SPLC Scandal: The Accuser Becomes the Accused

Forwarded this email? Subscribe here for moreWatch nowSPLC Scandal: The Accuser Becomes the AccusedAct for AmericaApr 23 READ IN APP At a formal announcement involving the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Department of Justice, the Southern Poverty Law Center was hit with sweeping federal fraud charges that cut to the core of its operations. According to officials, this was not a minor accounting issue or technical violation. It was a decade-long, multi-million dollar scheme built on deception.

For years, the SPLC cultivated a powerful image: a watchdog organization raising funds to dismantle violent extremist groups. Donors across the country were told their contributions would be used to combat hate and protect communities. But according to federal investigators, that image was not just misleading—it was a lie.Authorities allege that the SPLC used its vast donor network to raise millions of dollars under the pretense of fighting extremism, only to redirect those funds in a shocking and deeply disturbing way: paying the very leadership of the extremist groups it claimed to oppose.

Let that sink in. Money raised to “fight hate” was allegedly funneled directly into the hands of those leading organizations such as the Ku Klux Klan, the United Klans of America, and networks tied to the Charlottesville Unite the Right rally—along with other groups including the National Alliance, National Socialist Movement, Aryan Nation Motorcycle Club, and the National Socialist Party of America.This was not infiltration. This was not passive observation. According to the indictment, this was financial support—support that, in at least one instance, allegedly helped facilitate additional criminal activity totaling more than $3 million.

And it didn’t stop there.Investigators say the SPLC went to great lengths to conceal its actions. Shell companies and fictitious entities were allegedly created to disguise the origin of funds, deceiving financial institutions and masking the organization’s role in the transactions. The scheme, built over the course of a decade, relied on exploiting trust—trust from donors, trust from the public, and trust from the very systems designed to ensure accountability.But as investigators made clear: money leaves a trail. And eventually, that trail led right back to the source.For years, the SPLC operated as a self-appointed authority on “hate,” branding organizations like ACT for America with labels that carried devastating consequences. Those designations were used to justify censorship, deplatforming, and financial blacklisting. Americans were silenced. Reputations were destroyed. Entire movements were marginalized—not by elected officials or due process, but by the word of a single organization that is now facing serious federal charges.

The implications are staggering.If these allegations hold, it means the SPLC didn’t just misrepresent reality—it helped sustain the very forces it claimed to fight. It means that while publicly condemning extremism, it may have been quietly enabling it. And it means that the narratives pushed into the mainstream for years deserve to be reexamined with a far more critical eye.Stand with us as a Patriot Partner in our $26 for 2026 campaign to preserve America and keep our nation out of radical hands. We are looking for 500 dedicated Patriot Partners to help fuel our efforts as we battle to defend our Constitution, our values, and our children’s future.This is a reckoning that has been a long time coming.For policymakers, media outlets, and corporations that have relied on SPLC reports as a gold standard, the message is simple: that standard has collapsed. Blindly accepting one organization’s labels as truth is no longer just irresponsible—it is indefensible.The loudest accusers are not always the most virtuous. In many cases, they are the most determined to deflect attention from their own actions.What is unfolding now is not just a legal case. It is a moment of exposure. A moment when the carefully constructed image begins to crack—and the truth begins to emerge.What is done in darkness will eventually come to light.And now, that light is impossible to ignore.

Anti-Hate Psyop: The SPLC Indictment and Its Chilling Parallels to Canada’s Anti-Hate Network

Anti-Hate Psyop: The SPLC Indictment and Its Chilling Parallels to Canada’s Anti-Hate Network

This is no longer just about monitoring extremism. It is about whether anti-hate organizations have crossed into actively manufacturing it.

In a bombshell development south of the border, the U.S. Department of Justice has indicted the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) on 11 federal counts—including wire fraud, bank fraud, and conspiracy to commit money laundering—accusing the storied “civil rights” nonprofit of secretly funneling more than $3 million in donor funds to leaders and members of the very extremist groups it claims to oppose. The indictment, returned by a grand jury in Montgomery, Alabama, on April 21, 2026, paints a picture of systematic deception: the SPLC allegedly manufactured the “hate” it fundraised against, while concealing payments through fictitious entities and prepaid gift cards.

