Southern Poverty Law Center's leaders allegedly used major bank to fund pay-to-hate operation
FIRST ON FOX: A pair of former top executives at the Southern Poverty Law Center used a network of checking accounts to secretly funnel $4.1 million to extremists, including one nicknamed "The Aryan Barbarian," in a long-running pay-to-hate scheme, federal officials told Fox News Digital.
The SPLC's former chief financial officer Teenie Hutchison and ex-Intelligence Project chief Heidi Beirich allegedly created the accounts at Synovus Bank in 2008, making the beleaguered nonprofit’s trusted bank a hub for diverting supporters' donations to sketchy groups, sources said. The network ultimately supported secret payments to as many as 50 confidential "field sources," called "Fs," embedded within extremist organizations around the country. Some 13 field sources have so far been identified in court filings.
"The SPLC found its niche, and its leaders built a fiefdom with donations they got like crazy," former NYPD intelligence official, attorney and Fox News contributor Paul Mauro said.
Former SPLC Chief Executive Officer Margaret Huang allegedly signed a letter acknowledging the operation to Synovus bank officials in September 2021 before ending her tenure at the SPLC in July 2025.
SPLC supporters have characterized the payment recipients as "informants," and they included a right-wing extremist behind the infamous 2017 "Unite the Right" protests in Charlottesville, Va.
"The government can run informants," said Mauro. "Private industry cannot."
The new revelations show the federal investigation of the SPLC is significantly larger than initially reported and was orchestrated at the organization's highest level. Beirich was previously believed to be involved in the alleged payments, but this is the first time federal officials have confirmed her involvement.
The new details about the SPLC case emerge as the Trump administration's Justice Department intensifies scrutiny of influential nonprofit organizations. Earlier this week, Fox News Digital reported exclusively that federal prosecutors launched a grand jury investigation into Shanghai-based Marxist tech mogul Neville Roy Singham over possible illegality in his funding of left-wing activist groups. Together, the two federal investigations signal an aggressive effort by the administration to examine whether certain organizations are using their nonprofit status to conceal financial operations.
A spokesperson for Synovus Bank told Fox News Digital that the lender, based in Columbus, Ga., is working with federal investigators in the "ongoing investigation."
"As a matter of policy, we do not comment on specific client relationships," the spokesperson said. "We have cooperated fully with the ongoing investigation and will continue to do so."
Hutchison, Beirich and Huang didn't respond to repeated requests for comment. In late May, the SPLC filed a motion to dismiss the case. On June 9, days after the U.S. government filed a superseding indictment against the SPLC, the nonprofit's interim president and chief executive officer, Bryan Fair, denied any wrongdoing by the SPLC during a fiery hearing before the House Judiciary Committee.
The allegations sit at the center of a federal case accusing the SPLC of bank fraud, wire fraud and conspiracy to commit money laundering. Sources familiar with the investigation say additional charges will likely be filed against individual executives and former executives of the nonprofit.
Fox News Digital's investigation unpacks the government’s theory of the alleged operation through the traditional three stages of money laundering: placement, layering and integration. In the first stage of placement, U.S. officials say Hutchison and Beirich created and controlled a hidden financial infrastructure at SPLC that became the entry point for $4.1 million in allegedly illicit payments made to so-called field sources.
In the second stage, layering involves moving money through multiple accounts, transactions and entities, like a series of bank accounts Hutchison and Beirich allegedly set up for fake companies, designed to obscure the money's origin. Finally, in the third stage, integration occurs when the proceeds or products of an operation become absorbed into legitimate activities, like the organization's "Extremist Files," and become difficult to distinguish from ordinary business operations.
According to federal prosecutors, the SPLC's alleged operation involved all three stages.
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Without naming the finance and intelligence chiefs, a grand jury indictment made public in April revealed that "Employee-1" and "Employee-2" in 2008 created a secret network of nine bank accounts at "Bank-1" and "Bank-2" that funneled millions of dollars to far-right extremists from 2014 through 2023. The initial indictment put the amount at $3 million, but it was increased to $4.1 million in a superseding indictment.
The indictment notes that "individuals at the SPLC" were the ones who "secretly funneled donated money to the Fs," including "Employee-1," a "person who would become the Chief Financial Officer, and "Employee-2," a "person who would become the Director of the Intelligence Project."
Federal officials told Fox News Digital that Hutchison, who moved from the position of treasurer and corporate secretary to chief financial officer, is "Employee-1." They said "Employee-" 2 is Beirich, who started in 1999 as a newly-minted Ph.D. student, and was named deputy director of the Intelligence Project in 2004 and later director of the Intelligence Report.
The duo allegedly created a banking account structure under names that didn’t identify the SPLC. The nine shell entities were dubbed "Center Investigative Agency," "Fox Photography," "Imagery Ink," "J&J Electronics," "Kelly's Marine," "North West Technologies," "Tech Writers Group" and "Turner Personnel" and "Rare Books Warehouse."
Federal prosecutors allege the accounts were used to pay informants while concealing the source of the money. The government's theory is that the accounts became the financial infrastructure supporting a sprawling money laundering operation.
Federal prosecutors allege the accounts remained active for years, surviving leadership transitions and internal turmoil at one of the nation's most influential civil-rights organizations.
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Over two decades, Beirich became one of the nonprofit’s most influential figures, shaping how "far-right extremism," "White supremacy" and "neo-Nazi hate" were documented, defined and communicated.
