Soros Foundations Face Scrutiny Over Alleged Terror-Linked Funding

Federal investigators are now scrutinizing whether George Soros’s Open Society Foundations (OSF) illegally funneled tens of millions of dollars into extremist networks—both at home and abroad—that have been connected to political violence and terrorism.

A new Capital Research Center report alleges that since 2016, OSF—now run by Soros’s son Alexander Soros—has poured more than $80 million into organizations accused of either directly engaging in domestic terrorism, supporting terrorist causes, or partnering with foreign terrorist organizations.

Researchers say the funding is not incidental but represents a systematic pattern. At least $23 million allegedly went to seven U.S.-based groups implicated in criminal activity that meets the FBI’s definition of domestic terrorism. Those activities include sabotage, property destruction, and orchestrated attempts to disrupt public order.

Among the recipients were groups tied to the 2020 riots and the ongoing “Stop Cop City” campaign in Atlanta, where dozens of left-wing activists currently face domestic terrorism and racketeering charges.

Another $18 million reportedly went to the Movement for Black Lives, a coalition that critics say has published materials glorifying terrorist organizations like Hamas. Additional funding recipients included the Center for Third World Organizing and the Ruckus Society, both of which have trained activists in aggressive disruption tactics such as mass blockades and property destruction.

Internationally, OSF is said to have sent more than $2.3 million to Al-Haq, a West Bank NGO long accused of ties to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), a U.S.- and EU-designated terrorist organization.

In September 2025, the State Department officially sanctioned Al-Haq, citing its involvement in campaigns targeting Israel through the International Criminal Court. That designation puts Soros’s flagship philanthropy in the position of having financed a group now formally blacklisted by Washington.

The findings raise questions about whether OSF has violated federal law and whether its tax-exempt status can legally continue. IRS regulations explicitly prohibit nonprofits from engaging in or materially supporting criminal activity. Analysts argue that Soros’s money trail could justify revoking OSF’s charitable status, opening the door to congressional hearings, federal prosecution, and Treasury sanctions.

Critics contend Soros’s vast network has actively fueled radicalization. Materials produced by OSF grantees, they argue, encourage activists to use fake IDs, block commerce, and directly confront law enforcement.

Supporters of Soros dismiss these allegations, claiming his philanthropy advances “democracy and human rights.” But with investigators now circling, those claims may not withstand legal scrutiny.

🔥 Trump Admin Cracks Down on Political Violence

The scrutiny comes as President Donald Trump intensifies his administration’s effort to dismantle extremist networks. On September 22, Trump signed an executive order formally designating Antifa a domestic terrorist organization, citing its anarchist tactics and organized violence.

The White House vowed not only to dismantle Antifa’s networks but also to follow the money—raising the possibility that Soros’s funding streams could soon be a focus of federal counterterrorism investigations.

For years, Soros has poured billions into reshaping America’s political landscape—funding open-borders advocacy, leftist prosecutors, and radical criminal justice reforms. Critics argue those interventions eroded public safety, emboldened violent actors, and destabilized civic order under the banner of “reform.”

Now, in the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination and rising political violence nationwide, the U.S. government may finally be poised to confront Soros’s empire head-on.

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