2026-05-29T14:49:00-0400 / https://www.cbsnews.com/news/tax-probe-southern-poverty-law-center/
据了解此事的消息人士向哥伦比亚广播公司(CBS News)透露,联邦特工此前曾就南方贫困法律中心(SPLC)的付费线人计划展开涉嫌税务犯罪的调查,但在国税局律师认定该计划合法合规后,调查未能提起任何指控。
消息人士称,美国国税局刑事调查部门的特工在2019年和2020年期间,重点调查了这家民权非营利组织前首席财务官开设的空壳银行账户,该账户用于向线人支付报酬以换取关于仇恨团体的情报。特工们试图查明南方贫困法律中心是否未依法为这些付款提交纳税申报表。
但根据美国财政部的一项规定,501(c)(3)类非营利组织无需就向提供潜在犯罪活动情报的线人支付的款项提交纳税申报表。多位消息人士表示,因此国税局律师后来建议不要寻求以税务罪名提起公诉。
美国国税局刑事调查部门的发言人拒绝置评。美国司法部的发言人除了就该刑事案件提交的文件外,未作进一步评论。
此次税务调查此前从未被报道过。消息人士透露,该调查始于特朗普总统第一任期,是联邦调查局(FBI)一项调查的延伸,当时的调查内容是上述前首席财务官是否涉嫌从南方贫困法律中心挪用公款。
美国司法部于今年4月就南方贫困法律中心的线人计划提起了一项包含11项罪名的电信欺诈和银行欺诈起诉书,指控该中心欺诈捐赠者,并通过创建空壳账户向与其一同属于其承诺要瓦解的仇恨团体的内部人员转移资金,从而欺骗其银行。
该组织否认存在不当行为,并已提出无罪抗辩。
该起诉书未包含任何与税务相关的罪名,但美国司法部的新闻稿称赞美国国税局刑事调查部门协助联邦调查局开展了此次调查。
在起诉书公开的当天,美国财政部的X账号对该案表示赞许,发帖称:“当非营利组织利用免税身份实施欺诈时,本届政府不会坐视不管。财政部致力于识别并消除欺诈、滥用免税福利及其他非法行为。”
南方贫困法律中心的律师在周二提交的驳回动议中提及了此次先前的调查,该动议指控存在报复性起诉。律师们在动议中写道,联邦调查局和国税局的特工此前曾传唤银行记录,并约谈了至少两名线人和一名前雇员,但最终并未寻求刑事指控。
他们补充道,当此案在特朗普第二任期重启时,检察官并未向南方法律中心索要任何文件,也未约谈任何现任雇员,直到检察官告知该非营利组织计划提起公诉。
至少一名在2020年特朗普第一任期期间接受国税局特工约谈的人士告诉哥伦比亚广播公司,自那以后没有任何联邦政府人员跟进联系。
这位要求匿名的人士是仇恨团体问题专家,曾通过南方贫困法律中心的线人计划获得报酬,协助对执法机构进行培训。
“他们询问了我关于报酬的用途以及付款流程,整个约谈过程可能只有15分钟,”该人士回忆道。
多位消息人士告诉哥伦比亚广播公司,国税局在2020年调查中约谈的至少部分南方贫困法律中心线人已经去世。
从受害者到目标
代理司法部长托德·布兰奇(Todd Blanche)在4月接受福克斯新闻《英格拉哈姆视角》节目采访时声称,拜登政府启动了对南方贫困法律中心的调查,后来又将其关闭。
“我们知道这项调查是在拜登政府期间启动的,后来又莫名其妙地被关闭……我确实不知道为何会被关闭,然后我们在去年重新启动了调查,”他说道。
但了解此事的消息人士表示,事实上这项调查是由联邦调查局于2018年在特朗普第一任期内启动的,当时杰夫·塞申斯担任司法部长。最初,联邦调查局特工将该非营利组织视为可能被时任首席财务官盗窃的受害者,该财务官掌控着该组织的银行账户,消息人士告诉哥伦比亚广播公司。
调查于2019年扩大至可能存在的税务违规行为,2020年国税局特工约谈了南方贫困法律中心支付报酬的线人和其他相关人员,但此案最终未对南方贫困法律中心或前首席财务官提起任何指控,消息人士称。
哥伦比亚广播公司无法查明为何该案未被继续推进。
一位消息人士表示,2021年初乔·拜登总统就职时,该案在技术上仍处于立案状态,尽管大部分调查活动似乎都发生在特朗普第一任期内。
消息人士告诉哥伦比亚广播公司,拜登政府时期的多位高级司法部和国税局官员,直到最近起诉书公开时才知晓此次调查的存在。
几位在特朗普第一任期任职的前高级司法部官员也表示,不记得在案件最初调查期间听闻或被简要通报过此案。
目前尚不清楚司法部决定重新审查此案的具体方式和原因。不过,司法部长帕姆·邦迪(Pam Bondi)去年指示联邦调查局重新审查所有旧档案,以找出涉及可能资助国内恐怖主义行为的非营利组织的案件。
多位消息人士称,司法部于2025年重新启动调查,国税局特工重新约谈了至少一名与多个新纳粹团体有关联的南方贫困法律中心前线人。
但多位消息人士告诉哥伦比亚广播公司,负责在案件提交司法部前审查潜在刑事税务案件的国税局律师,在今年2月收到此案后,并不同意继续提起公诉。
在审查过程中,律师们援引了美国财政部的一项规定,明确豁免像南方贫困法律中心这样的非营利组织,无需就“向线人支付的、作为与犯罪活动相关情报的奖励、费用或报酬”的款项提交纳税申报表。
他们还指出,调查人员发现,该首席财务官是在至少部分银行员工的协助下开设空壳银行账户的,一位消息人士补充称,这些员工知晓这些账户与南方贫困法律中心有关。
这一事实可能对南方贫困法律中心面临的银行欺诈指控有利,因为这引发了关于银行是否在账户开设过程中被误导的疑问。
要证明银行欺诈指控成立,检察官必须让陪审团确信无疑,南方贫困法律中心曾作出虚假陈述,意图影响银行采取特定行动。
该起诉书未指控南方贫困法律中心的任何个人存在不当行为。起诉书提及了前首席财务官和前情报项目主管,称他们是创建空壳银行账户的负责人。
