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US congressional panel asks Southern Poverty Law Center boss to testify

By Thomson Reuters Apr 28, 2026 | 10:06 PM

By Kanishka Singh

WASHINGTON, April 28 (Reuters) – The chairman of the Republican-led U.S. House of Representatives Judiciary Committee on Tuesday asked the Southern Poverty Law ​Center’s boss to testify before the panel ‌in May after the civil rights group was indicted last week.

Here are some details:

• President Donald Trump’s administration obtained a criminal indictment last week charging SPLC with defrauding its own donors ‌by ​using paid informants to infiltrate ⁠far-right organizations.

• SPLC is ⁠a civil rights group that tracks political extremists. It condemned last week’s charges as “false allegations.”

• “We respectfully request your testimony at a hearing of the Committee ​on the Judiciary on May 20, 2026,” U.S. Representative Jim Jordan from Trump’s Republican Party said in ⁠a letter to Bryan Fair, ⁠SPLC’s interim president and CEO.

• Many rights ​advocates have raised alarm over what they call the ​Trump administration’s crackdown on civil rights groups and ‌voices of dissent.

• The 55-year-old law center had long shared information it collected with the FBI and other law enforcement groups before the Trump administration cut ties ⁠with the SPLC six months ago.

• The congressional hearing will examine the role that SPLC “has played in distorting federal civil ⁠rights policy ‌in recent years,” Jordan said in ⁠his letter on Tuesday.

• Jordan claimed SPLC’s ​reports ‌on hate in the U.S. included a “highly ​partisan understanding ⁠of ‘hate'” against conservatives.

• SPLC says its program of paid informants has “saved lives” and was not a secret to the federal government.

• The FBI also uses paid informants in its investigations.

(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing ​by Kate Mayberry)