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Boston University loaned $600K to a secretive trust managed by Ibram Kendi’s brother-in-law.

Kendi’s Center for Antiracist Research faces allegations of financial mismanagement

Ibram X. Kendi with brother-in-law Macharia​ Edmonds (Screenshot/Facebook)

In September of 2020, just weeks after Ibram X. ⁤Kendi launched the Center for Antiracist Research at Boston⁤ University, the school approved a ​$600,000 mortgage to an unnamed professor. The⁣ university won’t ​say‍ which professor that loan went to, but it was doled out to a trust controlled ⁤by Ibram X. Kendi’s brother-in-law, Macharia Edmonds.

The mortgage helped to cover the down payment for a $4.56 million luxury penthouse triplex that boasts the “best of ‌sophisticated Boston living.” Public real estate records obtained by ⁢the ⁤ Washington ⁢Free Beacon show ⁢the trust is controlled by Edmonds, ⁣a former Obama campaign official and ⁢ attorney who now​ serves as a Global Content Policy Lead‍ for YouTube⁣ in ⁣San Francisco.

Edmonds’s only apparent affiliation with‌ Boston University ​is ⁤through Kendi, who is married to his sister, Sadiqa,​ also an associate professor at Boston University. Edmonds controls the trust on behalf of its unnamed ‌beneficiary. While it’s not ⁢uncommon for ‌universities to provide sweetheart‌ loans and mortgages ⁢with below-market rates to ⁢poach star professors from⁤ their competitors, experts told the Chronicle ⁢of Higher Education in‍ 2009 that the IRS strongly discourages such transactions.

Dean⁢ Zerbe, a former‍ senior counsel⁣ to the ⁤Senate Finance Committee,​ raised questions about why Boston University is ⁤doling out loans to its professors in the first place. ⁢”There are‍ institutions that ‌actually do provide loans. They’re called banks,” Zerbe told the Free Beacon.⁢ “People like to get loans at banks,⁢ not at universities. It raises a fundamental question of why did ⁣you not get ‌a loan from a bank?”

“The reality is, overwhelmingly, when we ‍look ⁣at these loans, ⁣they ⁤are sweetheart deals‍ and they would ‌not have gotten ‍them⁤ from a bank,”‌ Zerbe ⁢added. “And that’s the problem with them.”

The mysterious circumstances surrounding the loan raise questions about Kendi’s ties to ‍Boston University.

His Center for Antiracist Research, which raised more‍ than $43 million⁤ since June⁢ 2020, ⁣is under scrutiny after ​it abruptly laid off most of its staff and‌ cut its budget‍ in half last month after producing ⁢hardly any original research. Meanwhile, Kendi has amassed​ considerable wealth through ⁢his “antiracism” work. He received a $625,000 MacArthur Foundation ⁣”genius” grant in‌ 2021 and charges up⁣ to $20,000 for speaking engagements. Just this week, ESPN+ launched a Kendi-helmed series ⁣centered around‍ racism in sports.

Boston University spokeswoman Rachel Lapal Cavallario told the Free​ Beacon that the​ beneficiary of the trust ‍is ⁤a‌ professor at the⁢ university but declined to​ provide the person’s⁣ name, the interest rate of the loan, or how much has been repaid. Cavallario added ⁢that the professor “applied for⁢ and received the loan under a‍ longstanding university⁢ program to assist senior‍ faculty ⁢with ‌their housing needs,” but declined⁤ to provide the​ Free Beacon any documentation about the university’s faculty home ⁤loan program.

Boston University reported​ in its ⁢latest audited ⁢financial statements that‌ only “certain employees” are eligible to take out‍ university-backed mortgages and debt, which totaled $8.5 million⁢ as of June⁢ 30, 2022.

Edmonds and⁢ Kendi ‌did not return requests for comment.

It ⁢appears unlikely that the trust controlled by Kendi’s brother-in-law ‍could have obtained ⁤a similar loan from a traditional bank. Boston University’s $600,000 mortgage⁣ to the⁢ trust is a non-recourse loan, which means⁣ the university can​ seize the property if ⁤the borrower defaults, but ⁢can’t come after the borrower for any additional compensation.

Such loans typically come with higher interest rates and are available only to borrowers with excellent⁣ credit. But Boston University reported the loans to‍ its employees bore interest rates no ‌greater than 4.91 percent as of June 30, ‌2022, a rate far lower⁤ than the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate of 6.38 percent ⁣on that date.

If history is any⁣ indication, it’s possible that the school has not collected any of the mortgage debt‍ held ‍by the trust. In 2008, for example,​ tax filings show it had $3.56 million in outstanding zero ⁢percent interest ⁤mortgages to 13 professors. Only one of the ⁣professors had made ⁤any payments on his loan, though some of the loans ⁤were over six years old at⁣ the time.

Boston University stopped disclosing the names of the professors to whom it provided mortgages in its tax returns after 2008.

Regardless of ⁣the ⁢circumstances surrounding ⁣the loan, Zerbe says ⁣the university ⁣ought to devote its funds to better ⁤things.

“Think of how many ⁤students are ‍being crushed by debt and‌ how ⁤much they would love to have a⁣ zero percent loan⁣ from their university,” Zerbe‌ said. “And ⁤think of how much ⁢this ⁣is costing the university to do this. The students ‍struggling to meet tuition, they are all ‍shouldering the ⁢burden of these sweetheart ‌loans covered by⁤ the university.”

That’s a message that would ‌resonate with Kendi, who ​has called on the higher​ education system ⁢to ​focus on ensuring student debt is “eliminated or ⁣at least driven down.”

“Black ​students are disproportionately bearing the weight of student debt,”‍ Kendi said⁣ in a December 2020 interview with The Business Journals.​ In the interview, given⁢ just months after ⁤his brother-in-law’s trust secured the loan, Kendi called on universities ‍to find‌ “new and‌ innovative ways to make college affordable.”

What are the allegations of ⁣financial mismanagement facing Kendi’s Center for⁢ Antiracist Research?

‌ Kendi’s Center for Antiracist Research, which was launched ⁤by Ibram X. Kendi at Boston University in September 2020, is facing allegations ⁣of financial mismanagement. The controversy surrounds a $600,000 ‍mortgage ⁣approved by the university for an unnamed professor, which‌ was subsequently revealed to ‌be controlled by Kendi’s brother-in-law, Macharia Edmonds.

Public ⁢real estate records obtained by the Washington Free Beacon show that Edmonds, a​ former Obama campaign official⁢ and⁢ current ​Global Content Policy Lead for ‍YouTube in San Francisco, controls ⁣the trust that received⁤ the mortgage. Edmonds’s affiliation ⁣with ‌Boston University seems to ​be solely through his connection to Kendi, who is married ⁢to‍ his⁢ sister,‌ Sadiqa, an associate professor ‍at the university. Edmonds acts⁣ as the trustee⁤ for the ⁣unnamed beneficiary.

While it⁣ is‌ not uncommon for universities to provide loans and mortgages‍ to⁢ attract star professors from competing institutions, these transactions are heavily discouraged by the IRS. ​Dean Zerbe, a‍ former senior ‍counsel⁤ to ​the Senate Finance Committee, questioned why Boston University is providing loans to its own⁢ professors rather than relying on banks. Zerbe argued that these loans are often sweetheart deals that would not ‍have ‍been granted⁣ by traditional financial institutions.

The circumstances surrounding ‍the loan have raised ‌questions about Kendi’s ‌ties to Boston University. His Center for Antiracist Research, despite raising⁣ over $43 million since June 2020, recently laid off most of its staff and cut its budget in half due to a lack of



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