联邦调查局与国税局将调查涉嫌与国内恐怖主义有关联的非营利组织,消息人士称


2026年3月18日 / 美国东部时间下午3:21 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻

消息人士向哥伦比亚广播公司新闻透露,联邦调查局(FBI)和国税局(IRS)特工正在发起一项新行动,以调查涉嫌与国内恐怖主义有关联的非营利组织。

去年12月,司法部长帕姆·邦迪(Pam Bondi)下令执法机构和联邦检察官优先调查和起诉属于反法西斯”反法西斯主义者”(antifa)运动或被视为”极端分子”的团体和个人。

邦迪在12月4日的备忘录中写道:”这些国内恐怖分子使用暴力或暴力威胁来推进政治和社会议程,包括反对法律和移民执法;支持大规模移民和开放边境的极端观点;坚持激进的性别意识形态、反美主义、反资本主义或反基督教。”

该备忘录要求执法人员考虑极端主义团体可能存在的”税务犯罪”,即”涉嫌欺骗美国国税局”。

联邦调查局发言人拒绝置评。

司法部发言人表示:”司法部完全致力于维护法治,保护执法人员免受有组织攻击,确保每个人都能在公共场合自由发言、自由参与选举进程,并在不受暴力或伤害恐惧的情况下践行信仰,将所有从事符合国会对国内恐怖主义定义的犯罪行为的犯罪分子绳之以法。”

一名政府官员证实了联邦调查局与国税局合作的计划,补充称重点将放在探索支持国内恐怖主义或政治暴力的非营利组织的潜在资金来源上。

消息人士补充称,调查非营利组织的新”任务控制指挥中心”将设在联邦调查局,国税局刑事调查部门的特工将执行为期一年的临时任务。

目前尚不清楚哪些团体可能成为调查目标,但邦迪的备忘录指示所有联邦执法机构梳理其档案中关于反法西斯团体的情报并提交给联邦调查局。

联邦调查局还被下令制定一份从事”可能构成国内恐怖主义”行为的团体名单,联邦法律对”国内恐怖主义”的定义即为此。

根据法律,此类个人或团体实施的是”危害人类生命的行为”,发生在美国境内,可能旨在恐吓或胁迫民众、通过恐吓影响政府政策,或通过大规模破坏、暗杀或绑架”影响政府行为”。

尽管法律对该术语有定义,但美国法律中尚无针对国内恐怖主义的刑事指控。检察官通常以其他罪名起诉被告,并在量刑时寻求恐怖主义加重处罚。

美国司法部国家安全部前国内恐怖主义法律顾问汤姆·布佐夫斯基(Tom Brzozowski)表示,邦迪12月备忘录中提出的调查方法令人担忧,这引发了关于联邦调查局为合法证明创建目标调查团体名单而需要何种前提条件的质疑。

他告诉哥伦比亚广播公司新闻:”联邦调查人员可以随意查看开源信息。他们不需要任何特定的前提条件就能做到这一点。’如果要收集信息并将其保存在政府数据集,就必须有前提条件——尤其是如果从调查角度进行查看时。’”

在特朗普总统9月底因一系列高调事件(包括2025年极右翼影响者查理·柯克遇刺)发布关于国内恐怖主义的行政命令后,邦迪发布了该备忘录。

一名知情人士称,除了联邦调查局与国税局的联合行动外,司法部副部长办公室也参与成立了一个专门调查与反法西斯相关团体资金的工作组。

消息人士补充称,美国检察官办公室也被要求指定一名国内恐怖主义协调员。

到目前为止,涉及反法西斯组织的公开刑事案件相对较少。

其中最引人注目的案件发生在得克萨斯州北部,本月早些时候,九名被指控属于所谓反法西斯组织的成员因使用武器和爆炸物、为恐怖分子提供物质支持、妨碍公务以及企图谋杀阿尔瓦拉多市警察和普雷里兰移民和海关执法局拘留中心的狱警而被定罪。

在周三联邦调查局局长卡什·帕特尔(Kash Patel)与其他高级政府情报官员一起在参议院情报委员会就全球威胁举行年度听证会时,”反法西斯主义者”(antifa)并未被提及,在2026年美国情报界未分类年度威胁评估中也未被引用。

帕特尔定于周四在众议院情报委员会就全球威胁举行第二次听证会,这是两场听证会中的第二场。

去年12月,在众议院国土安全委员会听证会上,一名联邦调查局高级官员作证称,反法西斯主义是最大威胁之一,但在回答关于该组织的结构、为何被联邦调查局定性等问题时却显得吃力。

FBI and IRS to investigate nonprofit groups for domestic terrorism links, sources say

March 18, 2026 / 3:21 PM EDT / CBS News

FBI and IRS agents are forming a new initiative to investigate nonprofit organizations over suspected possible links to domestic terrorism, sources briefed on the matter told CBS News.

