A federal grand jury in Alabama has indicted the Southern Poverty Law Center on 11 counts, including money laundering and wire fraud. The indictment alleges the SPLC didn’t just track hate groups - it funded them. Shell entities like 'Rare Books Warehouse' channeled cash to KKK and National Alliance figures, creating the very threats the group then exposed to drive donor panic.
According to Adam Curry and John C. Dvorak on the No Agenda Show, the SPLC operated a 'manufactured hate machine.' The group’s $500 million endowment thrived on fear it helped create. The indictment ties SPLC funds directly to leaders behind the 2017 Charlottesville rally - a narrative later leveraged in national politics.
"The SPLC is not exposing hate. It's producing it."
- Adam Curry, No Agenda Show
The case parallels a broader bureaucratic smear cycle. FBI Director Kash Patel faces anonymous leaks painting him as unstable - claims he’s now suing The Atlantic over. Patel alleges these attacks aim to block his probe into FBI files on election interference and FISA abuses. Former officials like John Brennan decry the investigation as 'retribution,' despite having overseen the same systems now under scrutiny.
The SPLC’s role in global fact-checking networks raises deeper concerns. If the organization is a paid provocateur, the entire media infrastructure built on its designations collapses. Curry and Dvorak frame it as a protection racket: pay up or stay on the hate list. Now, the DOJ’s forensic audit could dismantle decades of impunity.
"They’re not fighting extremism. They’re funding it, then profiting from it."
- John C. Dvorak, No Agenda Show

