Author Topic: Ministry Sues Southern Poverty Law Center Over 'Hate' Designation  (Read 558 times)

Dos Equis

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Interested to see how this plays out.  That list of "hate groups" is ridiculously broad. 

Ministry Sues Southern Poverty Law Center Over 'Hate' Designation
By Greg Richter   |   Wednesday, 23 Aug 2017

D. James Kennedy Ministries has sued the Southern Poverty Law Center over the latter group naming the ministry a "hate group," AL.com reports.

According to the lawsuit, filed Tuesday in Alabama where the SPLC is based, the designation was based on the ministry's opposition to homosexuality, which the ministry noted dates back to the founding of Christianity.

"These false and illegal characterizations have a chilling effect on the free exercise of religion and on religious free speech for all people of faith," said Frank Wright, CEO of D. James Kennedy Ministries. "After having given the SPLC an opportunity to retract, we have undertaken this legal action, seeking a trial by a jury of our peers, to preserve our own rights under the law and to defend the religious free speech rights of all Americans."

According to the suit, the SPLC "illegally trafficked in false and misleading descriptions of the services offered by DJKM and committed defamation against DJKM arising from the publication and distribution of false information that libels the ministry's reputation and subjects the ministry to disgrace, ridicule, odium, and contempt in the estimation of the public."

Amazon and Guidestar also are listed as defendants. According to the suit, the Amazon Smile program excluded it from its list of charities to which customers could donate because of the SPLC's "hate" designation.

The ministry is named after evangelist D. James Kennedy, who was pastor of Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church in Florida and was featured in the "Coral Ridge Hour" on television.

Kennedy died in 2007.

The SPLC, originally founded in 1971 to fight racism and other forms of discrimination, has in recent years come under criticism by conservative groups who say they are targeted simply because of traditional Christian stances on homosexuality.

The conservative Family Research Council in Washington, D.C. found itself on the SPLC's crosshairs. When LGBT volunteer Floyd Corkins entered the FRC's offices and shot a guard before being subdued, he said the SPLC's designation was his motivation.

The SPLC maintains its designation was not based on the FRC's stand on "traditional marriage," but because of the "FRC's distortion of known facts to demonize gay men as child molesters."

http://www.newsmax.com/US/D-James-Kennedy-Ministries-sues-splc-hate/2017/08/23/id/809413/

Dos Equis

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Re: Ministry Sues Southern Poverty Law Center Over 'Hate' Designation
« Reply #1 on: September 06, 2017, 03:46:57 PM »
The Southern Poverty Law Center Has $69 Million Parked Overseas
The civil rights group best known for its 'hate map' has investments across the globe, including in the Caymans, British Virgin Islands, and Bermuda.
SEP 06, 2017 | By JERYL BIER

Donations to the SPLC fund its endowment of $320 million, almost 20 percent of which is invested overseas in places like the British Virgin Islands. Other civil rights groups keep their money in the United States. Photo credit: Jeffrey Greenberg/UIG via Getty Images.
 
The Southern Poverty Law Center invests almost 20 percent of its nearly $320 million endowment fund in offshore equities and other investments. The 2016 annual report of the Alabama-based civil rights organization reports $69,093,576 of "non-U.S. equity funds" among the assets comprising the total endowment fund of $319,283,961, a fund the SPLC describes as a "plan for the day when nonprofits like the SPLC can no longer afford to solicit support through the mail because of rising postage and printing costs." (Given that 2016 contributions topped $45 million, that day has not yet arrived.)

Although the details of most of the SPLC's foreign investments are unknown, the portfolio includes at least several million dollars in the Cayman Islands, the British Virgin Islands, and Bermuda, as Joe Schoffstall reported in the Washington Free Beacon last week. The Beacon quoted two financial industry executives who expressed surprise and incredulity about the SPLC's offshore investing.

When THE WEEKLY STANDARD inquired of the SPLC about the appropriateness of the $69 million in offshore investments for the U.S.-based civil rights group, SPLC president Richard Cohen responded: “It is common for universities, foundations and other nonprofit organizations to have a portion of their endowments invested in off-shore funds. Each such fund in which the SPLC is invested is a highly reputable one that was recommended by Cambridge Associates, one of the country's leading investment advisory firms for nonprofit institutions.”

While Cambridge Associates said it was against policy "to discuss details about the firm's client relationships or their investment portfolios," the company issued the following response to TWS:

"Cambridge Associates has served as investment advisor to the Southern Poverty Law Center since 2008. In that role, we are committed to recommending investment strategies and vehicles that we believe will help the organization fulfill its mission and meet its fiscal objectives over the long term. The approach involves having a portion of the organization's endowment invested in funds that are registered outside of the United States—a practice consistent and in line with investments made by many nonprofits, including foundations, universities and other highly regarded and influential charitable organizations."

Although SPLC president Cohen's asserts that the group’s practice is “common,” at least one other large civil rights organization completely eschews the practice. The American Civil Liberties Union and related ACLU Foundation have combined assets of more than $250 million, but both 990s filed by the groups answer "no" to a question about "aggregate foreign investments valued at $100,000 or more." Another civil rights group, the Human Rights Campaign, similarly avoids foreign investments, though the organization’s assets total only about $9 million.

The SPLC's 2015 IRS Form 990 provides some limited further details of the group's foreign dealing. The form indicates answers of "yes" to these questions:

Was the organization a U.S. transferor of property to a foreign corporation during the tax year?

Did the organization have an ownership interest in a foreign corporation during the tax year?

Was the organization a direct or indirect shareholder of a passive foreign investment company or a qualified electing fund during the tax year?

While a question about "ownership interest in a foreign partnership" was answered with a "no" in 2015, the same question received a "yes" in 2013.

Besides the $69 million in offshore investments, the SPLC's endowment includes $60 million in U.S. public equities, $36 million in private equities (buyouts, venture capital, distressed companies,) $18 million in real assets (real estate, gas/oil reserves, etc.), and $57 million in "marketable alternative funds" (various hedge funds made up of derivatives, hedge funds and risk arbitrage, etc.,) besides bonds and cash.

Only about 1 percent of the SPLC's endowment fund is restricted; use of the remaining $300 million plus is up to the discretion of the organization's board of directors.

http://www.weeklystandard.com/the-southern-poverty-law-center-has-69-million-parked-overseas/article/2009553