Black Lives Matters billion-dollar grift is STILL spitting up scammers

The Black Lives Matter grift continues to pay dividends for the hucksters and scammers who cozened billions of dollars out of American institutions eager to pay big to avoid condemnation as racists.The feds have indicted Tashella Dickerson, the director of the Oklahoma City BLM chapter — “franchise” might be a better term — for a brazen $3 million fraud scheme.Dickerson, who has run that BLM affiliate for a decade, allegedly diverted millions from a BLM bail fund to pay for vacations, cars and properties deeded in her name.But she’s by no means an anomaly: In fact, it would be unusual to find a BLM branch that didn’t operate as a slush fund for its local leader.Last year, the DOJ indicted Sir Maejor Page (yes, that’s right), the former director of Black Lives Matter of Greater Atlanta, for stealing $450,000 in donations; he allegedly used the cash to buy guns, clothing and a home he tried to register under a false name.The rot starts from the head.
Patrisse Cullors, a co-founder of the national BLM organization, Black Lives Matter Global Network, made news in 2021 when it emerged that the outfit had purchased a $6 million Los Angeles compound that she was personally using.It also paid her brother almost a million dollars to provide security for the “Campus,” and employed her mother and sister.Cullors also purchased several other multimillion-dollar properties, including a ranch in Georgia that comes with an airplane hangar.The Justice Department has subpoenaed Cullors’ BLMGN as it probes tens of millions that might’ve gone astray.But these outrages only scratch the surface of a massive shakedown operation that saw tens of billions of dollars pour from corporate and charitable entities into the hands of hundreds of racial activist groups in the years following the George Floyd riots.The Claremont Institute’s Center for the American Way of Life’s “BLM Funding Database” tracks the massive flow of funds from major companies to BLM and oth...