Intel expert says Singham network is more than a nonprofit scandalit's a security threat

An intelligence expert warned that far-left sugar daddy Neville Roy Singham’s dark money network is a threat to national security, and said an ongoing federal grand jury probe into the China-based tech tycoon's funding of socialist, communist and Marxist organizations is warranted.Adam Sohn, co-founder and CEO of the Network Contagion Research Institute, said Singham’s network is funneling hundreds of millions of dollars into nonprofit political advocacy organizations, including the People's Forum, Breakthrough news, Tri-Continental, the Party for Socialism and Liberation.Those groups are mounting highly choreographed protests across the nation over a variety of left-wing causes and issues."Without his money, these nonprofits have no reason for existence," Sohn said.
"I think Americans are seeing what this ecosystem looks like in the streets of our country.These aren't protests, it's coordinated chaos and attacks on infrastructure."Rioters clashed with police on Friday night at the Delaney Hall ICE facility in Newark, New Jersey.
(John Taggart for Fox News Digital)CRUZ PUSHES BILL TO HOLD TAX-EXEMPT SPONSORS ACCOUNTABLE AS DOJ PROBES SINGHAM NETWORKSingham, a 72-year-old Marxist who sold his tech company for $800 million in 2017 and now lives in Shanghai, is known to fund pro-Chinese Communist Party groups that operate in the U.S.He has funneled $278 million into the broad network of nonprofits since 2017, according to a Fox News Digital investigation.
These groups regularly organize and participate in anti-ICE, anti-Israel and pro-Iran demonstrations.Fox News Digital reported last week that Acting U.S.Attorney General Todd Blanche authorized a grand jury in Manhattan to issue subpoenas as part of a probe of Singham's financial network.
The investigation was launched by U.S.Attorney Jay Clayton for the Southern District of New York, one of the country's most powerful districts for federal prosecutions.Singham hasn’t responded to repeated requests for comm...