By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Concealed RepublicanConcealed Republican
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Guns
  • Politics
  • Videos
Reading: Neville Singham Under Grand Jury Investigation
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
Concealed RepublicanConcealed Republican
  • News
  • Guns
  • Politics
  • Videos
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Guns
  • Politics
  • Videos
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
  • Advertise
  • Advertise
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Concealed Republican > Blog > Politics > Neville Singham Under Grand Jury Investigation
Politics

Neville Singham Under Grand Jury Investigation

Jim Taft
Last updated: July 16, 2026 9:03 pm
By Jim Taft 11 Min Read
Share
Neville Singham Under Grand Jury Investigation
SHARE

Everybody has heard of George Soros, and if you follow the news closely enough, you know of his decades-long project to create a leftist transnationalist coalition with ever-growing political and economic power.





Less well-known is Neville Roy Singham, an American citizen of Sri Lankan descent. If anything, his influence and vision are more nefarious and destructive than Soros. Soros’ project is to hijack the liberal order and replace it with a left-wing technocracy. While he pours money into left-wing organizations, including radical ones, his main line of influence goes through institutions and politicians who gain power through democratic means. 

It’s why you see pictures of Soros’ son, Alex, greeting Democratic politicians all the time. 

Singham, though, is a Maoist revolutionary, and proudly so. His father was a radical activist in Sri Lanka, where Singham spent much of his boyhood, and in the United States, Singham became deeply involved in revolutionary politics. 

Of course, none of that inhibited his drive to make a ton of money, first as a business consultant and then as a technology magnate. He sold his company, Thoughtworks, to a—I kid you not—private equity firm and lives in China, from which he runs a sprawling political empire funding the most radical groups in the West. 

Have you ever heard Neville Roy Singham explain his worldview in his own words?

This is the man who now commands a multimillion-dollar influence network spanning the globe.pic.twitter.com/DDy6I4e7uD https://t.co/jfy1byM8CG

— Stu Smith (@thestustustudio) July 16, 2026

Singham is still involved in many business ventures in China because, apparently, he believes deeply in destroying wealth as long as it is not his, but his main focus is politics. He is married to Jodie Evers, the founder of Code Pink, and funds groups such as the Party for Socialism and Liberation, the ANSWER Coalition, and the People’s Forum. 





He’s still a Marxist revolutionary and is using his vast fortune as a billionaire to spread the good word, sprinkled with violence and destruction. 

His organizations are deeply embedded in schools and universities, and his wealth funds a larger network of NGOs ultimately associated with the Chinese Communist Party, which can’t give money directly but can do so through Singham. 

And that’s where he is vulnerable: his use of nonprofits, which are the preferred money-laundering operation for leftist groups, where money can be washed, matched by government grants that Democrats arrange, and then pushed into political activities. 

Neville Roy Singham, the wealthy husband of the founder of the progressive nonprofit Code Pink and benefactor of far-left political causes, is under criminal investigation by a grand jury in the Southern District of New York, according to multiple sources with knowledge of the matter.

The investigation began by looking into possible violations of the Foreign Agents Registration Act and has since expanded into a criminal tax probe over whether money was unlawfully funneled through nonprofits he controls and whether he lied on the tax forms for those nonprofits, known as “990s,” the sources said.

The criminal investigation was first reported by Fox News.

Singham is a major financial backer of a New York City-based nonprofit called the People’s Forum, a left-leaning nonprofit that advocates for causes impacting the working class and other marginalized groups. 

He is also the founder of Thoughtworks, an IT consulting company, and is married to Jodie Evans, co-founder of the anti-war group Code Pink. Singham sold Thoughtworks to a private equity firm in 2017 for $785 million. At around the same time, Singham moved his business operations to Shanghai, China, and began funding a vast, global network of nonprofits and think tanks to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars. 

According to reports in The Free Press and the New York Times, Singham moved the funds through shell companies and other opaque entities advancing his brand of leftist politics while pushing pro-Beijing messaging. He injected much of his own money into Code Pink, funding up to a quarter of its operation, according to reports. Soon, Code Pink softened its stance on China, which had previously been highly critical of Beijing’s human rights policies. Among other things, the group defended China against widespread reports its government was committing genocide against a Muslim minority group in the country’s far Northwest.





Having run a conservative nonprofit, I can tell you that the IRS watches you like a hawk, but not so much left-wing organizations. There are very strict rules on what a nonprofit can and cannot do, and it’s pretty rare to find a left-leaning activist NGO that doesn’t break them. 

That is what the investigation into Singham is about. The Free Press does a deep dive into Singham’s Protest Industrial Complex and the network that has sprung up around the ANSWER Coalition, the PSL, Code Pink, and other radical groups, all of which are tied to Singham. 

The demonstration-industrial complex is powered by foreign funds. Many of the groups in ANSWER’s orbit are linked—through partnerships, funding relationships, or shared media ecosystems—to Neville Roy Singham, an American-born tech entrepreneur with strong connections to the Chinese Communist Party.

