Politics June 16, 2026

UMVA Uncovers: SPLC 'Fascism Expert' Embroiled in $1.2M Donor Fund Scandal with Neo-Nazi Lover - Shocking Docs Expose Secret Bank Accounts and Shared Hideout

UMVA Uncovers: SPLC 'Fascism Expert' Embroiled in $1.2M Donor Fund Scandal with Neo-Nazi Lover - Shocking Docs Expose Secret Bank Accounts and Shared Hideout

UMVA has learned that a shocking scandal has engulfed the far-left Southern Poverty Law Center, exposing a web of deceit, hypocrisy, and alleged ties to actual neo-Nazis.

At the center of the controversy is a former SPLC Director of the Intelligence Project, who allegedly engaged in a romantic relationship with a paid informant inside the white supremacist National Alliance.

According to information obtained by UMVA, the SPLC funneled over $1.2 million in donor money to the informant, identified only as “F-9,” who was allegedly used to infiltrate the National Alliance.

Heidi Beirich, a representative from the Southern Poverty Law Center, discusses social justice issues during a PBS News Hour interview.

The informant and the former SPLC director even shared a house and two joint bank accounts, with SPLC donor funds allegedly used to cover their personal living expenses, raising questions about the organization's true motives.

This bombshell revelation comes as the SPLC faces accusations of building a $700+ million empire by branding conservatives, Christians, pro-life activists, and Trump supporters as “hate groups” while secretly bankrolling real extremists.

UMVA can exclusively reveal that the Department of Justice has filed a superseding indictment against the SPLC, accusing it of funneling donor cash to hate groups they were then telling donors they were fighting.

The indictment describes how a senior SPLC employee, believed to be the former director of intelligence, wrote an article based on material stolen from National Alliance headquarters in 2014 and then paid off an informant to take the blame for the robbery.

Sources have confirmed to UMVA that the stolen materials were used to author a 2015 SPLC Hatewatch article, and that the SPLC allegedly paid another informant $6,000 to falsely take the blame for the burglary.

The details of the indictment paint a damning picture of an organization that claims to fight hate, but may have been secretly fueling it, raising questions about the SPLC's true goals and motivations.