the Secret $6 Million Mansion and What Happened When Media Found Out – Opinion

BLM Global Network Foundation bought a luxurious $6 million Studio City mansion through a middleman linked to co-founder PatrisseCullors. The LLC was formed shortly after the huge cash infusion of $66.5 million donated by their fiscal sponsor.

Washington Examiner

Six days after Dyane Pascall purchased the Studio City mansion in cash, he transferred the property’s deed to an LLC apparently named after the property’s address, public records show.

BLM used Pascall and the LLC as middlemen for the property purchase to “avoid exposing BLM’s assets to any litigation or liability,” BLM board member Shalomyah Bowers told the Washington Examiner on Monday. He also stated that the mansion doesn’t serve as a residence.

Pascall is the financial manager for Cullors’s personal LLC, Janaya and Patrisse Consulting. He is also the chief financial officer for Trap Heals, an art company led by the father of Cullors’s only child, Damon Turner. Both Trap Heals and Janaya and Patrisse Consulting have received significant payments from Cullors’s activist groups, including BLM.

Cullors uploaded videos to her Youtube channel that looked like they were taken from the mansion. That channel has now been set to private, but here’s an archived video of Cullors, co-founder Alicia Garza, and former Los Angeles BLM official Melina Abdullah which the Daily Mail says appears to have been taken outside of the mansion in 2021, marking the one-year anniversary of George Floyd/”Freedom Summer,” with drinks (what looks like champagne) and a spread of food.

Sean Kevin Campbell from New York Magazine notes that the property is “more than 6,500 square feet, has half a dozen bedrooms and bathrooms, a pool and bungalow, soundstage, and an outdoor fireplace made of Italian marble, among numerous other luxuries.”

Does the person have a good understanding of how that works?

They also bought a Toronto mansion for $6.3million. We’ve also reported on the multiple real estate purchases by co-founder Patrisse Cullors including a mansion in Los Angeles for $1.4 million. BLM claims that no BLM money went to the purchase of that Cullors’ home.

BLM also found itself in trouble recently for not properly reporting how much money it received between 2020 and now. After being threatened by Washington and California, they shut down fundraising and are now in compliance with several states.

New York Magazine asked BLM what they were using the mansion for — what was the justification for buying it?

According to the magazine, they acquired an internal strategy memo of the leaders talking about how to deal with the questions about the house ranging from “Can we kill the story?” to “Our angle — needs to be to deflate ownership of the property.” They discussed saying they were using it as a “safe house” for the leaders, but there were “holes in the security story” because of the videos showing the house on Cullors’ Youtube channel.

Finally, they seem to have reached a consensus.

In an emailed statement on April 1, Shalomyah Bowers, a BLMGNF board member, said that the organization bought Campus “with the intention for it to serve as housing and studio space for recipients of the Black Joy Creators Fellowship.” The fellowship, which “provides recording resources and dedicated space for Black creatives to launch content online and in real life focused on abolition, healing justice, urban agriculture and food justice, pop culture, activism, and politics,” was announced the following morning.

But as the magazine notes, if that was their aim, “relatively little content has been produced there over the course of 17 months.”

Campbell said that they were trying to “investigate” journalists” including him after he questioned them.

This is a terrible look for an organisation that has many questions.

Paul Kamenar (an attorney representing the National Legal and Policy Center), said Cullors could have used the house for private gain as her Youtube video shows. “It appears that BLMGNF’s purchase and use of the house by Cullors and other insiders violate the IRS rule prohibiting the use of nonprofit assets for private benefit as well as self-dealing.”

According to New York Magazine, they’ve also hired Democratic lawyer Marc Elias to help out with filing issues.

Can we say what a mess this is — how it needs a full investigation to figure out where all the money has gone? Why would anybody donate money to them at such a late stage?

Perhaps no one can do a better job of all this than Babylon Bee with Kira Davis. It says it all.

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