
The far-left Southern Poverty Law Center’s hypocrisy just hit a new low and this time it’s personal, sleazy, and allegedly involved actual neo-Nazis.
According to a New York Post exclusive citing the Department of Justice superseding indictment, former SPLC Director of the Intelligence Project Heidi Beirich was in a romantic relationship with a paid informant inside the white supremacist National Alliance.
The SPLC funneled more than $1.2 million in donor money to the man, identified only as “F-9.” The pair even shared a house and two joint bank accounts, with SPLC donor funds allegedly used to cover their personal living expenses.
This is the same SPLC that built a $700+ million empire by branding conservatives, Christians, pro-life activists, and Trump supporters as “hate groups” while secretly bankrolling real extremists.
The New York Post reported:
The Department of Justice filed a superseding indictment against the SPLC accusing it of funneling donor cash to hate groups they were then telling donors they were fighting.
One figure, referred to as “Employee-2” in the indictment, is described as a “person who would become Director of the SPLC’s Intelligence Project.”
It also describes how “Employee-2” 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.
Based on the details in the June 2 superseding indictment, “Employee-2” is believed to be Heidi Beirich, a 58-year-old fascism expert who was the director of intelligence at the Alabama-based anti-extremism nonprofit between 2012 and 2019.
The indictment alleges Beirich was very close to the informant known only as “F-9” who “infiltrated the neo-Nazi organization National Alliance.”
“[Beirich] was also in a romantic relationship with F-9. During this relationship, [Beirich] and F-9 shared a house and two bank accounts,” the indictment alleges.
“Between 2015 and 2021, approximately $140,000 in donors’ money flowed from the SPLC operating account … and was ultimately deposited into the joint bank accounts held by F-9 and [Beirich].
F-9 allegedly infiltrated the National Alliance at the SPLC’s direction, raised money for the neo-Nazi group, and participated in its activities. In one documented episode, 25 boxes of documents were stolen from the National Alliance headquarters in West Virginia.
Beirich then authored a 2015 SPLC Hatewatch article titled “Chaos at the Compound” based on the stolen materials. To cover their tracks, the SPLC allegedly paid another informant $6,000 to falsely take the blame for the burglary.
The post SPLC ‘Fascism Expert’ Funneled $1.2 MILLION in Donor Cash to Her Neo-Nazi Informant/Lover — They Even Shared Joint Bank Accounts and a House, Feds Say appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
