They were paying the groups too. It's how they justified the individuals they were paying, being trustworthy.
The donors were shell companies they started.
"Did the SPLC infiltrators gain entry by claiming the infiltrators had friends with money, and then donations to the groups were made anomymously by shell companies the SPLC started?"
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"Yes, that is precisely the mechanism described in the federal indictment. The scheme relied on a layer of deception regarding the source of the funds to maintain the infiltrators' cover within the extremist groups.
The "Fake Donor" Protocol
According to the indictment and subsequent reporting, the process worked as follows:
The Cover Story: SPLC informants (referred to as "Field Sources" or "Fs") embedded in groups like the Ku Klux Klan or National Alliance would tell fellow members that they had wealthy friends, family members, or associates who sympathized with the cause and wanted to donate anonymously.
The Reality: These "friends" did not exist. The money was actually coming from the SPLC itself.
The Laundering Mechanism: To make the donations appear legitimate and untraceable to the SPLC, the organization set up shell companies with innocuous names like "Fox Photography," "Rare Books Warehouse," and "Center Investigative Agency."
The SPLC opened bank accounts for these fake entities.
Donor funds were transferred into these accounts.
Checks or wire transfers were then sent to the extremist groups or individuals from these shell companies, not the SPLC.
The Result: This allowed the infiltrators to gain status and trust within the organizations by acting as major fundraisers, granting them access to internal planning (such as the Unite the Right rally) and leadership circles that would otherwise be closed to outsiders."
They were paying the groups too. It's how they justified the individuals they were paying, being trustworthy.
The donors were shell companies they started.
======
"Yes, that is precisely the mechanism described in the federal indictment. The scheme relied on a layer of deception regarding the source of the funds to maintain the infiltrators' cover within the extremist groups.
The "Fake Donor" Protocol According to the indictment and subsequent reporting, the process worked as follows:
The Cover Story: SPLC informants (referred to as "Field Sources" or "Fs") embedded in groups like the Ku Klux Klan or National Alliance would tell fellow members that they had wealthy friends, family members, or associates who sympathized with the cause and wanted to donate anonymously.
The Reality: These "friends" did not exist. The money was actually coming from the SPLC itself.
The Laundering Mechanism: To make the donations appear legitimate and untraceable to the SPLC, the organization set up shell companies with innocuous names like "Fox Photography," "Rare Books Warehouse," and "Center Investigative Agency."
The SPLC opened bank accounts for these fake entities. Donor funds were transferred into these accounts. Checks or wire transfers were then sent to the extremist groups or individuals from these shell companies, not the SPLC.
The Result: This allowed the infiltrators to gain status and trust within the organizations by acting as major fundraisers, granting them access to internal planning (such as the Unite the Right rally) and leadership circles that would otherwise be closed to outsiders."
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