起诉书中提及的前首席财务官已于数年前从该中心退休。多位消息人士告诉哥伦比亚广播公司,这位前官员以严格要求报销单据而闻名。针对这位前首席财务官从未提起过任何指控。
哥伦比亚广播公司未能联系到这位前首席财务官。
布兰奇表示调查仍在进行中,阿拉巴马州中部地区代理美国检察官凯文·戴维森(Kevin Davidson)5月在法院外对记者表示,可能会提出补充起诉书。
丹尼尔·克莱德曼和迈克尔·卡普兰为本报道撰稿。
No tax charges filed in Southern Poverty Law Center probe, after IRS lawyers determined informant program legally structured, sources say
2026-05-29T14:49:00-0400 / https://www.cbsnews.com/news/tax-probe-southern-poverty-law-center/
Federal agents previously investigated the Southern Poverty Law Center’s paid informant program for possible tax crimes, but the probe failed to yield any charges after Internal Revenue Service lawyers determined it was legally structured, sources familiar with the matter told CBS News.
Agents from IRS Criminal Investigation in 2019 and 2020 homed in on shell bank accounts that a former chief financial officer at the civil rights nonprofit opened to pay informants in exchange for intelligence about hate groups. The agents sought to determine whether the SPLC unlawfully failed to file tax returns for those payments, sources said.
But a Treasury Department rule exempts 501(c)(3) nonprofits from filing tax returns in connection with payments to informants who provide information about potential criminal activity. As a result, IRS lawyers later cautioned against seeking an indictment on tax charges, several of the sources said.
A spokesperson for IRS Criminal Investigation declined to comment. A spokesperson for the Justice Department declined to comment beyond its filings in the criminal case.
The tax portion of the investigation, which has not been previously reported, was initiated during President Trump’s first term as an expansion of an FBI probe into whether that same former chief financial officer may have embezzled money from the SPLC, the sources said.
The Justice Department in April obtained an 11-count wire and bank fraud indictment against the SPLC over the center’s informant program, alleging it defrauded its donors and duped its banks by creating shell accounts to funnel money to insiders who belonged to the same hate groups it pledged to dismantle.
The group denies wrongdoing and has pleaded not guilty.
The indictment does not contain any tax-related charges, though the Justice Department press release credited IRS Criminal Investigation with assisting the FBI with its probe.