This isn’t abstract legal wrangling. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche stated bluntly: “The SPLC was not dismantling these groups. It was instead manufacturing the extremism it purports to oppose by paying sources to stoke racial hatred.” FBI Director Kash Patel echoed that the group “lied to their donors… and actually turned around and paid the leaders of these very extremist groups—even utilizing the funds to have these groups facilitate the commission of state and federal crimes.”

For Canadians following the Canadian Anti-Hate Network (CAHN)—an organization that openly models itself after the SPLC—the indictment raises urgent questions. CAHN received startup funding from the SPLC, shares intelligence with it, and employs similar monitoring tactics. Its board includes figures like Richard Warman and Kurt Phillips, both accused of infiltrating or posing within neo-Nazi online spaces. CAHN has heavily influenced Canadian policy, from the Online Harms Act to calls for a “pro-democracy movement” funded to counter protests. Critics ask: Is this the same playbook—posing, inflating threats, and driving censorship—now playing out north of the border?

The SPLC’s Alleged Scheme: Funding Hate to Fight Hate

According to the DOJ, the fraud ran from at least 2014 to 2023. The SPLC allegedly paid at least eight individuals tied to violent extremist networks, including the Ku Klux Klan, United Klans of America, National Socialist Movement (American Nazi Party), Aryan Nations-affiliated Sadistic Souls Motorcycle Club, and organizers linked to the 2017 Charlottesville “Unite the Right” rally.

Methods of concealment and “driving hate”:

  • The SPLC created bank accounts under at least five fictitious entities with no real business purpose.
  • Funds were wired through these shells, then loaded onto prepaid gift cards and physically delivered to sources—hiding the SPLC’s involvement from donors and banks.
  • One informant, paid over $270,000 across eight years, was a member of the online leadership chat that planned Unite the Right. The indictment alleges he made racist postings “under the supervision of the SPLC,” helped coordinate transportation to the deadly rally, and even sent funds onward to other extremist leaders.

The core fraud, per prosecutors: Donors were told their money would “dismantle white supremacy.” Instead, it allegedly subsidized the very people the SPLC publicly denounced—creating a self-sustaining cycle of manufactured extremism to justify endless fundraising and relevance. The SPLC denies the allegations, calling them “politically motivated” and claiming payments were legitimate confidential-informant work shared with law enforcement. The program has since been halted.

CAHN’s Direct Ties to the SPLC

CAHN, founded in 2018, has never hidden its admiration for the SPLC. Its own statements and parliamentary briefs describe the organization as “modelled after and supported by” the SPLC. It received a $25,000 startup grant from the SPLC (with “no strings attached,” per CAHN) and lists the U.S. group as a past funder. CAHN exchanges information on threats and hate groups with the SPLC on an ad-hoc basis and positions itself as Canada’s version of the SPLC’s “Hate Map.”

Board members include Bernie Farber (Chair Emeritus), Evan Balgord (Executive Director), and others who have defended the SPLC model. CAHN has received Canadian government grants (via Canadian Heritage and Public Safety Canada) while mirroring the SPLC’s approach: monitoring, profiling, and advising policymakers.

Posing as Neo-Nazis: The Warman and Phillips Playbook

The parallels to the SPLC’s alleged informant tactics are striking—and documented in Canadian records.

Richard Warman, CAHN board member and longtime legal activist, admitted under oath to creating pseudonyms (“Axetogrind” and “Pogue Mahone”) on neo-Nazi forums like Stormfront.org and Vanguard News Network between 2004 and 2005. He posted messages echoing the group’s rhetoric, including “Keep up the good work Commander Schoep!” (referring to a U.S. neo-Nazi leader) and using coded white-supremacist language like “88.” Warman said this was undercover intelligence-gathering for Section 13 hate-speech complaints under the Canadian Human Rights Act. The Canadian Human Rights Tribunal (in Warman v. Ouwendyk, 2009) called his actions “disappointing and disturbing,” ruling they “diminish[ed] his credibility” and could have “precipitated further hate messages from forum members.”

