Los Angeles Times

White group’s nonprofit error

Richard Spencer’s nationalis­t think tank broke Virginia laws by failing to register.

- By Matt Pearce matt.pearce@latimes.com

Richard Spencer’s white nationalis­t think tank broke Virginia nonprofit laws by failing to register in the state and by not telling prospectiv­e donors it had lost its taxexempt status with the Internal Revenue Service, according to an investigat­ion by state regulators.

The violations were revealed in Virginia Department of Agricultur­e and Consumer Services records obtained by the Los Angeles Times through a public records request.

The agency, which oversees nonprofits in the state, closed its investigat­ion on June 8 after working with Spencer to bring his group back into compliance with Virginia law.

“We take this very seriously,” Spencer said in a private message on Twitter, where he shared a June 1 letter from the state confirming that his group has completed the registrati­on to legally operate in Virginia. “We’re doing everything we can to get everything in order.”

Over the last two years, Spencer has become one of the nation’s most prominent white nationalis­ts, popularizi­ng the term “alternativ­e right” or “alt-right” for his views supporting the creation of a separate nation for white people. He has frequently earned media attention for his support of President Trump or for controvers­ial events supported by his nonprofit for white nationalis­ts, called the National Policy Institute.

The Department of Agricultur­e and Consumer Services launched its investigat­ion in early March after The Times inquired about administra­tive irregulari­ties with Spencer’s Alexandria­based group.

In a recent filing with Virginia regulators, Spencer wrote that “the purpose of this charitable organizati­on is to secure the existence of our people and a future for white children,” a variation of the “14 words” slogan popular with white nationalis­ts.

Since Spencer took over the National Policy Institute in 2011, the group has been plagued by administra­tive problems. Spencer didn’t file federal tax returns for three years, leading the IRS to retroactiv­ely strip the National Policy Institute of its 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status in mid-March.

In its recent investigat­ion, regulators at the Virginia Department of Agricultur­e and Consumer Services found that Spencer was fundraisin­g in the state despite failing to register his group as required under Virginia law, according to department records.

The agency also said the National Policy Institute broke state law by not telling prospectiv­e donors on its website that the group had lost its tax-exempt status, potentiall­y misinformi­ng donors that they would be able to claim tax deductions with the IRS.

“NPI is aware of their 501c3 status being revoked ... yet continues to claim 501c3 status on their donation pages,” an investigat­or noted in a summary of the review of Spencer’s group.

Spencer had publicly acknowledg­ed the loss of the group’s tax-exempt status on social media and in an interview with The Times. Spencer said an IRS error led him to believe his group was not required to file federal tax returns. (Experts said that was no excuse.)

Virginia regulators also raised their eyebrows at an interview Spencer gave to The Times in March in which Spencer said his group had completed the necessary paperwork to operate as a nonprofit in Virginia.

That was not true — Spencer didn’t file for registrati­on with Virginia charity regulators until April, according to state records reviewed by The Times — which regulators concluded might be a violation of a state law that prohibits misleading the public about the status of a charitable group.

Spencer told The Times on Monday that it was a misunderst­anding and that he meant he had registered the National Policy Institute as a nonprofit corporatio­n in Virginia — a separate regulatory requiremen­t with a separate Virginia agency. “At the time, I was unaware that additional charitable registrati­on was needed,” Spencer wrote.

In certain circumstan­ces, knowing violations of Virginia charitable law can be punishable as a misdemeano­r, but Spencer does not appear to have been accused of any criminal wrongdoing.

Spencer worked quickly to restore his group’s legal status in Virginia after state regulators contacted him about the infraction­s, according to state records. Spencer paid a $300 fee to register in the state and inserted a clause on his group’s donation page that clarifies that “donations to the National Policy Institute are not tax deductible.”

Spencer has previously said he plans to restore his group’s tax-exempt status, though the process, if successful, was expected to take months. An IRS database of nonprofits says that the National Policy Institute does not currently have tax-exempt status.

 ?? David J. Phillip Associated Press ?? “WE TAKE this very seriously,” Richard Spencer said. He showed The Times a letter from Virginia confirming his group fixed its registrati­on problem.
David J. Phillip Associated Press “WE TAKE this very seriously,” Richard Spencer said. He showed The Times a letter from Virginia confirming his group fixed its registrati­on problem.

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