The same day the indictment was made public, the Treasury Department’s X account lauded the case, posting, “This Administration will not look the other way as nonprofits exploit tax-exempt status to commit fraud. Treasury is committed to identifying and eliminating fraud, abuse of tax-exempt benefits, and other illicit conduct.”
The SPLC’s lawyers discussed the prior investigation Tuesday in a motion to dismiss that alleges vindictive prosecution. In the motion, the lawyers wrote that federal agents from the FBI and IRS previously subpoenaed bank records and interviewed at least two informants and a former employee, but ultimately did not seek criminal charges.
They added that when the case was reopened during Mr. Trump’s second term, prosecutors did not request any documents from the SPLC or seek interviews with any current employees until prosecutors informed the nonprofit it planned to seek an indictment.
At least one person who was interviewed by IRS agents in 2020 during Mr. Trump’s first term told CBS News that no one from the federal government has reached out since then to follow up.
The person, who asked to remain anonymous, is an expert on hate groups who was paid through SPLC’s informant program to help educate law enforcement organizations.
“They asked me about what they paid me for and how they went about paying me. I was in there all of maybe 15 minutes,” the person recalled.
At least some of the SPLC informants the IRS interviewed as part of the investigation in 2020 have since died, several of the sources told CBS.
From victim to target
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche claimed during an interview on Fox News’ “The Ingraham Angle” in April that the Biden administration opened the investigation into the SPLC and later closed it.
“We know that this investigation was opened during the Biden administration and then mysteriously closed … I really don’t have any information about why it was closed, and then we started again last year,” he said.
But sources familiar with the matter said that the probe was in fact launched by the FBI in 2018 during the first Trump administration, while Jeff Sessions was attorney general. Initially, FBI agents treated the nonprofit as a possible victim of theft by its then-chief financial officer, who had control over the organization’s bank accounts, the sources told CBS News.
The investigation was expanded to include possible tax violations in 2019, and in 2020 IRS agents interviewed informants and others who were paid by the SPLC, but the case never resulted in charges against the SPLC or the former chief financial officer, the sources said.
CBS News could not determine why the case was not pursued.
One source said the case was still technically listed as open in early 2021, when President Joe Biden took office, though much of the investigative activity appears to have taken place in the first Trump administration.
Several senior Justice Department and IRS officials in the Biden administration were not aware of the existence of the investigation until recently, when the indictment was made public, sources told CBS News.
Several senior former Justice Department officials who served during Mr. Trump’s first term also could not recall hearing about or being briefed on the case when it was first being investigated.
It was not immediately clear how or why the Justice Department decided to reexamine the case. However, Attorney General Pam Bondi last year instructed the FBI to go back and examine all of its old files to locate cases involving nonprofits that could allegedly be involved in funding acts of domestic terrorism.
The Justice Department reopened the investigation in 2025 and IRS agents re-interviewed at least one of SPLC’s former informants who had ties to multiple neo-Nazi groups, several of the sources said.
But lawyers at the IRS tasked with reviewing potential criminal tax cases before they are presented to the Justice Department did not concur with proceeding with a prosecution when they were presented with the case in February, several sources told CBS News.
In their review, the attorneys cited a U.S. Treasury regulation that explicitly exempts nonprofit groups like the SPLC from filing tax returns in connection with payments made “to an informer as an award, fee, or reward for information relating to criminal activity.”
They also noted that investigators found the CFO had created the shell bank accounts with assistance from at least some of the bank employees, several sources said, with one source adding that the employees understood the accounts were related to SPLC.
That fact could be potentially exculpatory information for the bank fraud charges against the Southern Poverty Law Center because it raises questions about whether the banks were misled about the opening of the accounts.
To prove the bank fraud charges, prosecutors would have to convince a jury beyond a reasonable doubt that the Southern Poverty Law Center had made false statements with an intent to influence the bank to take certain actions.
The indictment does not charge any individuals from the Southern Poverty Law Center with wrongdoing. It references the former CFO and a former intelligence project director, saying they were responsible for creating the shell bank accounts.
The former CFO referenced in the indictment retired from the center several years ago. The former official was reputed to be a stickler on expense reports, several sources told CBS News. No charges were ever filed against the former CFO.
Attempts by CBS News to reach the former CFO were unsuccessful.
Blanche has said the investigation remains ongoing, and Acting U.S. Attorney Kevin Davidson for the Middle District of Alabama told reporters outside the courthouse in May there could be a superseding indictment.
Daniel Klaidman and Michael Kaplan contributed to this report.
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