Is This Right Wing Lawfare? Or Did the SPLC Actually Do This?

If you’d told me 20 years ago that the Southern Poverty Law Center would be sitting under an 11-count federal indictment for fraud and money laundering, I would have laughed it off. Back then, in my mind, they were one of the good guys. They went after the bad guys – businesses, municipalities, and individuals that were actively and obviously suppressing the rights of impoverished Black Americans.

I haven’t followed the SPLC closely, but over the last decade it’s been hard not to notice the drift. The mission expanded. The targets changed. And the tone began to feel less like courtroom advocacy and more like political positioning.

For example: They broadened their “Hate Map” to include mainstream conservative and religious organizations like the Family Research Council and Alliance Defending Freedom. They published a 2016 “Field Guide” labeling a range of commentators as “anti-Muslim extremists.” And they increasingly weighed in on issues like immigration, gender politics, and parental rights – territory that looked a long way from their original civil rights brief.

Still, I was stunned by the latest accusations. According to the indictment announced by acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, the SPLC is alleged to have funneled more than $3 million in donor money to individuals tied to groups like the Ku Klux Klan and neo-Nazi organizations between 2014 and 2023 – using fake business names to do it.

Now, an indictment isn’t a conviction. And in today’s political climate, both sides have shown a willingness to weaponize institutions when it suits them. Some widely reported stories in recent years haven’t aged especially well.

The Trump-Russia “collusion” story drove headlines for years without establishing a criminal conspiracy. The “Bountygate” story about Russian payments to Taliban fighters later came under serious doubt. And the Hunter Biden laptop story was initially dismissed as disinformation before key elements were verified.

So yes, skepticism is warranted.

But then there are the things we already know.

Take Maajid Nawaz, a former Islamist who became a prominent critic of extremism. The SPLC labeled him an extremist anyway. He sued – and won a $3.4 million settlement and a public apology. That’s not a gray-area outcome. That’s a clean loss.

Others, like Daniel Pipes and David Horowitz, were swept into similar categories, raising a basic question about whether the definition of “extremism” had quietly expanded to include inconvenient opinions.

The most troubling allegation now is the idea that the SPLC may have had a financial incentive to amplify the very threats they warned about. After the Charlottesville rally, for example, revenue reportedly jumped from about $50 million to $132 million in a single year. Donations poured in. The business of fighting hate was booming.

That kind of feedback loop isn’t unique. In financial publishing, conservative newsletters tend to sell best under Democratic administrations, and the reverse is also true. Fear sharpens attention. Attention drives revenue.

But if the indictment is even partly accurate, this goes well beyond that. It suggests not just benefiting from the cycle but feeding it.

Again, we don’t know how this ends. But I can say this without hesitation: Ten years ago, I would have dismissed accusations like these outright. Today, after watching the SPLC evolve into something that looks less like a civil rights law firm and more like a well-funded political brand with a blacklist attached, I read them and think, “That’s not crazy.”

Just the Facts 

* A federal grand jury in Montgomery charged the SPLC with wire fraud, bank fraud, and money laundering, alleging over $3 million in payments to members of the KKK, Aryan Nations, and similar groups using fictitious entities. (grand jury indictment, 2026; reporting summarized in second article)

* Prosecutors claim the SPLC paid $140,000 to a former National Alliance chairman, $70,000 to a National Socialist Party leader, and $19,000 to an American Front figure. (indictment details cited in Matt Taibbi article, 2026)

* One SPLC-paid source (“F-37”) is accused of participating in planning for the 2017 Charlottesville rally while receiving roughly $270,000 over several years. (grand jury indictment summary; second article)

* The SPLC paid $3.4 million and issued a public apology after labeling Maajid Nawaz an extremist – one of the most high-profile retractions in its history. (settlement, 2018; widely reported)

* Individuals like Ayaan Hirsi Ali were labeled “anti-Muslim extremists” despite documented threats against their lives from jihadist groups. (second article; SPLC “Field Guide,” 2016)

* A Pulitzer-nominated 1992 series in the Montgomery Advertiser concluded that SPLC’s primary activity had become fundraising, often tied to expanding “hate group” classifications. (Montgomery Advertiser, 1992; referenced in Taibbi article)

* Reports have cited millions held in offshore accounts (e.g., Cayman Islands, Bermuda), while CharityWatch (a nonprofit watchdog organization) previously gave the SPLC a failing grade for hoarding funds rather than deploying them. (CharityWatch; tax filings reported 2017; second article)

* Following Charlottesville, SPLC revenue reportedly surged from about $50 million to $132 million in one year, with major corporate donations from firms like Apple and JPMorgan. (second article; donation disclosures)

* In 2012, attacker Floyd Lee Corkins targeted the Family Research Council after reportedly using the SPLC’s map. A security guard was shot. (FBI statements; widely reported case, 2012)

* Journalists like Ken Silverstein (Harper’s, 2000) and later critics have argued the SPLC inflated threats to sustain fundraising, a pattern echoed in recent “hate inflation” critiques. (Harper’s; Taibbi, 2026)