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What a Mess! Defund Police Activist in Huge Trouble for Alleged Wrongdoing

Raheem AI was on a mission to change the way the community interacts with the police, until things went horribly wrong.

What started as a mission to eliminate police brutality ended in a scandal that has a non-profit founder in big trouble in the District of Columbia.

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On November 25, D.C. Attorney General Brian L. Schwalb sued Raheem AI and its founder Brandon Anderson for โ€œviolating the Districtโ€™s nonprofit and workersโ€™ rights laws.โ€

According to the Attorney Generalโ€™s office website, Anderson has been accused of stealing $75,000 from an organization meant to change how the community interacts with local law enforcement to fund his lavish vacations and luxury shopping sprees.

DC non-profits are required by law to have a President and Treasurer to keep operations and finances separate. The AG says Raheem AI has been operating without a treasurer since 2020, allowing Anderson to have unchecked control over the organizations financials.

In addition to the misuse of funds, the AG says the organization failed to pay its DC-based Deputy Director โ€œtens of thousands of dollars in earned wagesโ€ and forced her into signing an illegal non-compete clause.

Anderson founded Raheem AI in 2017 in honor of his fiancรฉ, Raheem, who was killed by the police in Oklahoma in 2007.

โ€œHe was driving a car that the officer said was stolen. The car had never been stolen. In fact, it was the car that me and my partner had saved up to buy,โ€ Anderson said in a 2021 interview. โ€œMy partnerโ€™s death threw me into two years of clinical depression. The loss of my partner โ€” the killing of my partner โ€” by the police changed my life forever.โ€

Anderson envisioned Raheem AI as providing people with a means to file complaints against the police from their smartphones. It would also eventually provide an alternative to 911, sending aid workers instead of police to deal with non-violent incidents like drug overdoses and mental health issues.

But while the organization raised over four million dollars in donations, the idea, which Anderson called โ€œYelp for police,โ€ had technical issues, as some police departments around the country accept complaints online, while others need people to make their complaints over the phone or in person at a police station, according to reporting from The New York Times.

Attorney General Schwalb says his office is prepared to go after Anderson for using a non-profit for his personal gain.

โ€œBrandon Anderson misused charitable donations to fund lavish vacations and shopping sprees, and the Raheem AI board of directors let him get away with it,โ€ D.C. Attorney General Brian L. Schwalb said in a written statement on the departmentโ€™s website. โ€œMy office will not allow people to masquerade behind noble causes while violating the law.โ€

Straight From The Root

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