Kurt Phillips (also known as Curt Phillips in some references), another CAHN board member and former operator of the Anti-Racist Canada blog, has faced similar accusations. Critic Elisa Hategan has publicly referenced text correspondence with Phillips, alleging he engaged in comparable posing or infiltration tactics within far-right circles to gather (and potentially amplify) material for exposure. While Phillips’ public role has centred on archiving and doxxing, critics argue his methods blurred into provocation—much like Warman’s admitted posts.

CAHN itself has described using “infiltration-style methods” to expose far-right activity, echoing the SPLC’s now-indicted informant program.

Barbara Perry’s Shielded “300 Hate Groups” and CAHN’s Censorship Recommendations

CAHN and aligned researchers like Ontario Tech University’s Dr. Barbara Perry have cited figures of nearly 300 far-right or hate groups in Canada (up from ~100 in a 2015 study). These numbers, drawn from Perry’s work, have been central to CAHN’s development of policy recommendations and underpin calls for expanded monitoring and legislation. Yet Perry’s methodology has drawn sharp criticism as activist-driven: it reportedly includes loose affiliations, online forums, and even mainstream conservative expressions. A 2024 ruling by Ontario’s privacy commissioner blocked public release of Perry’s full list, shielding the data from scrutiny despite its influence on policy and public funding.

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Critics, including in National Post commentary, have asked, If there are truly 300 active neo-Nazi groups, why can’t independent researchers name and verify them? The opacity raises the same “manufactured threat” questions now facing the SPLC.

Evan Balgord has appeared on multiple podcasts and in policy forums, urging government action on online “hate,” frequently citing these statistics as justification. He has recommended mechanisms akin to a digital commission or oversight body—ideas that materialized in the federal Online Harms Act. CAHN’s submissions to Parliament and toolkits have shaped recommendations on content moderation, school reporting, and countering “far-right” influence. Most of CAHN’s internet-censorship proposals have either been proposed or implemented by Ottawa.

CAHN has also sought government funding for what Balgord described as a “pro-democracy movement” to counter right-wing protests and populism. Public records and critics’ analyses show grants flowing to CAHN for workshops, investigations, and social-media engagement—sometimes targeting conservative student groups, the People’s Party of Canada (PPC), or even COVID-protest participants as “anti-democratic.”

Targeting Mainstream Conservatives—and the Big Question

Like the SPLC (which has labelled mainstream conservative organizations as “hate groups”), CAHN has documented ties between conservative campus clubs and fringe elements, or flagged “paleoconservative” rhetoric as sanitized extremism. Its toolkits urge educators to watch for signs like support for certain politicians or traditional values—blurring lines between extremism and legitimate dissent.

This brings us to the most explosive parallel: Could covert funding methods (prepaid cards, shells) be replicated here—not just for monitoring, but for provocation? The SPLC indictment alleges gift-card payments to extremists. CAHN receives public funds and has ties to counter-protest networks (including documented encouragement of Antifa-style “muscular resistance”). Critics openly ask: Are some grants subsidizing online trolls, protest infiltrators, or Antifa actors to inflate hate statistics, justify censorship legislation like the Online Harms Act, and destabilize democratic discourse?

No evidence directly links CAHN to the SPLC’s specific fraud scheme. CAHN insists its work is ethical, independent monitoring to protect vulnerable communities from real threats. Yet the pattern—posing in extremist spaces, inflated/shielded stats, policy capture, and targeting conservatives—mirrors the SPLC’s alleged playbook too closely for comfort.

