Monday, June 22, 2026

The SPLC, a scandal-plagued smear factory exposed for...

Editor's note: ...funneling over $1.2 million (wire fraud) in donor cash to a neo-Nazi lover and informant, complete with joint bank accounts, while pretending to battle "hate," has zero credibility when it smears America as "founded on white supremacism." This is grotesque hypocrisy from an outfit that allegedly manufactured extremism to justify its $800 plus million war chest, propping up the very fringe groups it milked donors to "fight." America's founding rests on the Declaration's self-evident truth that all men are created equal, with a Constitution limiting government to secure individual liberty, not racial hierarchy. The 1776 Revolution rejected hereditary privilege and divine-right tyranny; the Founders' Enlightenment ideals, imperfectly realized and later advanced through amendments and abolition, built the freest, most prosperous multi-ethnic society in history. SPLC's lies invert reality to fuel division and grift, dishonoring the blood shed to expand those founding principles against actual supremacism. While exact figures are unknown due to incomplete records, roughly 5,000–9,000 Black Americans served with Patriot forces in the Revolutionary War, with likely hundreds killed fighting the British.
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SPLC boss funneled $1.2 million to lover in neo-Nazi group — pair even had joint bank account Chadwick Moore and Isabel Vincent

By NY Post | June 20, 2026

A top Southern Poverty Law Center official is accused of helping funnel $1.2 million in donor money to an informant in the National Alliance white supremacist group — who was also allegedly her lover.

The Department of Justice filed a superseding indictment against the SPLC accusing it of funneling donor cash to hate groups they were then telling donors they were fighting.

One figure, referred to as "Employee-2" in the indictment, is described as a "person who would become Director of the SPLC's Intelligence Project."

It also describes how "Employee-2" wrote an article based on material stolen from National Alliance headquarters in 2014 and then paid off an informant to take the blame for the robbery.

Based on the details in the June 2 superseding indictment, "Employee-2" is believed to be Heidi Beirich, a 58-year-old fascism expert who was the director of intelligence at the Alabama-based anti-extremism nonprofit between 2012 and 2019.

The indictment alleges Beirich was very close to the informant known only as "F-9" who "infiltrated the neo-Nazi organization National Alliance."

"[Beirich] was also in a romantic relationship with F-9. During this relationship, [Beirich] and F-9 shared a house and two bank accounts," the indictment alleges.

"Between 2015 and 2021, approximately $140,000 in donors' money flowed from the SPLC operating account ... and was ultimately deposited into the joint bank accounts held by F-9 and [Beirich].

"This amounted to approximately 66% of all money ever deposited into their joint bank accounts. [Beirich] then used donors' money to pay the couple's personal living expenses."

The indictment also claims that while getting paid by the SPLC, the unnamed informant was also raising money for the National Alliance and helping to "carry out its extremist activities."

The indictment describes how a source broke into National Alliance's headquarters in West Virginia in 2014 and "stole approximately 25 boxes of documents," took them over state lines into North Carolina and copied them, before returning the originals.

In 2015, Beirich wrote an article allegedly based on the stolen materials for her group's "Hatewatch" section of its website. That article, "Chaos at the Compound," is still available.

The indictment then describes how the SPLC tried to cover up who their informant was by paying a second informant "approximately $6,000" to take responsibility for the burglary.

Beirich and SPLC did not respond to requests for comment from The Post.

"I knew it was that fat, ugly hog Heidi Beirich," National Alliance chairman William White Williams, 78, told The Post from his home in east Tennessee. He also confirmed the details of the indictment match what happened to the group.

"I think some of those cluckers wanted to get out of the movement and they went to the SPLC for help. But instead of helping them, [the SPLC] said, 'Why don't you stay in and get paid?'" he added of the informants.

Beirich had joined the SPLC in 1999 and became director of the Intelligence Project in 2012. She left in 2019 as part of a massive shake-up, when many top brass departed amid accusations of racism and sexual harassment, with the group mainly being run by white people and black people in its lower ranks. Beirich was not publicly implicated in those scandals.

Alabama-based SPLC has been charged with wire fraud, bank fraud and money laundering conspiracy for allegedly engaging "in the active promotion of racist groups at the same time that the SPLC was denouncing the same groups on its website," acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and FBI Director Kash Patel announced on April 21.

Patel charged that far from using spies to dismantle the hate groups, the SPLC gave them over $4 million to keep promoting their ideologies, thus giving them something to point out and seek donors to fight against. The nonprofit has amassed some $800 million to do so, its publicly released nonprofit accounting shows.

By 2013, the National Alliance had effectively ceased to exist. That year, group chairman Erich Gliebe — a former boxer nicknamed the Aryan Barbarian — had sent a letter to followers saying the group was ending its membership program that September, writing they were abandoning dues-paying chapters in favor of a "supporter-based" structure. Membership had collapsed from 1,400 to around 20 in less than a decade.

Please go to the NY Post to continue reading.
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Editor's note: The SPLC's business model of smearing mainstream conservatives, Christians, immigration skeptics, and critics of identity politics as equivalent to Klansmen, has poisoned discourse and empowered actual extremists by blurring lines. The antidote to the SPLC is sunlight, boycotts, rival watchdogs, lawsuits and stripping their undeserved media halo as an "authority." In fact, SPLC is a hate factory. Free societies defeat bad ideas with better ones and accountability, not state shutdowns that set dangerous precedents. The SPLC's self-inflicted collapse would be far more fitting:

Who Radicalized Heidi Beirich (SPLC)? Beirich’s origin story, family, early life, clues to her political origins and turn towards left-wing extremism

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