SPLC Accused of Funding Extremist Groups Amidst Election Fraud Claims

The SPLC faces allegations of channeling $3 million in donations to extremist groups, including the KKK and Neo-Nazis, while their leaders allegedly received payments. This comes as calls arise for the 2020 election results to be nullified if the SPLC is convicted of fraud.
Allegations of Covert Funding
The SPLC was fingered Tuesday– with district attorneys declaring $3 million well worth of contributed funds was covertly channelled to teams, including the Ku Klux Klan, the American Nazi Party, National Socialist Movement, United Klans of America, and Unify the Right, in between 2014 and 2023.
A former supervisor of the Aryan Nations, that also was a member of the Ku Klux Klan, was included in the SPLC’s “Extremist Record”– despite getting paid $70,000 in between 2014 and 2016, the court docs claim.
The SPLC prides itself on dealing with white preeminence and in the 1980s, the organization started to operate a covert network of sources that were either related to, or had actually penetrated fierce extremist teams.
Informant Payments and Document Theft
The indictment alleges that those sources, known as area resources or Fs, were paid in a “private manner,” all while contributors continued to pump cash right into the company under the idea funds would be used to “take apart” such companies.
Meanwhile, an informant, recognized as F-9, was supposedly paid greater than $1 million by the SPLC– and swiped 25 boxes of papers coming from the neo-Nazi group National Alliance, according to the indictment.
Election Integrity and SPLC Conviction
Trump after that asked for the outcomes of the 2020 political election– which he shed to Joe Biden– to be cleaned if the group is condemned of cable scams, bank fraudulence, and conspiracy theory to commit cash laundering offenses.
President Trump on Friday asked for the 2020 election to be “completely cleaned from the books” if the Southern Poverty Legislation Facility is convicted of making fraudulent settlements totaling $3 million to members of white supremacist groups the company asserted to eliminate.
1 Election Fraud2 Extremist Groups
3 Financial Misconduct
4 Ku Klux Klan
5 Neo-Nazis
6 SPLC
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