In December, Attorney General Pam Bondi ordered law enforcement agencies and federal prosecutors to prioritize efforts to investigate and prosecute groups and individuals who belong to the anti-fascist antifa movement or are deemed “extremist.”

“These domestic terrorists use violence or the threat of violence to advance political and social agendas, including opposition to law and immigration enforcement; extreme views in favor of mass migration and open borders; adherence to radical gender ideology, anti-Americanism, anti-capitalism, or anti-Christianity,” Bondi wrote in the Dec. 4 memo.

The memo asked law enforcement agents to consider potential “tax crimes” in which extremist groups are “suspected of defrauding the Internal Revenue Service.”

A spokesperson for the FBI declined to comment.

“The Department of Justice is fully committed to preserving the rule of law, protecting law enforcement from coordinated attacks, ensuring everyone has the freedom to speak in the public square, participate freely in the electoral process, and practice their faith without fear of violence or harm, and bringing to justice the full range of criminal actors engaged in criminal conduct matching Congress’s definition of domestic terrorism,” a Justice Department spokesperson said.

A government official confirmed the plans for the FBI-IRS partnership, adding that the focus will be on exploring potential funding streams at nonprofits that support domestic terrorism or political violence.

The new “mission control command center” that is probing nonprofits will be based at the FBI, with agents from IRS Criminal Investigations working on one-year temporary assignments, one of the sources added.

It is not yet clear what groups could be targeted for investigation, though Bondi’s memo instructed all federal law enforcement agencies to scour their files for intelligence on antifa groups and forward it to the FBI.

The FBI was also ordered to develop a list of groups that are engaged in acts that “may constitute domestic terrorism,” as defined by federal law.

Such individuals or groups are, according to the law, involved in “acts dangerous to human life” that occur within the U.S. and may be intended to intimidate or coerce people, influence government policy through intimidation or affect the conduct of the government “by mass destruction, assassination or kidnapping.”

Although the term is defined in the law, there is no criminal charge on the books for domestic terrorism. Prosecutors typically charge defendants with other crimes and seek terrorism enhancements at sentencing.

Tom Brzozowski, the former domestic terrorism counsel at the Justice Department’s National Security Division, said the investigative approach laid out by Bondi in her December memo is concerning and raises questions about what predication the FBI has in order to legally justify creating a list of groups that should be targeted for criminal investigation.

Federal investigators “can look at open source information all they want. They don’t need any kind of particular predication to do that,” he told CBS News. “If you’re going to pull down information and retain it in a government data set, you have to have predication to do that – especially if you’re looking at it through an investigative lens.”

Bondi issued her memo after President Trump in late September issued an executive order on domestic terrorism that was sparked by a series of high-profile events, including the 2025 assassination of far-right influencer Charlie Kirk.

In addition to the FBI-IRS joint initiative, the deputy attorney general’s office has also been involved in creating a task force focused on looking into funding into antifa-linked groups, according to a source with direct knowledge of the matter.

U.S. attorney offices, meanwhile, have also been asked to assign a domestic terrorism coordinator, one of the sources added.

To date, there have been relatively few public criminal cases involving antifa.

The most prominent took place in northern Texas, where nine people accused of being part of a so-called antifa cell were convicted earlier this month for their roles in using weapons and explosives, providing material support to terrorists, obstruction, and attempted murder of an Alvarado police officer and correctional officers at the Prairieland ICE Detention Center.

Antifa, short for “anti-facist,” did not come up on Wednesday when FBI Director Kash Patel testified alongside other senior government intelligence officials before the Senate Intelligence Committee during its annual hearing on worldwide threats, nor was it referenced in the 2026 unclassified annual threat assessment of the intelligence community.

Patel is slated to appear again for the second of two worldwide threats hearings on Thursday, this time before the House Intelligence Committee.

During a hearing before the House Homeland Security Committee in December, a senior FBI official testified that antifa represented one of the biggest threats, but struggled to answer questions about the organization, its structure, or why the FBI labeled it as such.

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