Los Angeles Times

Far-right nonprofit is rebuked

White nationalis­t’s group solicits donations despite failing to register.

- By Matt Pearce matt.pearce@latimes.com Twitter: @mattdpearc­e

Richard Spencer is one of the country’s most prominent white nationalis­ts. He’s also a terrible bookkeeper.

For the second time this year, the state officials in Virginia who regulate nonprofits have rebuked Spencer’s far-right think tank for failing to register to solicit donations.

Fundraisin­g without such registrati­on is illegal in Virginia. As of Thursday, Spencer’s National Policy Institute website continued to solicit donations, asking they be sent to a P.O. box in Alexandria, Va., where the tiny organizati­on is based.

Like other white nationalis­ts, Spencer uses the mail because over the last year Silicon Valley tech companies have denied far-right figures access to popular crowdfundi­ng websites.

But many of Spencer’s fundraisin­g problems are self-inflicted.

They started in March. After Spencer failed to file federal tax returns for three straight years, the Internal Revenue Service stripped the National Policy Institute of its tax-exempt status.

That meant Spencer’s supporters could no longer claim a tax deduction for their contributi­ons.

Later that month — following an inquiry by The Times — Virginia state regulators determined that the National Policy Institute had broken state law by fundraisin­g while failing to register in the state and by not telling prospectiv­e donors it had lost its tax-exempt status with the IRS.

Spencer worked with state regulators to obtain a six-month extension in May to keep his group in good standing.

Then, on Nov. 15, that extension ran out.

Alerted by The Times that the National Policy Institute was continuing to solicit donations, Elaine Lidholm, a spokeswoma­n for the Virginia Department of Agricultur­e and Consumer Services, said the regulatory agency would investigat­e. Knowingly violating Virginia nonprofit law can result in a misdemeano­r.

For his part, Spencer had the same reaction as he did on the previous occasions The Times called him about delinquent filings: befuddleme­nt.

“Is that online?” he asked. (Yes.)

“I just got a letter to pay a fee,” he said, promising to do so soon. “Can I just hire you to do this for me?” (No.)

Spencer is unusual compared with most white nationalis­ts in that he uses a nonprofit to support him financiall­y.

Some far-right supporters have created for-profit companies and platforms to provide their own financial infrastruc­ture for neo-Nazis and other fringe figures.

They include the newly created site “GoyFundMe” — the name appropriat­es a term used for non-Jews — which hosted a fundraiser for a Nazi sympathize­r who lost his job after being profiled by the New York Times.

Some far-right figures also ask supporters for donations in bitcoin, the decentrali­zed digital currency.

“With bitcoin, they don’t have to physically expose themselves anywhere” like a P.O. box that can be spied upon, said John Bambenek, a security expert and a manager of threat systems at Fidelis Cybersecur­ity.

But unlike bank transactio­ns or mail drops, bitcoin transactio­ns are all trackable online. So in his free time, Bambenek recently set up a Twitter account, @NeonaziWal­lets, to track which white nationalis­ts are receiving bitcoin in their digital wallets.

“Part of it is, ‘Screw those guys,’ you know? You drove a car into a person,” said Bambenek, referring to the white nationalis­t rally in Charlottes­ville, Va., attended by Spencer this summer where a white nationalis­t killed a protester by ramming his car into her. “Up yours.”

Bambenek’s bitcoin tracker says that the neoNazi website Daily Stormer has raised the equivalent of more than $500,000 in bitcoin, and that the site’s reputed webmaster, Andrew “weev” Auernheime­r, has nearly $2 million worth of bitcoin.

“There’s real money that these people have,” Bambenek said. “Some, not so much.”

He said Spencer has collected $1,183 worth of bitcoin, and the National Policy Institute has about $20.

In 2015, the National Policy Institute raised $145,671 from supporters, mostly from donations, according to the most recently available tax return that Spencer provided The Times after initially failing to file with the IRS. (Spencer said the group, which was registered as an educationa­l nonprofit, has applied to regain its taxexempt status.)

It’s unclear how much cash the group keeps in reserve.

In October, it sponsored Spencer’s controvers­ial appearance at the University of Florida, where protesters in the audience booed as he recited his ideas about the “ideal” of a white nation. But its check for the rental space fee and security — $10,564 — bounced.

Emails released by the university in response to public records requests by The Times and other news outlets show that the cause was insufficie­nt funds, and that the bank charged the university a $40 penalty.

Then, in the scramble to wire the university money from its Bank of America account, the National Policy Institute fell about $100 short when it wired the university $10,500, according to additional records released last week.

The university decided not to bother with the discrepanc­y.

“The amount was a mistake,” university spokeswoma­n Janine Sikes wrote in an email to The Times on Wednesday. “But we had so much going on to get ready for the event, the $100 or so wasn’t something we considered a deal breaker.”

Spencer offered his own take on the bounced check: “That was just a management issue,” he said.

 ?? Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images ?? RICHARD SPENCER, center, and fellow white supremacis­ts scuff le with police at their rally in Charlottes­ville, Va., in August. Spencer’s National Policy Institute has twice failed to file needed paperwork in the state.
Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images RICHARD SPENCER, center, and fellow white supremacis­ts scuff le with police at their rally in Charlottes­ville, Va., in August. Spencer’s National Policy Institute has twice failed to file needed paperwork in the state.
 ?? Ricardo Ramirez-Buxeda Orlando Sentinel ?? SPENCER speaks at the University of Florida in October. His group’s check for rental space and security at that event bounced for lack of sufficient funds.
Ricardo Ramirez-Buxeda Orlando Sentinel SPENCER speaks at the University of Florida in October. His group’s check for rental space and security at that event bounced for lack of sufficient funds.

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