Not a Good Time for BLM

From Toronto to Tennessee to Fraud Investigations

BLM ‘charity’ mansion. Who says deceit doesn’t pay… Photo courtesy of deception.news

For a group responsible for the biggest riots and destruction of property of 2020 and 2021, they do get a lot of contributions from the community and if you dare to question them, their leadership labels you a racist or some other nonsense.

It is a well documented fact the upper echelons of the movement have made a pretty penny and a good living, while the people they were supposed to be helping have seen none of the money.

Things are so bad for the organization that as of February 3, 2022 BLM has shutdown all fundraising activities after several states initiated fraud investigations due to a “lack of financial transparency”, including $60 million dollars in undisclosed donations.

To make matters worse, recently, the Toronto chapter made a lavish $8.1 million dollar purchase of a mansion (pictured above) after getting the bulk of the money from the BLM Global Network based in the United States. Needless to say, the ‘activists’ were not too happy about it.

The leaders of the Toronto chapter unexpectedly quit the chapter while millions of dollars are still unaccounted for. You can kiss that money goodbye!

This seems to be garden variety BLM leadership behavior. In the United States, co-founder Patrisse Cullors, quit the movement, but not after buying five mansions, including one in the Bahamas. I am sure the people from Ferguson, Missouri, will not be invited to the ‘Black Tie’ parties.

This week, Memphis BLM founder, Pamela Moses, was sentenced to six years in prison for illegally registering to vote as a convicted felon. Of course, she claims she was unaware of her felony conviction to which she pled back in 2015.

Perhaps it is a case of selective memory loss, but if I were a convicted felon I would remember it and I would know what I am not supposed to do. I would definitely know if I voted illegally six times.

She went on to say nobody ever mentioned anything about voting. Well, for an individual with a bachelor’s degree in political science, and a self proclaimed stalwart for ‘voting rights, she should have been well acquainted with Tennessee voting laws.

Obviously the prosecution was able to make its case and Ms. Moses will be serving some time for her voter fraud shenanigan’s.

The NAACP made the claim that ‘those who intentionally committed voter fraud, they are sentenced to probation’.

I guess when they say ‘those’ they are insinuating this is about race and if Ms. Moses were a white woman she would have been given a pass. I would love to read the circumstances under which those individuals were given probation, if that’s indeed a factual claim. Every case is different and to make such a broad comparison is ludicrous.

Folks, this is not about color or race, this about the rule of law. In a time when our electoral system integrity is in question, cases like this need to be address and if the law has been broken, dealt accordingly.

Fraud is fraud folks!