Becker, for example, is closely linked to the Singham network. He runs a show on the Singham-funded BreakThrough News; has a seat on the advisory board of Singham’s Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research; and is a member of the International Peoples’ Assembly’s media network, which is a project of Tricontinental.

The Singham Network, as it is known today, began to take shape soon after Neville Roy Singham sold his tech company, Thoughtworks, in 2017. Through entities such as the United Community Fund and the Justice and Education Fund, Singham has directed money to a network of nonprofits aligned with his political outlook. In 2021, The People’s Forum publicly acknowledged receiving support from Singham, referring to him as “a Marxist comrade” who was following “in the footsteps of his father Archie, a committed activist for National Liberation.” Code Pink has also received significant funding from Singham-linked sources—reportedly accounting for roughly a quarter of the organization’s donations since 2017, the same year Singham sold Thoughtworks. Singham is also married to Jodie Evans, one of Code Pink’s co-founders, further linking the organization to the broader network.

ANSWER receives funding through the San Francisco–based Progress Unity Fund and has also received grants from The People’s Forum. PSL, meanwhile, raises funds primarily through membership dues paid by individuals who join its action network. Despite these different funding mechanisms, the two organizations operate within a shared ecosystem of allied nonprofits. These groups regularly amplify one another’s activities by promoting events, featuring each other’s leadership, and coordinating messaging across platforms. As a result, when organizations such as The People’s Forum or Code Pink receive financial support, groups like ANSWER and the PSL can benefit indirectly through the broader network’s institutional backing and visibility.





No doubt Singham would skate under a Democratic administration, because of course these groups would, given their usefulness in the political ecosystem. Just as the Democrats, at least until recently, reluctantly embraced the DSA as frenemies, they often latch onto the issues pushed by the radicals as campaign issues. 

These are what Senator Fetterman calls the “Dirtbag Left.” 

Singham is no doubt very vulnerable, at least legally, to this investigation, although as a resident of and friend to China and its Communist Party, he will avoid any serious personal liability. Although his wife might face some trouble and have to flee the country if she gets caught up in the mess, as she certainly could. 

Even without facing personal liability, or much of it, his network of NGOs and political parties like the PSL would be in trouble if criminal activity can be proven. 

It’s certainly there. But as with all financial crimes, such things are very hard to prove, especially if you have great lawyers, and Singham can afford the best in the world. 

And the clock is ticking. Trump only has two more years in office, and we can’t be sure he will be replaced by a Republican, and certainly can’t be assured a Democratic President would press charges even if criminal wrongdoing were found. 

For over two decades, I have argued to my Republican friends that the NGOs are the left’s center of power and money laundering. If you want to defang the left, defund the NGOs. 





They are evil. As is Singham. 


Editor’s Note: Do you enjoy HotAir’s conservative reporting that takes on the radical left and woke media? Support our work so that we can continue to bring you the truth.

Join HotAir VIP and use promo code FIGHT to receive 60% off your membership.





Read the full article here

You Might Also Like

What Does It Mean to Say Somebody Has a ‘Right’ to Something

DOJ Closes Criminal Investigation Into Fed Chair Jerome Powell: Jeanine Pirro

Will We See a Supreme Court Vacancy (or Two) This Summer?

Virginia’s ‘Make Fraud Legal’ Bill

Why Fix It When Fraud Pays So Well? [WATCH]

Share This Article
Facebook X Email Print
Previous Article Could Gun Control Crowd Have Pushed Too Far in Colorado? Could Gun Control Crowd Have Pushed Too Far in Colorado?
Next Article Bill Maher Blasts NPR Reporter to His Face During Tense Interview [WATCH] Bill Maher Blasts NPR Reporter to His Face During Tense Interview [WATCH]
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

- Advertisement -
Ad image

Latest News

‘Hijabs are beautiful’: Famous child content creator Ms. Rachel accused of soft pedaling Islam
‘Hijabs are beautiful’: Famous child content creator Ms. Rachel accused of soft pedaling Islam
News
MLB effectively outlaws use of AI on dugout iPads during games
MLB effectively outlaws use of AI on dugout iPads during games
News
Kai Trump Shines in Her Own Way And Refuses To Play The Political Game [WATCH]
Kai Trump Shines in Her Own Way And Refuses To Play The Political Game [WATCH]
Politics
Bill Maher Blasts NPR Reporter to His Face During Tense Interview [WATCH]
Bill Maher Blasts NPR Reporter to His Face During Tense Interview [WATCH]
Politics
Could Gun Control Crowd Have Pushed Too Far in Colorado?
Could Gun Control Crowd Have Pushed Too Far in Colorado?
News
Thug allegedly threatens to kill homeowner, enters victim’s residence. But homeowner fights back with baseball bat — and gun.
Thug allegedly threatens to kill homeowner, enters victim’s residence. But homeowner fights back with baseball bat — and gun.
News
© 2025 Concealed Republican. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?