Southern Poverty Law Center seeks dismissal of 'vindictive' Justice
Department indictment
[May 27, 2026]
By ERIC TUCKER
WASHINGTON (AP) — A Justice Department indictment against the Southern
Poverty Law Center is part of a “top-down” campaign of retribution
against President Donald Trump's perceived political enemies and
constitutes a vindictive prosecution that must be dismissed, lawyers for
the nonprofit argued Tuesday in urging a judge to toss the case out.
The Alabama-based nonprofit was indicted in April on fraud and money
laundering charges that accuse it of misleading donors by paying
informants inside white supremacist and other extremist organizations to
obtain inside information about their activities.
Lawyers for the SPLC have already argued that law enforcement agencies
have long known that the nonprofit paid informants to report on the
movements of hate groups. They have also said acting Attorney General
Todd Blanche made a false statement at a news conference when he said
the organization had not shared with law enforcement information it had
learned from informants. Blanche later appeared to walk back that claim
in a television interview, saying it was true that the SPLC had
“selectively” shared information with law enforcement over the years.
The attorneys for the center expanded on those arguments Tuesday, saying
in a legal brief seeking to dismiss the case that the prosecution was
the “culmination of a top-down, retributive campaign" in which Trump
pushed the Justice Department "to go after those individuals and groups
he deemed his political enemies, including the SPLC.”

Defense says indictment fits broader retaliation campaign
The brief was filed against the backdrop of other politically charged
prosecutions that have raised concerns that the Justice Department is
operating as a weapon to target Trump's opponents. It drew a parallel
between the SPLC indictment and the human smuggling prosecution of
Kilmar Abrego Garcia, which was dismissed Friday on similar vindictive
prosecution grounds by a judge who called the case an “abuse of
prosecuting power.”
The SPLC has said its now-defunct program of paying informants to
infiltrate hate groups was developed to glean key insights into their
activities so that potential victims could be protected. An earlier
federal investigation into the practice was closed without charges, but
the brief paints the current Justice Department as pursuing the case
with renewed — and rushed — vigor.
The department decided to pursue the indictment without having
interviewed any current SPLC employees, and did not seek any documents
from the group until after it had told defense lawyers that criminal
charges were forthcoming, defense lawyers say.
During a meeting requested by defense lawyers who hoped to avert to
indictment, Justice Department officials informed them that the decision
had already been made to pursue charges, according to the brief.
“These procedural irregularities show that the charges against the SPLC
were a foregone conclusion based on prosecutorial vindictiveness —
driven by the White House and FBI leadership’s retribution campaign —
rather than the result of a good faith examination of the evidence,” the
document states. It says the indictment was “premised on conclusory
accusations but devoid of provable facts or a proper statement of the
law.”
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Acting U.S. attorney general Todd Blanche speaks during a news
conference at the Justice Department, May 4, 2026, in Washington.
(AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson, File)

The motion also cites whistleblower accounts that accused top Justice
Department officials of rushing forward with an indictment despite
internal concerns about the merits of the case and the strength of the
evidence.
“For weeks, we have been arguing against these false allegations levied
against the SPLC — an organization that for 55 years has stood as a
beacon of hope fighting white supremacy and various forms of injustice
to create a multiracial democracy where we can all live and thrive,”
Bryan Fair, the interim president and CEO of SPLC, said in a statement.
“The government can’t prosecute the SPLC as payback for its protected
speech — it violates basic constitutional rights," he said.
The administration has painted SPLC as partisan
Founded in 1971 as a civil rights organization, the SPLC over the
decades has used litigation to fight white supremacist groups. It also
tracks the activities and locations of domestic extremists. But its work
has made it a popular target among Republicans who see it as overly
leftist and partisan.
The center, for instance, received fresh attention last year after the
assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk because the SPLC had
included a section on the group that Kirk founded and led, Turning Point
USA, in a report titled “The Year in Hate and Extremism 2024."
FBI Director Kash Patel announced in October that the bureau would be
severing its relationship with the SPLC, saying it had turned into a
“partisan smear machine,” and he accused it of defaming “mainstream
Americans” with its “hate map” that documents alleged anti-government
and hate groups inside the United States.
The defense motion says “animus” from senior levels of the
administration helped shape the indictment.

It cites, among other comments, a statement from Trump himself deriding
the SPLC as “a total scam run by the Democrats,” as well as a news media
interview in which Harmeet Dhillon, the Justice Department's top civil
rights official, said the indictment was “personal” to her because she
had “a lot of journalist friends ... and groups that I’ve represented
who have been targeted by the Southern Poverty Law Center.”
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