Washington — The Southern Poverty Law Center told a federal court on Tuesday that law enforcement agencies had long known the nonprofit paid informants to report on the movements of white supremacist and other extremist groups, rejecting statements by Justice Department officials that the organization steered money to Ku Klux Klan members and similar figures without authorities’ knowledge. The filings follow a federal grand jury in Alabama returning an 11-count indictment last week accusing the SPLC of wire and bank fraud for allegedly using donor funds to pay informants; SPLC lawyers asked the court to compel grand jury disclosures and to block Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche from repeating claims the government lacked information about the program, and additional hearings are expected to address disclosure and related evidentiary disputes.
Prepared by Emily Rhodes and reviewed by editorial team.
南方贫困法律中心(SPLC)的行动可能会影响非营利组织的运营方式。如果它们被判有罪,可能会导致对慈善机构如何使用捐款的规定更加严格。关注您喜欢的非营利组织,确保它们遵守规定。
南方贫困法律中心 (SPLC) 因涉嫌挪用资金而受到抨击。尽管他们否认有不当行为,但法院的裁决可能会改变非营利组织的格局。如果您经常向慈善机构捐款,值得转发。
检察官和政治盟友在起诉后获得了公众叙事权和程序上的优势,这可能会有助于未来诉讼的法律策略和沟通。
南方贫困法律中心及其捐助者、以及该组织服务的社区,由于起诉及相关的公开声明,遭受了声誉损害、法律风险,以及对其正在进行的调查工作的潜在干扰。
No left-leaning sources found for this story.
南方贫困法律中心声称司法部知晓起诉书中提到的付费线人 - Cville Right Now
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