The indictment of the Southern Poverty Law Center on federal fraud charges this week is the start of what could become not just a major criminal prosecution but a major constitutional challenge. At issue is whether the Center’s secret operations to enlist and pay informers constituted fraud of its donors.
The center has long been controversial after drifting away from its early litigation against segregation and becoming more of a partisan organization targeting conservative organizations. I shared that criticism after the center went after groups such as Focus on the Family for opposing LGBTQ values.
It also drew outcries after focusing on Turning Point in a report titled “The Year in Hate and Extremism 2024” as “A Case Study of the Hard Right in 2024”.
The federal indictment alleges that the Center improperly paid informants to infiltrate extremist groups without disclosing the payments to donors. The Center insists that these were confidential informants and that law enforcement was informed of the results of these operations when they shared evidence with local and federal agencies.
The indictment cites pitches to donors that failed to mention that millions were given to figures in hate groups while pledging that “Your support powers our work to confront hate, stand up to injustice, and defend our civil and human rights. From the courtroom to the classroom to communities across the country, you can help create a more just and inclusive future for all.”
It is rare to see a private organization engaged in such clandestine operations, using confidential sources the way that the FBI does with drug and other criminal organizations.
Some of what is described in the indictment is surprising and, frankly, could form the basis for civil action by the targeted groups. For example, I was surprised by this graph in the indictment:
“F-9 was affiliated with the neo-Nazi organization, the National Alliance and C. served as an F for the SPLC for more than 20 years. F-9’s activities included fundraising for the National Alliance. Between 2014 and 2023, the SPLC secretly paid F-9 more than $1,000,000.00. In 2014, F-9 entered the headquarters of a violent extremist group and stole 25 boxes of their documents. F-9 coordinated payment for the copying of the materials with a high-level SPLC employee who had knowledge the documents had been stolen. The original stolen materials were returned to the violent extremist group in a second illegal entry by F-9.”
This individual was allegedly paid a million dollars for such services. The Center does not have any special authority to commit such acts. It reminds me of the cases involving media organizations.
Courts have previously held that reporters do not have any special privilege to commit trespass and may be sued for such offenses. In Food Lion v. ABC, a store was shown in an undercover segment engaging in unsanitary practices, and Food Lion was accused of selling rat-gnawed cheese, meat past its expiration date, and old fish and ham that had been washed in bleach to mask the smell. Food Lion denied the allegations and sued ABC for trespass. A jury ruled against ABC and awarded Food Lion punitive damages in an investigation into ABC journalists lying on their application forms and assuming positions under false pretenses. (here). The Fourth Circuit, however, wiped out the punitive damage award while upholding the trespass and breach-of-loyalty verdicts, with awards of only $1 for each.
There is also a case out of the Seventh Circuit. Judge Richard Posner wrote the decision in Desnick v. ABC, where investigative reporters went undercover in 1993 to show that employees of the Desnick eye clinic had tampered with the clinic’s auto-refractor, the machine used to detect cataracts, so that the machine produced false diagnoses to find cataracts (and require procedures). The court rejected wiretapping claims (based on the state’s one-party consent rules) as well as trespass and defamation claims. On trespass, the court noted that the reporters were allowed into areas open to new patients. Posner relied on the consent to the entry to negate the trespass claim even when the entrant “has intentions that if known to the owner of the property would cause him . . . to revoke his consent.”
In this matter, there was no Desnick-like claim in entering non-public areas and removing material. A valid civil action alleging trespass and other claims could be raised. Moreover, the affected groups could potentially allege a tolling of the statute of limitations given the secrecy of the operations.
Setting aside such civil litigation, this will still be a challenge for the Justice Department. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche told Fox News that the investigation was begun under the Biden Administration but then suddenly terminated.
The action is likely to draw serious constitutional challenges over free speech and associational rights. The Center can argue that it was clear that they were targeting racist groups by any means necessary. While they did not discuss such clandestine operations, they will argue that the operations were still used to attack these groups and share information with law enforcement. The Center is also likely to raise selective prosecution claims.
The government has a tough case, with the alleged fraud used to produce evidence submitted to state and federal prosecutors. In addition, if this case extends into a new administration, a Democratic Justice Department could scuttle the case as did the Biden Administration.
