Anti Police-Terror Project

The Anti Police-Terror Project is a radical-left anti-police activist organization based in Oakland, California. The organization advocates defunding the police, supporting cutting half of the budget of the Oakland Police Department and redirecting those funds towards various social welfare programs including mental health and wellness services. 1

At-A-Glance

Executive Director:

Cat Brooks

Location: Oakland, CA View on map
Tax ID: 86-2883695
Most Recent Filing: 2024
Budget (2024): Assets: $3,359,223 Revenue: $4,047,518 Expenses: $4,449,044

Contents

    The group has alleged that the police have caused “community trauma” in the Black community and other communities of color. It has demanded more resources to research “police-related trauma” and the use of any research to shape the policies of the police. 2

    In the fiscal year covering July 1, 2021 to June 30, 2022, it received $200,000 in grants from the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation. 3

    Background

    The Anti Police-Terror Project is a radical-left anti-police activist organization based in Oakland, California. The organization is an advocate of the “defund the police” movement. In the city of Oakland, the organization has advocated cutting half of the budget of the Oakland Police Department and the reallocation of those funds to various social programs such as mental health and wellness services. 1

    The organization began as a project of the radical-left ONYX Organizing Committee. 4

    Activist Projects

    The organization seeks the abolition of the Oakland Police Department. Until the police department is abolished, the organization seeks the appointment of an independent police commission to oversee the police. 5

    In addition to abolishing the police, it seeks more research into the “community trauma” that has been alleged to have been caused in part by the police in the Black community. It has demanded more resources to be devoted into the research of this trauma and for the results of the research to be incorporated into the policies of the police. 2

    In January 2023, the organization opened a new community center in Oakland that has a focus on mental health. The community center, known as The People’s House, intends to offer health and wellness services, from massages and herbal medicines to psychological counseling from volunteer mental health professionals. It sees the community center as important in a community that has been “devastated by everything from gentrification to environmental pollution to poverty to gun violence.” It will also house Mental Health First, which is an organization that responds to mental health situations without police being involved. 1

    Leadership

    Cat Brooks is the co-founder of the organization. She is an activist as well as a stage actress and director. 6

    Funding

    According to its 2021 tax return, the organization the organization had $5,709,289 in revenue and $313,631 in expenses. It had $5,403,517 in assets. 7

    In the fiscal year covering July 1, 2021 to June 30, 2022, it received $200,000 worth of grants from the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation. 3

    Sometime before November 2022, it received $3.5 million from an anonymous Bay Area family. The organization decided to give most of it away. It kept $400,000 to fund its community center and it allocated $400,000 to a mutual aid project run by the Community Ready Corps. It gave the rest of it away to Black-run organizations and others who were victims of police violence. It called the project the Radical Redistribution Fund. 8

    Financial Statistics

    Total Assets

    Total Revenue

    Total Expenses

    YearTotal AssetsTotal RevenueTotal ExpensesFiling
    2024 $3,359,223 $4,047,518 $4,449,044 View
    2023 $3,712,347 $2,853,691 $3,739,402 View
    2022 $4,574,475 $2,692,549 $4,170,788 View
    2021 $5,403,517 $5,709,289 $313,631 View

    Revenue Detail

    Expenses Detail

    Employee Compensation

    • Number of Employees: 18

    Highest Earning Employees

    EmployeeTitleTotal Compensation
    Cat BrooksEx Dr/President$280,950
    Annie BanksTreasurer$125,700
    James BurchDeputy director$125,700

    Grant Activity

    All-time grants received statistics from Candid dataset:

    • Total Grant Value: $6,890,741
    • Number of Grants: 67
    • Number of Funders: 32

    Selection of highest value grants received from the last seven years:

