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SPLC – The Racial Arsonist Fundraised Off The Fire

SPLC – The Racial Arsonist Fundraised Off The Fire

“This has got to be just the tip of the iceberg, not just for SPLC but for a lot of left-wing movements.”

I have been doing numerous interviews about the recent DOJ indictment of the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) for alleged fraud, money laundering, wire fraud, and lying to banks regarding its funding of certain individuals leading or organizing KKK and Neo-Nazi groups and events. This included the “Unite the Right” tiki torch rally in Charlottesville in 2017.

The gravamen of the Indictment is that SPLC presented itself to donors as fighting these groups when it was in bed with them, and in the course of that fraud committed several crimes.

I’ve been writing about SPLC since 2009, so I’m something of an ‘expert’ on its shenanigans. Among other things, I covered how SPLC had a KKK group (2010) and Neo-Nazi group (2012) on their Hate Map for Rhode Island despite those supposed groups having no real-world presence when I investigated and wrote about it at the time. With the addition of inflating the number of hate groups by treating each “branch” as a separate group and counting branches that appeared to be nothing more than blips on a website somewhere, SPLC arguably was a fundraising scam.

But was it criminal?

I appeared earlier this morning on Chicago’s Morning Answer with Dan Proft to talk about that. Here is the show’s write up of my appearance:

FBI Director Kash Patel described the indictments against the Southern Poverty Law Center this week in stark terms, saying the organization ran a methodical scheme to defraud donors of three million dollars, used shell companies and illicit banking structures to hide money, and funded at least eight hate groups it was simultaneously claiming to fight.

Professor William Jacobson, clinical professor of law and director of the securities law clinic at Cornell Law School, founder of Legal Insurrection, and someone who has been tracking SPLC’s activities since 2009, joined Dan Proft on Chicago’s Morning Answer to argue that the indictment almost certainly represents the beginning of a much larger reckoning rather than its end

Jacobson said he believes the indictment is extremely detailed, names names, and describes conduct that is far more specific and far more serious than the crisis management line SPLC has been feeding to sympathetic media, which is that they were simply paying informants the way any organization fighting hate would do. He said the indictment describes shell companies, fictitious accounts, suspicious money transfers that triggered bank fraud detection systems, and alleged lies told to banks when those systems flagged the transactions. That is not a description of routine informant payments. It is a description of a deliberate financial concealment structure, and the bank fraud charges reflect that distinction.

His first piece on SPLC appeared in 2009, and by 2010 he had already identified what he described as a pattern of fabricating or vastly inflating the existence of hate groups for fundraising purposes. He investigated a Ku Klux Klan group that SPLC had listed on its hate map in Rhode Island, where he is from, and found no evidence the group existed. He called the state police hate crimes unit, which also said it had no knowledge of any such group. The same thing happened in 2012 with a neo-Nazi group SPLC listed in Rhode Island. He said over the following fifteen years he wrote nearly fifty pieces documenting how SPLC’s hate map, which is its primary fundraising tool, was built on inflated and in some cases apparently invented groups. The inflation methodology was straightforward: if a group listed on its own website claimed to have thirty chapters, SPLC would count each chapter as a separate hate group even if none of them had any verifiable existence beyond a line on a website. That is how the organization produced dramatic annual announcements of record-high hate group numbers that reliably triggered waves of donor contributions.

Jacobson said the SPLC’s business model was essentially designed by co-founder Morris Dees, who made his fortune in direct mail fundraising before co-founding the organization, and who understood from the beginning that creating the perception of an overwhelming and ever-growing threat was the mechanism for sustaining donor revenue. He said he was personally on SPLC’s mailing list as a college student in the late 1970s and donated small amounts because he genuinely believed the organization was focused on combating violent racist groups, which was its stated mission at the time. The pivot to listing organizations like the Alliance Defending Freedom, Moms for Liberty, the Family Research Council, Rand Paul, and Ben Carson as hate groups or extremists came later, as the fundraising machine discovered that expanding the definition of hate was the most efficient way to expand the donor base and the revenue stream.

Proft raised the question of the FBI’s partnership with SPLC under the Biden administration and asked what accountability should look like for current and former bureau leadership who were working in concert with an organization that may have been engaged in criminal conduct for years. Jacobson said SPLC functioned essentially as a domestic political terrorist organization in the sense that landing on its list could be career-ending for individuals and company-ending for organizations, and that the terror the list created was amplified by the corporate partners who agreed to use SPLC designations as the basis for deplatforming decisions. He described being told by a client relationship management platform that it would expel his organization if it appeared on the SPLC list, calling that a vivid illustration of how the SPLC’s list functioned as a private extortion mechanism backed by the implicit threat of corporate enforcement. He said Amazon, PayPal, and other major companies participated in that enforcement network, and that the roughly eight hundred million dollars in total assets SPLC is believed to have accumulated could not have been built without significant support from corporate America alongside the celebrity and foundation donors who have received more attention.

He offered an analogy he said is not perfect but captures the essential fraud: it is like taking your car to a mechanic for a state inspection, being told something is broken and being charged to fix it, without being told the mechanic broke it himself. SPLC allegedly created or supported the very hate it was fundraising to combat, did not disclose that to donors, and pocketed the contributions. An arsonist collecting money to put out fires he set is another version of the same scheme, and the specific allegation that SPLC was funding an organizer of the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, whose name became the central fundraising reference in SPLC’s donor appeals for the following several years, is the most explosive version of that dynamic if it is proven.

Jacobson said the question of what former FBI Directors James Comey and Christopher Wray knew, what former Obama officials including Tina Chen knew when she was brought in to conduct SPLC’s internal review in 2019, and what senior figures across the Biden Justice Department knew about the organization they were treating as a trusted partner and policy adviser, are questions that need to be pressed and answered. He said his own reporting from 2009 onward was publicly available and plainly documented the scam, and that any serious due diligence by anyone partnering with SPLC would have found it immediately. The failure to find it was not a failure of information. It was a failure of will.

Audio/Video

(sorry, no transcript)

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Jonathan Cohen | April 24, 2026 at 12:03 am

In 2014 I attended the fiftieth anniversary celebration of my graduating class during alumni week-end at Brandeis University. Brandeis had been in the news recently when under pressure from some in the Brandeis community, the president of the university, Fred Lawrence, revoked an invitation to Ayaan Hirsi Ali to receive an honorary degree. There were questions raised by quite a few attendees to what was an alumni affair that was scheduled during graduation week at the school.

After several questions, Lawrence justified his decision with a claim that he had been given severe criticism about Ali from the SPLC. As I remember it, the information was given to him after the decision but he used it as confirmation that he had done the right thing.

It struck me as a very strange thing to say. Brandeis is essentially a non-denominational secular Jewish institution. What next. It would be like Brandeis canceling an honorary to someone because it found out that the proposed recipient had criticized the Nazis.

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