Ayaan Hirsi Ali, once labeled an 'anti-Muslim extremist' by the Southern Poverty Law Center, celebrated this week's federal indictment of the nonprofit on fraud charges in an opinion piece, calling it a long-overdue reckoning. The charges allege the SPLC diverted over $3 million in donor funds to informants tied to hate groups from 2014-2023—details covered in prior reporting.
Hirsi Ali, who has lived under armed protection for over 20 years following threats linked to the 2004 murder of filmmaker Theo van Gogh (whose killer targeted her), argued that the SPLC's 2016 report endangered critics of Islamist ideology during attacks like the 2015 Charlie Hebdo massacre and 2016 Bataclan assault. She noted the SPLC's 2018 multimillion-dollar settlement and apology to Maajid Nawaz, another figure on the list, but received no such redress herself. Hirsi Ali also highlighted longstanding financial concerns, including massive reserves, fundraising surges after the 2017 Charlottesville rally, and an alleged informant connection to that event. The indictment, handed down by a Montgomery, Alabama, grand jury, accuses the SPLC of wire fraud, bank fraud, and money laundering conspiracy while publicly opposing the extremism it allegedly funded. SPLC interim CEO Bryan Fair called the charges politically motivated, emphasizing an indictment is not a conviction. For full indictment details, see earlier coverage in this series.