    AmountYearFunderSubject
    $550,0002023 San Francisco FoundationPROGRAM – TO ADDRESS NEEDS OF PEOPLE EVICTED FROM WOOD STREET ENCAMPMENT. PROGRAM – FOR GENERAL SUPPORT. ADVISED – FOR GENERAL OPERATING SUPPORT OF PEACE OUT LOUD.
    $500,0002024 Silicon Valley Community Foundation
    $423,3332024 The California EndowmentTo support an organization working to create non-carceral, replicable models for community safety to eradicate police terror in communities of color in California.
    $360,0002024 The California EndowmentTo support a network that builds the capacity of communities to respond to state violence and advance healing justice in California.
    $350,0002024 The Heising-Simons Foundationfor general support
    $325,0002022 San Francisco FoundationPROGRAM – FOR GENERAL OPERATING SUPPORT TO ADVANCE LONG-TERM SUSTAINABILITY AND GROWTH FOR BLACK-LED ORGANIZING AND ADVOCACY ORGANIZATIONS THROUGH COLLABORATIVE DEVELOPMENT OF TRAININGS AND ACTIVITIES THAT STRENGTHEN THE INFRASTRUCTURE, CAPACITY, AND RELATIONSHIPS AMONG THEM. PROGRAM – FOR GENERAL OPERATING SUPPORT TO ADVOCATE FOR AND IMPLEMENT POLICIES AND PRACTICES AT THE STATE AND LOCAL LEVELS THAT INCREASE POLICE ACCOUNTABILITY AS WELL AS DIVEST PUBLIC FUNDING FROM THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM TOWARDS REAL PUBLIC SAFETY FOR COMMUNITIES OF COLOR. ADVISED – FOR GENERAL OPERATING SUPPORT OF THE ANTI POLICE-TERROR PROJECT. ADVISED – FOR GENERAL OPERATING SUPPORT OF THE MENTAL HEALTH FIRST SACRAMENTO PROJECT.
    $315,0002022 ImpactAssetsIN SUPPORT OF JUSTICE TEAMS NETWORK FOR THE PURPOSE OF THE CALIFORNIA HEALERS NETWORK PROJECT.
    $300,0002022 The Heising-Simons Foundationfor the Justice Team Network Education Fund
    $256,0002022 Charities Aid Foundation of AmericaCHARITABLE DONATION
    $250,0002024 THE CALIFORNIA WELLNESS FOUNDATIONCORE OPERATING SUPPORT
    $240,0002023 The California EndowmentTo support a network that builds the capacity of communities to respond to state violence and advance healing justice in California.
    $225,0002024 BOREALIS PHILANTHROPYTO SUPPORT THE WORK OF JUSTICE TEAMS NETWORK
    $225,0002022 Center for Empowered Politics Education FundREFUNDING COMMUNITIES NARRATIVE PROJECT
    $200,0002024 ImpactAssetsGENERAL SUPPORT
    $200,0002023 ImpactAssetsJUSTICE TEAMS NETWORK
    $200,0002023 ImpactAssetsMH FIRST
    $200,0002022 Levi Strauss FoundationGeneral support through the "Pioneers in Justice" program for advocacy, organizing and community-based education campaigns.
    $200,0002022 Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation IncTO CONDUCT ACTIVITIES TO SUPPORT BLACK COMMUNITIES
    $166,6672022 Rosenberg FoundationGENERAL SUPPORT
    $150,0002022 The CARESTAR FoundationAnti Police-Terror Project and Mental Health First
    $100,0002024 Walter and Elise Haas FundONE YEAR OF GENERAL OPERATING SUPPORT FOR AN ORGANIZATION THAT IS ESSENTIAL TO BUILDING A MORE JUST AND EQUITABLE SOCIETY AND IS ACTIVELY WORKING TO CHALLENGE SYSTEMS OF OPPRESSION
    $90,0002023 Solidaire Network, IncGeneral Support for 501(c)(3) activities
    $83,3332023 Rosenberg FoundationPROJECT SUPPORT
    $75,0002024 Solidaire Network, IncGeneral support
    $70,0002024 Amalgamated Charitable Foundation IncProject support

    All-time grants given statistics from Candid dataset:

    • Total Grant Value: $2,488,370
    • Number of Grants: 24
    • Number of Recipients: 24

    Selection of highest value grants given from the last seven years:

    AmountYearFunderSubject
    $400,0002022 Affect Real Change IncRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $400,0002022 Christopher L Jones Foundation Services IncRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $265,0002023 TIDES FOUNDATIONRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $200,0002022 Miss Major Alexander L. Lee TGIJP Black Trans Cultural CenterRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $200,0002022 St James InfirmaryRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $100,0002022 CENTER FOR MEDIA JUSTICERadical Redistribution Gifts
    $100,0002022 Moms 4 Housing IncorporatedRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $100,0002022 Shelterwood CollectiveRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $100,0002022 Wild Seed Liberation LandRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $55,0002022 Black Organizing ProjectRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $55,0002022 East Bay Sanctuary CovenantRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $55,0002022 Escape Velocity Resources Foundation IncRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $55,0002022 Fam 1st Family FoundationRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $55,0002022 Healthy Black Families IncRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $55,0002022 Marcus A Foster Educational InstituteRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $55,0002022 Transgender Law CenterRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $55,0002022 Ujima Adult and Family Services IncRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $55,0002022 Voice of the Youth IncRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $25,0002022 Destiny Arts CenterRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $25,0002022 Digital Organizing Power-Building and Engagement Labs (dope Labs)Radical Redistribution Gifts
    $25,0002022 Love Not Blood CampaignRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $25,0002022 Motivating Inspiring Supporting and Serving Sexually Exploited YouthRadical Redistribution Gifts
    $15,0002024 California State University Los Angelesregrant for education support
    $13,3702024 Black Arts Movement Business District Developmentfiscally sponsored organization

    References

    1.  Ramos, John. “Oakland Crisis Center Opens to Handle Mental Emergencies without Police Help.” CBS News, January 14, 2023. https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/oakland-crisis-center-opens-to-handle-mental-emergencies-without-police-help/.
    2. Chan, Rosalie. “Activists in Oakland Are Pushing for Better Research around Police …” Pacific Standard, May 25, 2018. https://psmag.com/social-justice/activists-in-oakland-are-pushing-for-better-research-around-police-violence-and-community-trauma.
    3. Return of Organization Exempt From Income Tax (Form 990). Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation, Inc. June 13, 2023. Schedule I. Available at: https://www.influencewatch.org/app/uploads/2023/05/BLMGNF-2021-Form-990.pdf
    4. “About APTP.” APTP. Accessed June 13, 2023. https://www.antipoliceterrorproject.org/about-aptp.
    5. “Oakland Should Lead the Way: Proposal for Effective Police Oversight.” APTP. Accessed June 13, 2023. https://www.antipoliceterrorproject.org/oakland-should-lead-the-way-proposal-for-effective-police-oversight.
    6. “Bio.” CAT BROOKS. Accessed June 13, 2023. https://www.catbrooks.org/bio.
    7. “Anti Police Terror Project Inc, Full Filing – Nonprofit Explorer.” ProPublica. Accessed June 13, 2023. https://projects.propublica.org/nonprofits/organizations/862883695/202202679349300000/full.
    8. Holder, Sarah. “With Millions in Tech Wealth, a Nonprofit Tries Radical Philanthropy.” Bloomberg, November 21, 2022. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-11-21/with-millions-in-tech-wealth-a-nonprofit-tries-radical-philanthropy.