Dramatic illustration of Southern Poverty Law Center's federal indictment for allegedly funding KKK and neo-Nazi informants.
Dramatic illustration of Southern Poverty Law Center's federal indictment for allegedly funding KKK and neo-Nazi informants.
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Southern Poverty Law Center indicted on federal fraud charges for funding extremists

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A federal grand jury in Alabama's Middle District indicted the Southern Poverty Law Center on 11 counts, including wire fraud, false statements to banks, and conspiracy to conceal money laundering, for allegedly funneling over $3 million from 2014 to 2023 to informants in groups like the Ku Klux Klan, Aryan Nations, and National Alliance. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche accused the nonprofit of 'manufacturing the extremism it purports to oppose by paying sources to stoke racial hatred.'

The indictment, returned Tuesday, claims the Montgomery-based SPLC—founded in 1971 to combat white supremacists through litigation—used fictitious entities like the Center Investigative Agency, Fox Photography, and Rare Books Warehouse to disguise payments in a now-defunct informant program dating to the 1980s, known internally as 'the Fs.' Specific sources included F-37, who received over $270,000 and helped plan the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville under SPLC supervision, including racist postings and transportation; F-9, paid more than $1 million over two decades while fundraising for the neo-Nazi National Alliance; and F-30, a former leader in the National Socialist Party of America and Aryan Nations, who got over $70,000 while featured on the SPLC's Extremist Files webpage. Prosecutors allege the group defrauded donors by lying about dismantling extremists while funding their leaders, with false statements to banks. FBI Director Kash Patel stated the SPLC used donor money 'to actually pay the leadership of these very groups.' The SPLC has faced criticism for labeling conservative organizations like Moms for Liberty and Alliance Defending Freedom as hate groups alongside neo-Nazis, designations relied on by media and firms like PayPal after Charlottesville. Interim President Bryan Fair called the probe focused on past informant use for intelligence shared with law enforcement, stating 'what we learned from informants saved lives' amid Civil Rights-era dangers. The group vowed to defend vigorously, calling allegations false.

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X discussions on the SPLC indictment show predominantly negative sentiments, with users accusing the organization of fraud, money laundering, and funding extremists like the KKK, potentially dooming its mission. Skeptical voices label it vindictive lawfare, citing legal consensus against prosecution and doubts over proving intent beyond recklessness.

Связанные статьи

Tyler O'Neil testifying at a House Judiciary Committee hearing on the Southern Poverty Law Center
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Tyler O’Neil, a Daily Signal editor, testifies at House Judiciary hearing focused on the Southern Poverty Law Center

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Tyler O’Neil, a senior editor at The Daily Signal, appeared at a House Judiciary Committee hearing in May to discuss the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) as Republicans examine the group’s role and influence in federal policy debates.

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.

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Bryan Fair, interim president and CEO of the Southern Poverty Law Center, appeared before the House Judiciary Committee on Tuesday. He faced questions from Chairman Jim Jordan about a superseding federal indictment alleging misuse of donor funds.

Sen. Joni Ernst said internal Small Business Administration emails and meeting titles used the word “Benghazi” in discussions involving Paycheck Protection Program loans to Planned Parenthood affiliates, and she asked the Justice Department to investigate whether any federal records laws were violated. The allegation, first reported by The Daily Wire, comes amid a broader, long-running dispute over whether those affiliates were eligible for PPP aid and how the agency handled loan forgiveness.

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President Trump created a taxpayer-funded fund of $1.8 billion to compensate his allies, including January 6 rioters, along with a provision granting IRS immunity to him and his family.

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