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MS NOW Defends SPLC Indictment as Political, as it Airs Their Ads
At the end of Thursday’s Morning Joe, co-host Jonathan Lemire interviewed the CEO of the National Urban League, Marc Morial, and former U.S. Attorney and MS NOW analyst Joyce Vance to defend the Southern Poverty Law Center amid the recent indictment from the DOJ related to wire fraud, as Morial called the indictment an “assault on civil rights.” In the same program, an advertisement aired for the indicted SPLC.
Just about an hour before the segment, MS NOW and Morning Joe aired a 2-minute-long ad, which asked for donations to the SPLC for “$19 a month” for a “special Fight Hate t-shirt.” Essentially, amid the criminal indictments, MS NOW was still taking money from the SPLC.
The two-minute SPLC advertisement also aired on Tuesday Night’s 11th Hour with Stephanie Ruhle, mere hours after the announcement of the indictment.
Lemire's introduction of the topic gave actual details, unlike his colleague Chris Hayes’s non-detailed version. Lemire described the indictment as “claiming that a DOJ investigation found that the SPLC used donor money to pay informants in extremist groups like the Ku Klux Klan and the national socialist movement, and then hid the payments through shell companies.”
On Morning Joe, Jonathan Lemire and a panel that included the Urban League CEO, Marc Morial, and legal analyst Joyce Vance defended the SPLC amidst their fraud indictment. All three implied the indictment was political, as Morial said it was an "assault on civil rights." pic.twitter.com/zWtUerqzuH
— Nick (@nspin310) April 23, 2026
Vance described the indictment and focused on the informant aspects, as she went towards the new talking point of the FBI, a government agency, relationship with informants as similar to the SPLC, an activist group, allegedly paying extremist group members as informants while they committed wire fraud:
And, you know, this is not unused or unused in federal law enforcement either. If you want to get information about a domestic terror group, you have to go and talk to domestic terrorists. Oftentimes, those are unscrupulous people, and your best way in is to pay them.
Vance continued on the claim the indictment uses “fiction”:
So, what this indictment does is it sort of uses the fiction that the only thing that the Southern Poverty Law Center was doing was paying informants, and it ignores the center's larger work, which involved dismantling those entities. They were the entity that was responsible for bankrupting the Ku Klux Klan and putting them out of business.
Guest Pablo Torre, former ESPNer turned Morning Joe regular, asked Morial about “how this has now been used politically on the internet” and showcased a New York Post cover that, Torre said, claimed the KKK “is funded by the SPLC.” Torre asked him only to “process the conversation that’s happening as a result.”
The Urban League CEO stated, “the indictment is nakedly political,” and turned to complain about the DOJ’s end of the relationship with the SPLC under the Trump administration.
Morial further went on to accuse the DOJ of political prosecutions and said the indictment “is furthering this pattern and practice of an assault on civil rights through frivolous, political motivated indictments.”
Lemire implied the investigations were only for interim AG Todd Blanche and FBI Director Kash Patel to gain more notoriety and, in Patel’s case, an attempt to squash bad headlines. Morial responded with the favorite word of Democrats during Trump's second term:
Distraction away from the problems that they're facing. A distraction away from the FBI director's continuing controversy over his personal conduct. And of course, the acting attorney general wants to be confirmed. And so maybe he's playing to a certain audience.
Vance then agreed with Lemire and Morial, as she stated the press conference was “very unusual” and it was “relatively rare” for the Attorney General to announce indictments. She ended the presser, “underscores the analysis that this was nakedly political.”
Lemire’s mention of the actual details of the indictment was the next step, but it was unlikely a network that takes ad money from the indicted SPLC would not do much of anything but defend the group.
The transcript is below. Click "expand":
MS NOW’s Morning Joe
April 23, 2026
9:48:36 AM Eastern
JONATHAN LEMIRE: Welcome back. The Southern Poverty Law Center is vowing to vigorously fight an indictment leveled against the civil rights organization by the Department of Justice, FBI director Kash Patel joined acting attorney general Todd Blanche earlier in the week, claiming that a DOJ investigation found that the SPLC used donor money to pay informants in extremist groups like the Ku Klux Klan and the national socialist movement, and then hid the payments through shell companies. The 11-count indictment was handed down by a federal grand jury in Alabama, where the Southern Poverty Law Center is located.
The organization's interim CEO and president said he is, quote, “outraged by the false accusations.” Joining us now, the president and CEO of the National Urban League, Marc Morial, and former U.S. Attorney and MS NOW legal analyst Joyce Vance. Our thanks to you both for being with us.