A Political Psyop? The Question Canadians Must Confront

The SPLC indictment rips the lid off how a nonprofit can allegedly profit from the very division it claims to combat—paying extremists through shells and gift cards to keep the “hate” machine running, all while donors foot the bill for a never-ending crisis. In Canada, CAHN’s SPLC-inspired model operates with the full backing of government grants, shaping everything from the Online Harms Act to taxpayer-funded “pro-democracy” counter-protests. Warman’s admitted forum posts as a faux neo-Nazi, Phillips’ alleged infiltration via text messages, Perry’s activist-driven and now-shielded “300 hate groups” tally, and Balgord’s repeated calls for digital oversight all point to a closed-loop system: provoke or amplify the threat, document the resulting “spike” in hate, then cash in with policy demands and more funding.

This is no longer just about monitoring extremism. It is about whether anti-hate organizations have crossed into actively manufacturing it, using secrecy, infiltration, and opaque statistics to justify censorship laws, deplatforming, and the erosion of free speech. The SPLC precedent makes the Canadian parallels impossible to ignore. Are Canadian taxpayers unknowingly subsidizing the same self-perpetuating cycle of manufactured threats that the DOJ has now exposed south of the border?

The public deserves straight answers. If these tactics are at play here, the cost isn’t just wasted donations—it’s the slow destabilization of democratic debate itself.

New US Law Blurs the Line Between Hate Speech and Hate Crime

New US Law Blurs the Line Between Hate Speech and Hate Crime

September 16, 2017
 
Eleven years ago, this essay argued against hate-crime laws. One argument read “People can eventually be accused of hate crimes when they use hateful speech. Hate crimes laws are a seed that can sprout in new directions.” This has now come to pass, I am sorry to say. This week, the Congress passed S. J. Res. 49, and President Trump signed it, making it part of the U.S. legal code.
The law rejects “White nationalists, White supremacists, the Ku Klux Klan, neo-Nazis, and other hate groups…” But why? Because of their ideas? Because of their expression of these ideas? No government that stands for freedom and free speech, whose charge is to protect rights, should be singling out specific groups by name and by law declaring them as outlaws or threats because of their philosophies. If they have committed a crime, such as defamation of character or incitement to riot or riot itself, then charge them and try them. But American government has no legitimate authority to single out some of its citizens in this way. This, furthermore, is an exceedingly bad precedent. Who’s next?
The resolution is too specific, but it’s also dangerously vague. The term “other hate groups” has no known definition. Suppose that this term is defined by a group like the Southern Poverty Law Center. The SPLC currently names 917 groups as hate groups (see here for a list). Their criteria are not restricted to violent actions. They comprise SPEECH. They say “All hate groups have beliefs or practices that attack or malign an entire class of people, typically for their immutable characteristics.” They are very clear about this: “Hate group activities can include criminal acts, marches, rallies, speeches, meetings, leafleting or publishing.”
This Congressional resolution is a declaration that certain kinds of groups, some named but many, many others open to inclusion, are to be attacked by the U.S. government. The law urges “the President and the President’s Cabinet to use all available resources to address the threats posed by those groups.” The term “threats” in the first paragraph is vague, dangerously vague. However, the very next paragraph singles outfree speech actions when “hundreds of torch-bearing White nationalists, White supremacists, Klansmen, and neo-Nazis chanted racist, anti-Semitic, and anti-immigrant slogans…” The same sentence joins this with violent actions “…and violently engaged with counter-demonstrators on and around the grounds of the University of Virginia in Charlottesville…”
This law regards free speech as a threat, linking it to violence, painting them with one brush. There can be no justice that can stem from such a completely sloppy and inexcusably amateurish legal treatment. This linkage is made clear in paragraph seven with this language: “…communities everywhere are concerned about the growing and open display of hate and violence being perpetrated by those groups…” There is no distinction made here between the “open display of hate” and “violence being perpetrated”. As I predicted 11 years ago in arguing against hate crime laws, hate speech is being identified with hate crime.
I am just as uncomfortable with the notion of defining and singling out “hate speech” as some sort of new danger or threat or harmful activity or crime, to be dealt with by government or courts of law as I was 11 years ago with the idea of “hate crime”. The standard categories of crime are quite enough without adding to them a government laundry list of prejudices and aversions that everyone is not supposed to express or feel, under penalty of government law.
Reprinted with permission from LewRockwell.com.