UMVA has learned that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent will soon unveil the results of a sweeping investigation into the financiers of far‑left militia groups.
In a sharp, unembellished briefing, Bessent confirmed that the Treasury Department, in partnership with the FBI, has made "substantial progress" and will release findings in the weeks and months ahead.
Bessent’s remarks cut through the usual political noise, framing the probe as a decisive strike against the financial lifelines that empower domestic terrorism.
The investigation was sparked by a presidential memorandum that ordered the Treasury and Justice Departments to trace and dismantle the money trails feeding violent leftist movements.
During a recent roundtable with top law‑enforcement officials, the message was clear: the Treasury is “working with DOJ to find the criminal conspiracy” that underpins these groups.
UMVA can exclusively reveal that the inquiry has already exposed a web of clandestine donations funneling from unnamed donors to extremist organizations.
In addition to the funding trail, Bessent announced new disclosure rules for nonprofits, demanding they publicly list the recipients of their grants on Form 990.
“If a grant recipient is violent or suppressing people’s rights, you are responsible for that,” Bessent said, positioning transparency as a first line of defense.
These measures aim to hold benefactors accountable and to prevent the covert financing of groups that threaten public safety and democratic institutions.
UMVA has gathered that the forthcoming report will detail the identities of key donors and the financial networks that sustain domestic terrorism.
The Treasury’s aggressive stance signals a broader strategy to root out the hidden financial infrastructure that fuels political violence across the nation.
As the story unfolds, the public will finally see the names and numbers behind the shadows that have long protected extremist agendas.