preponderance of evidence supporting a specific manner (homicide, accident, or suicide) is not available."

Mayor Bass stated in response, "The coroner raises questions that still must be answered and I await the result of the investigation already underway. I know that in this time of pain it sometimes feels like there is no hope, but we must turn the pain into concrete, substantive change – and we will."

Bass added, "I remain committed to expanding the public safety system to include health professionals and to ensuring LAPD officers receive the best possible training to assist people in crisis."

Patrice Cullors, the multimillionaire co-founder of BLM, maintains that the LAPD killed Anderson.

"All I know and all we know, because we have seen the video, is that my cousin was alive when he flagged the police. He was alive. And after his interaction with the police, he was dead," said Cullors, suggesting the coroner's apparent inability to determine the manner of death was "unacceptable."

The $50 million lawsuit filed on behalf of Anderson's son against the LAPD and the city was previously denied. However, Carl Douglas, attorney for Anderson's estate, suggested they would be filing another lawsuit before month's end, reported the Los Angeles Times.

"Had officers chosen not to tase Mr. Anderson repeatedly on the back side of his heart, he would still be alive today," said Douglas. "And there is nothing that was released by the autopsy report that disputes that conclusion."

"Legally the question is not whether they killed Mr. Anderson, but whether their actions were a substantial factor leading to his death. It doesn’t have to be the only factor. But certainly it was a substantial factor," added Douglas. "There’s no evidence or any indication whatsoever that he would have had a cardiac arrest, a heart attack, had he not been tasered repeatedly."

Hennepin County Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Andrew Baker reported that George Floyd, whom Anderson referenced in his struggle with police, similarly had heart issues and drugs in his system at the time of death.

Baker noted Floyd had hypertensive heart disease, “meaning his heart weighed more than it should" and consequently needed more oxygen than a normal heart," reported CNN.

Floyd's autopsy report revealed he had fentanyl, norfentanyl, methamphetamine, cannabis, and morphine in his system.

Baker agreed that "both the heart disease as well as the history of hypertension and the drugs that were in his system played a role in Mr. Floyd’s death."

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BLM paid nearly $1 million to its co-founder's baby daddy, roughly five times more than to the Trayvon Martin Foundation



Black Lives Matter paid its co-founder’s baby daddy almost five times more than it gave to the Trayvon Martin Foundation – a nonprofit dedicated to the legacy of the 2012 death of Trayvon Martin, which kicked off the BLM movement.

Patrisse Cullors, the former executive director and co-founder of Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation, paid a company owned by Damon Turner $969,459 for “live production, design and media,” according to its latest IRS filings. The New York Post reported that Turner’s company, a for-profit organization, which is known for selling $145 sweatshirts and soliciting donations for abstract causes known as “the movement,” received the second-highest payout from Black Lives Matter in the fiscal year 2020.

Turner, a rapper and artist, is the father of Cullors’ son and manages a Los Angeles-based entertainment and clothing company called Trap Heals LLC. Turner is a frequent recipient of Cullors’ redirection of money raised for nonprofit causes. In 2019, Turner’s company received $63,500 from Reform LA Jails, a state-level political action committee controlled by Cullors that had the mission of working toward criminal justice reform.

While Cullors used money raised through charitable donations to pay the father of her child nearly $1 million, Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation paid the Florida-based Trayvon Martin Foundation just $200,000, according to IRS filings.

The Trayvon Martin Foundation was established by Martin’s parents to “provide emotional and financial support to families who have lost a child to gun violence,” according to its website. Trayvon Martin’s 2012 death led to the birth of the Black Lives Matter movement.

The IRS filings disclosing the questionable spending by Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation show that the company raked in $76,872,002 in charitable donations in fiscal year 2020 and paid out $25,997,945 in grants to other nonprofit organizations.

Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation’s largest payout was just over $2 million and went to Bowers Consulting Firm, which is owned by Shalomyah Bowers, a current board member of the foundation. According to IRS filings, the money was paid to Bowers for “administrative support, general consulting, strategy, design … and staff management under the direction of the executive director.”

The foundation also paid $840,993 to Cullors Protection LLC, a private security firm owned by Patrisse Cullors’ eldest brother. According to the IRS filings, the payments were for “professional security services." Cullors Protection LLC was established in July 2020 and currently provides security for the foundation’s $6 million Los Angeles headquarters.

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Black Lives Matter co-founder tearfully claims she was harassed by Candace Owens at her home, but new video appears to tell a different story



Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Cullors posted a tearful video on Instagram claiming that Candace Owens harassed her at her home. However, Owens refuted the complaint and provided a video that seemingly tells a different story.

Cullors posted a 7-minute video on Instagram where she claimed, "Right-wing pundits and media are attacking and harassing me and my family."

“This morning I woke up to Candace Owens being outside of my house with a news crew," the BLM leader alleged. "She was demanding that I come outside… she was actually asking about the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation property,” Cullors said on Instagram last week. “It seems like she thought my house was that. It’s unacceptable and it’s dangerous for anybody, any stranger, to come outside of my house.”

Cullors broke down crying during the video.

“I really need my family to be safe. I need to be safe. I need my child to be safe, and what happened this morning is not safety," Cullors alleged.

"While she is black, she is advancing a right-wing agenda," Cullors said. "She is dangerous, and her followers are dangerous."

"We have to see what the f*** they are doing," Cullors declared. "And we must challenge it. The backlash against our movement is impacting people and their livelihood. I won’t accept it, and we won’t accept it."

(WARNING: Explicit language)

Owens admits that she did visit the BLM co-founder's $1.4 million home in the predominantly white town of Topanga Canyon, California. However, Owens repudiates the accusation that she harassed Cullors, and believes her video is proof.

Owens is allegedly making a documentary about the finances of Black Lives Matter, which will be released on May 23. The Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation reportedly raked in a whopping $90 million in donations in 2020.

Owens brought a film crew with her to the residence of the BLM activist.

The video shows Owens politely saying, "We’re not trying to harass you. We’ll gladly leave. We’re just wondering if we can speak to anybody?"

The conservative firebrand accused Cullors of crying "crocodile tears."

Owens wrote on Twitter, "Remember she fake cried and said I harassed her? LIAR."

Ownes asked, "Remember last week when she hopped on Instagram and LIED, claiming that she was unsafe and scared because I 'demanded' to see her?"

"I simply showed up, spoke to a white security guard accompanied by a white dog THROUGH the gate—and then volunteered to leave because he wasn't responding to my questions at all," she continued. "Patrisse Cullors is an absolute fraud."

"Patrisse is pretending to be scared because she knows that this Black Lives Matter lie is falling apart. And she doesn’t know what to do,” Owens said on Instagram. "What you are seeing right now is the face of a woman who is pretending she's afraid of right-wing pundits when in reality, she’s being exposed as a fraud… took millions of dollars to fund herself, to fund her lifestyle, to fund her girlfriend and to buy million-dollar mansions in neighborhoods where no black people live."

Patrisse Khan-Cullors reportedly went on a "real estate-buying binge, snagging four high-end homes for $3.2 million in the U.S. alone" in a 5-year period.