https://t.co/vi2qKecWBi
Whistleblower warned DCYF Secretary Tana Senn directly,in writing,that there is "major theft" occurring at Echo Glen juvenile facility,with DCYF staff actively covering it up. This was June 2025
The State Auditor says DCYF never told them
@TJMartinell1
🚨A federal grand jury on Tuesday, June 2, returned a superseding indictment charging the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) with wire fraud, bank fraud and conspiracy to commit money laundering, accusing the nonprofit of secretly funneling about $4.1 million in tax-exempt donor funds to informants embedded in extremist groups it pledged to dismantle.
The superseding indictment, returned in U.S. District Court in Montgomery, updates an original 11-count charging document from April. Prosecutors allege that from at least 2010 through 2023, SPLC routed millions through fictitious bank accounts to “field sources” inside groups including the Ku Klux Klan, Aryan Nations and National Alliance.
According to the indictment reviewed by the Lynnwood Times, those paid informants used the monies to attend and host rallies, recruit new members, expand or create chapters, purchase racist paraphernalia and materials for cross burnings, and cover living expenses. In some cases, the SPLC allegedly reimbursed informants for such activities while soliciting donations by telling supporters it was working to combat the very extremism it was allegedly subsidizing.
Specific examples include more than $1.2 million paid to one source linked to the National Alliance who also raised funds for the group; more than $70,000 to a leader in the Nazi, KKK and Aryan Nations movements who was encouraged to remain active rather than exit; and $300,000 to a participant in the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Va. The indictment also alleges payments to members of the National Socialist Movement and other extremist organizations.
The charges stem not from the use of informants itself but from allegations that the SPLC concealed the payments from donors and made false statements to banks to facilitate the transfers. Prosecutors allege that the SPLC created shell entities to disguise the nature, source and control of the funds.
The indictment seeks forfeiture of any property traceable to the alleged scheme.
The SPLC has pleaded not guilty to the original charges and maintains that its long-standing informant program was a legitimate intelligence-gathering effort aimed at preventing violence. The organization has called the charges "vindictive" and "politically motivated."
The case is being prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Alabama; a trial date has not been set.
@Acyn You REALLY think anyone believes he didn't know he was getting not just a Nazi tattoo, but one of the most brutal Nazi group's logos during the entirety of the Holocaust?
Get the fuck outta here.
@harryjsisson Here's a thing you either can't or won't understand:
Many of us quietly are fine with it
I spent years hunting down Islamic extremists while you were still in diapers, eating your own boogers and sucking on your mom's tit
Every fucking road ran straight back to Iran. Fuck em