Joyce, I'll start with you. Can you just walk us through this indictment? You know what allegations are made. And in your estimation, do they have merit?
JOYCE VANCE Well, this, Jonathan, is something we've discussed before. It's a speaking indictment. So, instead of just being bare bones, the Justice Department lays out its entire theory of the case. They then charge the Southern Poverty Law Center. They only charge the entity. They don't charge any individuals with wire fraud, with making false statements to banks, and to money laundering.
The money laundering charge first, that depends entirely on whether there's any merit to the other two substantive charges. If they don't work out for the government, then money laundering is off the table. And so it's interesting. I think the easiest way to summarize the merits of this indictment is to say that it's hyper-focused on one aspect of how the Southern Poverty Law Center operated, that for a period of time, they paid informants, they paid them a lot of money to provide information about various domestic terror, white supremacist hate groups.
And, you know, this is not unused or unused in federal law enforcement either. If you want to get information about a domestic terror group, you have to go and talk to domestic terrorists. Oftentimes, those are unscrupulous people, and your best way in is to pay them.
So, what this indictment does is it sort of uses the fiction that the only thing that the Southern Poverty Law Center was doing was paying informants, and it ignores the center's larger work, which involved dismantling those entities. They were the entity that was responsible for bankrupting the Ku Klux Klan and putting them out of business. As domestic terror groups reformed in that vacuum, they then began scrutinizing them, often working with law enforcement to provide information.
You know, the point here is that this might be an indictment that looks good on its face in some ways, but it doesn't hold up to scrutiny. And a jury, of course, will hear the evidence in this larger context. Tough sell for prosecutors to convict.
PABLO TORRE: Mark, when you look at how this has now been used politically on the internet, on the cover of the New York Post today, the argument is that this money has funded this is the money that was responsible for the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville. That the KKK actually, per the cover of the Post, funded by the SLPC. And so, for you, and the question of paid informants, how do you process the conversation that's happening as a result?
MARC MORIAL: The indictment is nakedly political, and it's the Justice Department turning on itself. For years, federal law enforcement worked with the Southern Poverty Law Center to ferret out hate groups and domestic terrorist groups, and recently, the Justice Department canceled its relationship with the Southern Poverty Law Center.
So, the government has been intimately involved in what the Southern Poverty Law Center has done, which has been an important public service, and that is to ferret out these hate groups, these domestic terrorist groups, these anti-semitic groups. And this Justice Department, once again, is furthering this pattern and practice of an assault on civil rights through frivolous, politically motivated indictments. Think of Comey, think of the Attorney General in New York. Think of these. This is a continuation indeed of that pattern.
And to stand up against this is really the call to action for the American people, because the Justice Department itself in recent years has identified these types of groups as the biggest threat to the public safety, to mass violence in this country, these supremacist groups, these domestic terrorist groups. So, the Southern Poverty Law Center has performed an important public service consistently and continuously working with our government to ferret out these groups. So, this indictment, I think, is political. I think it's a grasping at straws. And let's see how it evolves in the courts.
LEMIRE And, Mark, you can't help but note that the two men up front announcing this,. FBI Director Kash Patel trying to ward off some negative headlines, and interim attorney general Todd Blanche, who's trying to make a bid for the job full-time. Feels like this is an audience of one move too, no?
MORIAL: Distraction away from the problems that they're facing. A distraction away from the FBI director's continuing controversy over his personal conduct. And of course, the acting attorney general wants to be confirmed. And so maybe he's playing to a certain audience.
But this is what's so important. The civil rights community and the American people have to stand up to prosecutorial misconduct, to the weaponization of the power of the state and the justice department. And this is just another example of that pattern continuing. So, we're going to stand with the Southern Poverty Law Center. I think the more people understand the magnitude and the importance of the work that they've done, I think the public is going to understand it, and they're going to support it, and they're going to see this indictment for what it is. And that is nakedly political.
LEMIRE: And Joyce, lastly and briefly, can you walk us through what the next steps are going to be?
VANCE: Right. So, we'll see a flurry of pretrial motions trying to determine what goes forward. There will, of course, be discovery, but these are largely the kinds of charges that get vetted, either on a guilty plea or at trial. Very unlikely that we'll see a guilty plea here.
And to the point that you just made, you know, this is a very unusual press conference. It's relatively rare for the Attorney General of the United States, or an acting one in this case, to announce a case that a United States Attorney's Office has indicted. Usually, those announcements happen in the district. It's very rare for main justice to send high-ranking officials down here. We've got the two top leaders at DOJ making the announcement without the U.S. Attorney alongside them. I think that that underscores the analysis that this was nakedly political.
(...)