Montgomery, AL – A federal grand jury has indicted the Southern Poverty Law Center on fraud and money laundering charges, with prosecutors alleging the nonprofit funneled donor funds to members of extremist groups it publicly claimed to oppose.
The indictment, announced Tuesday by FBI Director Kash Patel and Attorney General Todd Blanche at the Department of Justice, outlines what officials describe as a years-long scheme involving donor deception, financial fraud, and the use of shell entities to move money through the banking system.
Allegations center on donor funds and hidden payments
According to the Department of Justice, the SPLC faces 11 federal counts, including wire fraud, false statements, and conspiracy to commit money laundering.
Prosecutors allege that between roughly 2014 and 2023, the organization raised millions of dollars from donors under the premise of combating violent extremism, but instead directed portions of that money to individuals affiliated with groups such as the Ku Klux Klan, Aryan Nations, and other white supremacist organizations.
Investigators claim some of those payments exceeded $3 million in total and, in at least one instance, contributed to additional criminal activity.
Patel said the organization “used the fraudulently raised money by lying to their donor network… to actually pay the leadership of these supposedly violent extremist groups.”
Government alleges decade-long scheme
Federal officials describe the case as a “decade-long” operation involving layered financial tactics designed to avoid detection.
The indictment alleges the SPLC created shell companies and entities to disguise the origin of funds, allowing transactions to appear unrelated to the nonprofit while moving through U.S. financial institutions.
“Financial institutions… were deceived in believing that money was not coming from the Southern Poverty Law Center,” Patel said, adding that investigators traced the funds across multiple entities.
Attorney General Blanche further alleged the organization was “manufacturing the extremism it purports to oppose,” a claim central to the government’s case.
Key Points
• SPLC indicted on 11 federal counts including fraud and money laundering
• DOJ alleges millions in donor funds went to extremist group affiliates
• Organization denies wrongdoing, calls charges politically motivated
SPLC denies allegations, cites informant work
The Southern Poverty Law Center strongly disputed the charges, saying the allegations mischaracterize its work.
Interim CEO Bryan Fair said the claims are “false” and “politically motivated,” maintaining that any payments referenced were part of confidential informant efforts used to monitor extremist threats.
According to the organization, such activities contributed to intelligence shared with law enforcement and helped prevent violence.
This defense sets up a central legal question: whether the payments described by prosecutors constituted fraud—or legitimate investigative practices tied to tracking extremist networks.
Longstanding tensions with federal officials
The case follows years of political and institutional friction between the SPLC and some federal officials.
In October 2025, FBI Director Patel formally severed ties between the bureau and the organization, calling it a “partisan smear machine.” Critics, particularly in conservative circles, have long argued the SPLC’s classifications of “hate groups” are overly broad or politically biased.
The nonprofit, founded in 1971 and headquartered in Montgomery, built its reputation through civil litigation against white supremacist groups and its widely cited “hate map” tracking extremist organizations across the country.
What happens next
The indictment marks the beginning of a federal criminal case that could take months or years to resolve.
Prosecutors say the investigation remains ongoing and could lead to additional charges or defendants. The SPLC, meanwhile, has indicated it will contest the case in court.
No trial date has been announced, and the court will ultimately determine whether the government’s allegations meet the legal standard for conviction.