Once again, it is remarkable to read the extent to which the Center acted like a mini-FBI in running its own confidential informants and allegedly conducting a “black bag job.”
The unfolding prosecution is likely to shine a light on the tactics used by the Center. It could also further define the constitutional protections for such organizations in using such novel and controversial means.
Here is the indictment: United States v. Southern Poverty Law Center
OT
Listened to US v. Barbara today and score for Barrett imo. She didn’t use the word “feudalism” but brought in the idea in a loose way.
There is an element of “claim” and not the common misunderstanding today in babies claiming or the state claiming property. It’s salty. 😂
Cheers
It is interesting that JT takes perspective that these paid informants were paid to infiltrate the supremacist groups to gather intelligence on their activities. I’ve heard the media reporting on this that the SPLC made payments to individuals within the groups to gin up activity by them which would benefit the SPLC fundraising and media campaigns. The sums reportedly paid out to the individuals was substantial and beyond what I would expect for information. The latter interpretation seems to me the most plausible for a leftist organization given their history over the last 20+ years.
These agents are within all riots including Ray Epps and within campaigns laundering money.
Mafia-state
Let’s see, now. We have the Trump DOJ that goes after his perceived enemies, that keeps getting laughed out of court–one case after another getting tossed–that keeps failing to obtain indictments, but keeps on filing them anyway, that misrepresents the status of Lindsey Halligan and Alina Habba as “US Attorneys” when they weren’t, that ignores the Epstein Transparency Act, that constantly lies to judges and keeps getting sanctioned–and we have Turley trying to sell the idea that the Trump DOJ is righteously prosecuting the Southern Poverty Law Center for failing to disclose to its donors that it has used paid informants, which it claims is criminal. NO ONE is buying it–NO ONE.
Turley claims the SPLC “targets conservative groups”–no they don’t. Here’s what “USA Today” says, in an excerpt from a longer piece:
“The nation’s top law enforcement officials, FBI Director Kash Patel and acting Attorney General Todd Blanche announced a slew of criminal charges against the Southern Poverty Law Center, a nonprofit research and advocacy organization that has worked for decades to investigate, report on and combat White supremacist, neo-Nazi and other hate groups.
The charges focus on the SPLC’s use of paid informants, who, according to prosecutors, were given large sums of money to infiltrate some of the nation’s most infamous and dangerous extremist groups. This tactic, Blanche said at a news conference, “was not dismantling these groups, it was instead manufacturing the extremism it purports to oppose by paying sources to stoke racial hatred.”
The federal indictment against the SPLC, unveiled April 21, states: “Unbeknownst to donors, some of their donated money was being used to fund the leaders and organizers of racist groups, including the Ku Klux Klan, the Aryan Nation, and the National Alliance.”
Paying informants to infiltrate hate groups, the tactic at the heart of the SPLC indictment, has, however, been used by federal law enforcement agencies “for decades, if not longer,” said Javed Ali, associate professor of practice at the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy at the University of Michigan and a former senior counterterrorism official at the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security.
The FBI has long paid, and probably is still paying, confidential sources across the country to gather intelligence on extremist groups, including organizations like those named in Tuesday’s indictment, Ali said. ”
This one’s likely to get tossed, too, but if it doesn’t, the defense will simply point out that the FBI routinely does exactly what the SPLC did.
🤣🤣🤣🤣 Turley’s credibility sinks even lower by lending credence to another of TACO’s weaponized DOJ’s politically motivated prosecutions that has no hope of succeeding.
Professor Turley’s credibility is just fine.
It is the SPLC who’s credibility that is in ruins. The DOJ does not have to even take them to court and the damage to the SPLC is already done, by their own doing.
Turley wrote that the SPLC targets “conservative groups”. The “groups” identified by USA Today that were infiltrated by the SPLC are: the Ku Klux Klan, the Aryan Nation, and the National Alliance, which are hate groups, not “conservative groups”. Todd Blanche, who has zero credibility, claims that the SPLC was “manufacturing the extremism it purports to oppose by paying sources to stoke racial hatred”. These groups stand for racial hatred, and the SPLC isn’t the cause of their racial animus. The SPLC wasn’t even around when the Klan was formed during the Civil War.
USF spot on
Scum just like the ACLU. They are dependent upon keeping their lies and division alive.