Chambers — who also goes by her married name, Henson — now appears to run 1776 Cleaners, a home cleaning and handyman service in Georgia. She did not respond to The Post’s request for comment and it is unknown if she is still a member of the KKK.
Since the indictment, Neo-Nazis, Klansmen, and National Socialist groups ensnared in it have been throwing accusations around about who among them was making hundreds of thousands off the lefty nonprofit, which saw its annual revenue surge from $51 million to $133 million after Charlottesville.
The SPLC indictment identifies one informant who was involved in litigation over an Adopt-a-Highway program while married to an Exalted Cyclops in the Klan.
“This was a new one. Usually, it’s feds that are the problem. The SPLC was a curveball for me,” Burt Colucci, leader of the neo-Nazi National Social Movement (NSM), told The Post on learning his group had an SPLC payee among them.
One of his members, a motorcycle enthusiast identified as “F-27’ in the indictment, received over $300,000 from the SPLC.
“It’s someone I was in Iraq with and who I know very well. This person was thrown out [of NSM] several years ago,” Colucci said, stopping short of naming him.
“He was worrying about getting extra shekels [money]. I used to fight with this individual. He was a big information collector. He wanted to see people’s driver’s licenses, social security numbers.”
Former neo-Nazi leader Jeff Schoep says he wasn’t surprised by the indictment, saying the SPLC had been trying to contact him for years.Getty Images
Schoep is now a reformed neo-Nazi who preaches about the downsides of extremism after leaving the movement in 2019.Courtesy of Jeff Schoep
Another ‘informant,’ “F-30,” is described in the indictment as a National Socialist Party of America leader, “the former director of a faction of the Aryan Nations, and a former member of the Ku Klux Klan” who was secretly paid $70,000 between 2014 and 2016 and “was featured on the SPLC’s ‘Extremist File’ webpage.”
That resume matches up perfectly with the SPLC website’s Extremist File entry on National Socialist Party of America boss Paul Mullet.
When reached by phone and asked if he was F30, Mullet bluntly told The Post “I’m not answering any questions right now. No Comment” before hanging up.
The SPLC also had a field source who was a member of the online leadership chat group that planned the deadly 2017 “Unite the Right” event in Charlottesville, Va., the indictment alleges, and that the group oversaw racist online posting from its sources.
Rumors continue to swirl online that ‘informant,’ “F-37” — who was paid $270,000 by the SPLC between 2015 and 2023 and helped organize the deadly Charlottesville event — was Unite The Right head Jason Kessler.
One of the SPLC’s so-called informants was an Imperial Wizard of the United Klans of America, a Ku Klux Klan organization, who remained a committed racist until his death in 2023 aged 50.
nypost.com
Socialist socialist everywhere but national socialist are the bad socialist and we're the good socialists
Just like the post office..... you like the post office don't you
Wasn't the guy who drove the black charger or Challenger whatever the f*** it was....... he was
Yep a socialist
Anyone calling a national socialist a right winger is a f****** retard