She testified before Congress, and appeared regularly on television and radio. Journalists, academics and policymakers frequently turned to her for analysis of White-nationalist groups, anti-government movements and domestic extremism. By 2017, ABC News described her as "the woman tracking hate in America."
In contrast, Hutchison maintained a low profile and was rarely photographed, working quietly behind the scenes. In 2017, she was on the renewal document for the nonprofit’s "Mississippi Charitable Registration" as the SPLC’s treasurer and secretary, the custodian of financial records and one of the nonprofit’s two "check signers."
The SPLC listed its official bank as Sterling Bank, a Synovus Bank subsidiary based in Montgomery.
In October 2019, Beirich co-founded a new 501(c)(3) nonprofit, "Global Project Against Hate and Extremism," with a mailing address just three miles away from SPLC headquarters in Alabama's capital.
Two months later, Beirich left SPLC after 20 years, according to her LinkedIn profile, just as the dragnet was closing in on the alleged pay-to-hate operation she’d been running for years. According to the SPLC's tax filing that year, she last earned a salary of $173,090 and a bonus of $25,721.
The alleged violations continued after Beirich's and Hutchison’s tenures at SPLC.
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One of the alleged recipients of secret SPLC payments was Erich Gliebe, the former chairman of a neo-Nazi organization, National Alliance. Known as "The Aryan Barbarian" during his time as a boxer, Gliebe allegedly received more than $140,000 from the SPLC between 2016 and 2023.
At the same time he was allegedly collecting payments, Gliebe was featured in SPLC materials describing extremist figures and organizations. An SPLC "Extremist Files" profile dedicated to Gliebe contained a link through which visitors could donate to the organization.
Gliebe didn't respond to requests for comment.
Daniel Harvill, a Virginia attorney who represented National Alliance members in litigation involving Gliebe, described Gliebe as an ineffective leader.
"Gliebe was a joke," Harvill told Fox News Digital. "He didn't know how to run a business or political organization. There was a large pile of stupid among them."
Harvill said bitterness from that litigation may have contributed to Gliebe becoming an SPLC informant.
Court filings indicate that larger accounts associated with the alleged operation remained active until August 2020, when the hidden account structure finally drew scrutiny from bank officials. Synovus Bank did an internal investigation, according to court filings. That review became a pivotal moment in the government's case.
According to the indictment, around Sept. 9, 2021, the SPLC "President and Chief Executive Officer" and the SPLC "Board Chair" admitted in writing to Bank-1 – Synovus Bank – that the fictitious accounts were "opened for the benefit of the Southern Poverty Law Center operations and operated under the Center’s authority."
They signed a document also stating that "pursuant to the discussion we had earlier this week…the accounts had been opened and operated for the benefit of the organization." The CEO was Huang, federal sources told Fox News Digital.
Huang's acknowledgment now sits near the center of the government's legal theory that the account structure wasn’t the work of rogue employees but operated under organizational authority.
The nonprofit and its sister organization, the SPLC Action Fund, had hired Huang the year earlier, describing her as an "internationally renowned human and civil rights leader," previously serving as executive director of Amnesty International USA.
It isn’t clear who the board chair was at the time of the signing, but former Goldman Sachs executive Bennett Grau was a board member at the time. Grau didn't respond to repeated requests for comment.
Huang’s role in signing the admission hasn’t been publicly disclosed before.
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SPLC last listed Hutchison on its IRS 990 filing for the period ending on Oct. 31, 2022. According to that IRS filing, she last earned $237,749 and a bonus of $32,697.
In early July 2025, Huang announced her resignation as president, stepping down "to prioritize family life." The board of directors named constitutional scholar and former SPLC Board Chair Bryan Fair as interim president and CEO.
The role of senior SPLC officials in this alleged operation raises significant red flags for law enforcement, federal officials told Fox News Digital, saying the alleged activity reflects a structured ecosystem directed from the top. Investigators describe an operation in which financial flows, informants, public content and political work by the SPLC and its sister organizations were closely linked, with senior officials like Hutchison and Beirich positioned to control the money, narrative and influence of the SPLC.
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The court proceedings represent a form of vindication for some targets of the SPLC.
Back in October 2017, the SPLC and three other groups – Media Matters, ReThink Media and the Center for New Community – released a publication titled "Field Guide to Anti-Muslim Extremists." In interviews at the time, Beirich confirmed that Democratic billionaire George Soros's Open Society philanthropy had provided funding for the production of the report.
The report included Maajid Nawaz, a British Muslim reformer who founded the Quilliam Foundation to combat Islamist extremism. The next year, in 2018, he sued the SPLC for defamation, winning a $3.375 million settlement and a public apology.
Nawaz recently told Fox News Digital that the SPLC’s alleged system of paying extremists is corrupt, and he feels vindicated by the federal prosecution against the nonprofit.
"They were funding both sides," Nawaz said. "If you control the rules of the game… you’re able to control where the hate comes from… and then control the reaction."
"They were taking money to fight hate," he said, "and then funding the very hate they took money to fight."
As the SPLC mounts its defense, Nawaz said, "This indictment demonstrates clearly that the SPLC should now cease to exist. It should come to an end."
Fox News Digital's Bonnie Chu and Adriana James-Rodil contributed to this report.