California Attorney General demands Flipcause shutdown operations

Oakland-based Flipcause is withholding hundreds of thousands of dollars from nonprofits. Photo: Rasheed Shabazz.

California Attorney General Rob Bonta ordered Oakland-based Flipcause to stop operations and transfer all of its cash to a “blocked bank account” by Dec. 12. 

A blocked account requires legal authorization for access. 

The order, dated Nov. 12, gives Flipcause 30 days to send the attorney general an accounting of all its assets since 2015 as well as a list of all charities Flipcause provided its platform to since 2015. 

Flipcause has not responded to repeated requests for comment.

Nonprofits across the country have accused the fundraising platform of withholding hundreds of thousands of dollars in donations. 

Nonprofits hope to receive outstanding donations

The gravity of the order stunned East Oakland Collective Executive Director Candice Elder. 

“I’m shocked, but glad to see it,” Elder told Oakland Voices. Flipcause owed East Oakland Collective more than $127,000. The company transferred $50,000 to her organization in September, but the company is still withholding more than $76,000.

“I am hopeful that this leads East Oakland Collective and other organizations closer to receiving our outstanding donor contributions.” Candice Elder, executive director, East Oakland Collective

She hopes that Flipcause complies and organizations can get the donations they depend on to serve their communities. 

“Hopefully they can stop the bleeding that’s happening to organizations and they won’t harm any other organization,” Elder said. “I am hopeful that this leads East Oakland Collective and other organizations closer to receiving our outstanding donor contributions.”

Attorney general has oversight over fundraising platforms

State law grants the attorney general oversight authority over fundraising platforms that allow organizations to solicit donations. Since 2024, the law has required platforms to register. 

The attorney general assessed Flipcause with a total of $70,000 in penalties. The company failed to register as a donation platform or submit annual reports for two years, provided services while unregistered, and did not transfer donations to organizations within five days, according to the order. According to the attorney general’s website, the first annual report was due July 15 of this year.

Flipcause can appeal the decision within 30 days to Deputy Attorney General Kim Kasreliovich, attorney for the Registry of Charities and Fundraisers.

Flipcause caused ‘significant financial stress’ 

Oakland Voices reported in October that Flipcause was not registered to operate as a platform in California. 

Flipcause failed to register, did not file required annual reports, and withheld donations for more than 60 days, according to the order.    

“Donors placed their trust in Flipcause to ensure their contributions reached those in need. Instead, charities are experiencing significant financial stress due to the platform holding these funds back.”  Attorney General Rob Bonta

Flipcause caused “financial stress” to charities, Bonta said, and it is “unacceptable.”

“Donors placed their trust in Flipcause to ensure their contributions reached those in need,” Bonta said in a statement. “Instead, charities are experiencing significant financial stress due to the platform holding these funds back.” 

The order lists 17 affected organizations that are owed $615,242.57. Flipcause withheld donations from three nonprofits for more than 60 days. Another 14 said Flipcause is still holding their funds, despite repeated requests. 

Across the country, nonprofits have told Oakland Voices that Flipcause is withholding more than $1.5 million in donations.

Flipcause must halt operations, has 30 days to appeal

The cease and desist order requires Flipcause and CEO Sean Wheeler to immediately stop its operations, including soliciting donations. 

Within 30 days of the order, Flipcause must send the attorney general an accounting of all its assets since 2015 as well as a list of all charities Flipcause provided its platform to since 2015. This is similar to the information required in the annual report. 

Unless Flipcause responds and reaches an alternative agreement with the attorney general, the company must also transfer all of its cash to a “blocked bank account.” 

The attorney general will “retain jurisdiction” over the Flipcause for compliance, according to the order. 

Flipcause must provide a copy of the order to all employees, owners, officers and every nonprofit it is currently doing business within 10 days. 

If Flipcause does not confirm that it ceased operations and complied with the order, penalties will accrue at a rate of $100 per day.

Flipcause could not be found at the address of its Oakland headquarters. As of Nov. 14, the Flipcause website is still online.

14 nonprofits listed by California Attorney General’s cease and desist order to Flipcause

ORGANIZATIONAMOUNT OWEDLOCATIONACTIVITIES
GOALS Athletic League$47,502.00Queens, NYGirls sports
East Oakland Collective$76,381.86Oakland, CAAdvocacy, housing services
Pasadena Roving Archers Heritage$22,945.710Pasadena, CAArchery range
Black Visioning Group$69,379.52Philadelphia, PABlack queer/trans collective
CityLax, Inc.$126,809.95New York, NYYouth lacrosse
21st Century Dads$33,163.33Barrington, IllinoisPeer support for fathers
Intersection for the Arts$144,746.14San Francisco, CASupports Bay Area artists
Arizona Academy of the Performing Arts$26,000.00Tempe, AZYouth drum, bugle corps
Provision Packs$7,000.00Ormond Beach, FLMeals for school children
Designer Genes$2,433.00Bismarck, NDDown Syndrome support network
Camp Impact$17,826.03Grand Prairie, TXFree camp for youth
Mercer Island Fine Arts Advisory Commission$35,632.10Mercer Island, WAArts education for schools
Critter Adoption & Rescue Effort$4,617.93Ruskin, FLAnimal rescue and adoption
Harmony New Beginnings Animal Rescue$805.00Sheridan, ORAnimal rescue and adoption
About Rasheed Shabazz 66 Articles
Rasheed Shabazz is a multimedia storyteller. He is a journalist, educator, urban planner, and historian. He is director of Oakland Voices' Community Journalism Program.

1 Comment

  1. Thank you for what you’re doing and helping raise awareness of the fraud and corruption that Flipcause has been exuding. We trusted it for so long and it was such a great tool until it wasn’t (2024 and on.) I’ve been able to refund $6000 to our donors but they still owe us $11,300 now. It’s disgusting and horrific- the scam they are pulling. There CEO living in Hawaii says it all. I hope justice is served somehow.

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