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In ] the ] published an investigative series revealing financial mismanagement, poor management practices, misleading fundraising, and institutionalized racism at the Center. Former black employees asserted that the Center was run "like a plantation" and complained of discrimination by white supervisors. The Center threatened legal action against the newspaper during the publication of the series, and lobbied against its consideration for journalism awards. However, the investigative series was a finalist for a ] ]. | In ] the ] published an investigative series revealing financial mismanagement, poor management practices, misleading fundraising, and institutionalized racism at the Center. Former black employees asserted that the Center was run "like a plantation" and complained of discrimination by white supervisors. The Center threatened legal action against the newspaper during the publication of the series, and lobbied against its consideration for journalism awards. However, the investigative series was a finalist for a ] ]. | ||
The SPLC has, on at least one occasion, attempted to become a quai-official government agency. Morris Dees helped organize ]'s presidential campaign in the hope of being named ] in a McGovern administration, and securing a place for SPLC in the government system. The SPLC also offers free training to law enforcement officers concerning hate crimes, and investigates alleged hate groups in its Intelligence Report newsletter. | |||
Critics have noted that the SPLC is a left-leaning group that maintains ties to ethnic lobbies and has focused almost exclusively on conservative organizations. The Center has also been painted as a believer in the ] theory. | |||
==== External links ==== | ==== External links ==== |
Revision as of 01:58, 16 August 2004
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The Southern Poverty Law Center is based in Montgomery, Alabama, in the South of the US. It was started in 1971 by Morris Dees and Joe Levin as a civil rights law firm. It is known for its tolerance education programs, its legal victories against white supremacist groups, its tracking of hate groups, and its sponsorship of the Maya Lin-designed Civil Rights Memorial. The Center publishes an in-depth analysis of political extremism and bias crimes in the United States in the quarterly Intelligence Report.
History & Controversy
The first case the Center took on forced the local YMCA to racially integrate their athletic offerings. In 1979 the Center brought its first case against the Klu Klux Klan . This was the first of many cases against the Klan. In 1983, the Klan responded by burning down the Center's offices. Several other attempts to bomb the center and kill Morris Dees have been thwarted.
However, the Center has not been without controversy. In 1996 USA Today reported that the Southern Poverty Law Center was "the nation's richest civil rights organization" with $68 million in assets. In 2003, the Fairfax (VA) Journal reported that 89% of income was spent on fundraising and administrative costs. Guidestar.org states that the center has $131 million in assets on $31 million revenue.
Critics of the Center, including Laird Wilcox, death-penalty lawyer Millard Farmer, and former Dees associate Stephen Bright claim that it has exagerated the threat of white extremist groups for fundraising purposes. Others have charged it targets conservative political organizations by using 'guilt by association' rather than direct evidence of involvement in extremism.
In 1994 the Montgomery Advertiser published an investigative series revealing financial mismanagement, poor management practices, misleading fundraising, and institutionalized racism at the Center. Former black employees asserted that the Center was run "like a plantation" and complained of discrimination by white supervisors. The Center threatened legal action against the newspaper during the publication of the series, and lobbied against its consideration for journalism awards. However, the investigative series was a finalist for a 1995 Pulitzer Prize.
The SPLC has, on at least one occasion, attempted to become a quai-official government agency. Morris Dees helped organize George McGovern's presidential campaign in the hope of being named attorney general in a McGovern administration, and securing a place for SPLC in the government system. The SPLC also offers free training to law enforcement officers concerning hate crimes, and investigates alleged hate groups in its Intelligence Report newsletter.
Critics have noted that the SPLC is a left-leaning group that maintains ties to ethnic lobbies and has focused almost exclusively on conservative organizations. The Center has also been painted as a believer in the vast-right wing conspiracy theory.
External links
- Southern Poverty Law Center official site
- SPLC Internet-based activism project - Tolerance.org
- 'The Church of Morris Dees' - A critical look at the SPLC and its founder from Harper's Magazine, republished in the Free Republic
- Harvard University's Nieman Foundation for Journalism- Panel discussion with the investigative reporter who covered the SPLC for the Montgomery Advertiser