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BootinUp

(51,643 posts)
Wed Apr 22, 2026, 08:41 AM Apr 22

Investigating the Good Guys

Excerpt from Joyce Vance's substack article on the DOJ indictment of the Southern Poverty Law Center

At first blush, these allegations feel like an extension of the revenge docket and the attacks on universities and law firms, an effort to delegitimize and marginalize an organization that is pushing back against the administration. We’ll have a chance to study the charges as we learn more about the government’s evidence. The government’s core theory is that the SPLC paid high-ranking white supremacists, but they seem to ignore the reason—that the use of paid informants was essential to the intelligence the Center was gathering on the groups they were members of, including intelligence that was shared with the FBI.

Just like the federal government pays cooperating witnesses, including some within white supremacist domestic terror groups, in order to prosecute crimes those groups commit, the SPLC used paid informants to obtain information. "Klanwatch" refers to a project established in 1981 to monitor, investigate, and litigate against the Ku Klux Klan and other white supremacist hate groups in the United States. It focused on exposing extremist activity and curbing racist violence through legal action. There are obvious reasons for not publicizing the fact that you are recruiting sources, and that you’re paying them to accomplish your goals. But the proof is in the pudding, and this is a group that not only tried to take down white supremacist groups, but it was also highly successful. Suggesting that they were taking action designed to enrich the informants they were paying for some nefarious, unspecified reasons would be silly if the consequences here weren’t so serious.

In his announcement this morning, which you can watch here, Fair, the acting president of the Center, acknowledged that it had sometimes used paid informants. But he defended the Center’s work. “We will not be intimidated into silence or contrition, and we will not abandon our mission,” Fair said. “We will vigorously defend ourselves, our staff, and our work.” This Justice Department—as Kash Patel said during the press conference, this was Donald Trump’s Justice Department going after “fraud”—sees fraud. But if you’re trying to infiltrate one of those groups, the kind of people willing to affiliate themselves with successor groups to the Klan, like Aryan Nation, League of the South, and the Army of God, paying for information is the logical path forward.

Expect a flurry of pre-trial motions from the defense, including ones to dismiss. If this case goes to trial, it will be up to a jury—a trial jury that will hear both sides of the case, not just the government’s side, which was presented to the grand jury to obtain the indictment.

full article https://open.substack.com/pub/joycevance/p/investigating-the-good-guys

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Investigating the Good Guys (Original Post) BootinUp Apr 22 OP
The Justice Department Sides With the Ku Klux Klan LetMyPeopleVote Apr 24 #1

LetMyPeopleVote

(182,068 posts)
1. The Justice Department Sides With the Ku Klux Klan
Fri Apr 24, 2026, 07:13 PM
Apr 24

The administration’s vindictive targeting of the Southern Poverty Law Center is yet another mask-off moment.

The Justice Department Sides With the Ku Klux Klan

The administration’s vindictive targeting of the Southern Poverty Law Center is yet another mask-off moment.

Jon Cooper (@joncooper-us.bsky.social) 2026-04-24T15:42:01.876Z

https://newrepublic.com/article/209432/justice-department-klan-splc-suit

The United States did not always have a Department of Justice. President Ulysses S. Grant founded it in 1870 to help suppress the Ku Klux Klan in the Southern states and enforce federal civil rights protections for formerly enslaved Americans. On Tuesday, Justice Department officials announced what may be the first Klan-friendly prosecution in the department’s history.

The Southern Poverty Law Center, or SPLC, is one of the most influential civil rights groups in the nation. Founded in 1971, it has spent the last five decades monitoring, documenting, and exposing hate groups and violent extremists. The group rose to national fame in the 1980s by financially breaking the modern Klan through strategic lawsuits on behalf of its victims. The SPLC’s most persistent targets have been white nationalist groups like the Klan and various neo-Nazi gangs, but its work has expanded over the years, as well. (More on that later.)....

That brings us back to Blanche’s claims that the organization was “paying sources to stoke racial hatred.” A cynical observer might suspect that the Trump Justice Department’s goal is to blame the work of white nationalist groups on the civil rights groups that oppose them. There is a long history of Klan denialism in this country that minimizes the actions of violent white supremacists, often by blaming their actions on their victims and opponents.

It is horrifying to see the Justice Department, whose original mission was to fight the Klan, engage in similar denialism. At least some conservative commentators appear to be buying it too. “Given the small and marginal nature of these groups, the obvious conclusion is that the SPLC found that demand for racism outstripped the supply, so it had to spread cash around to keep talking up these fringe groups,” McLaughlin wrote.
.
In reality, there has been an alarming resurgence in white supremacist organizations since Trump first captured the presidency in 2016. White nationalist rhetoric, which was politically fatal 10 years ago, is now regularly espoused by Trump administration officials and even by official government publications. Now the Justice Department is throwing its full weight behind a flimsy prosecution in an effort to destroy one of the Klan’s greatest opponents. There is no subtlety about what is happening here.

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