People who attempt to publicly implicate their employers for perceived wrongdoing by partnering with James O’Keefe’s far-right nonprofit Project Veritas have been consistently going home with hundreds of thousands of dollars since at least November 2020. While fundraisers for Project Veritas’ purported “whistleblowers” in previous years appeared on the site GoFundMe, they now mostly pop up on the smaller Christian crowdfunding platform GiveSendGo, where they appear to be receiving unprecedented amounts of cash.
This trend is concerning as it appears that Project Veritas -- which bills itself as a journalistic enterprise -- may be all but promising significant amounts of money to people who give it enough supposedly insider information that the group can spotlight their claims in a video.
O’Keefe and Project Veritas attempt to create news narratives or inject themselves into existing ones by producing undercover videos meant to expose hypocrisy, bias, or corruption within the media, unions, political campaigns, the government, or other groups. They attract “insiders” — usually employees of organizations that Project Veritas targets, including Google, CNN, and even the toy company Hasbro — to become “whistleblowers” for Project Veritas, appearing in videos complaining about a perceived company bias or wrongdoing. There is rarely a solid foundation for their complaints, and these “insiders” often lose their jobs shortly after Project Veritas features them. Often they also take home hundreds of thousands of dollars raised on crowdfunding platforms.
GoFundMe vs. GiveSendGo
O’Keefe has a history of promoting crowdfunding pages for his public “insiders.” Up until late 2020, Project Veritas “whistleblowers” frequently used crowdfunding site GoFundMe, raking in as much as over $100,000. O’Keefe has promoted some of these fundraisers directly in his videos.
But GoFundMe pages associated with Project Veritas “insiders” came under scrutiny in September of 2020 after a video series accused Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) of being associated with an illegal ballot collection scheme. The “insider” interviewed for this series was Omar Jamal, a longtime media figure with a history of making unsubstantiated claims, including that Al Qaeda had an active presence in the Twin Cities. While GoFundMe said it investigated Jamal’s fundraiser, the page appears to still be up and active.
Project Veritas ceased promoting GoFundMe campaigns shortly after the 2020 election, when the site shut down a fundraiser for an “insider” who claimed that his supervisor at a post office in Pennsylvania was illegally backdating ballots. Now, Project Veritas promotes a new platform that its “whistleblowers” use to rake in up to hundreds of thousands of dollars.
GiveSendGo is a Christian crowdfunding site launched in 2015, purportedly as a tool to raise money for missionary trips -- but it has since reportedly become a haven for far-right causes. Project Veritas-affiliated campaigns seem to be some of the largest on the site, with each “insider” campaign Media Matters identified making well over $100,000. Most other “trending” campaigns rarely receive even half that. Notable exceptions are largely for far-right extremist groups, including one fundraiser used to raise money to travel to Washington, D.C., for the January 6 Capitol riot and another created to raise money for the defense of Kyle Rittenhouse, the man who allegedly killed two protesters in Kenosha, Wisconsin, in the aftermath of the police killing of Jacob Blake.
So far, GiveSendGo has hosted at least five major fundraisers for Project Veritas “insiders.” Each one was promoted in Project Veritas communications — either in its videos, or its emails to supporters, or both.
The first GiveSendGo after GoFundMe
After GoFundMe shut down the fundraiser for Project Veritas’ U.S. Postal Service “whistleblower,” a GiveSendGo page for him appeared around November 10. The insider, a postal worker named Richard Hopkins, told Project Veritas he overheard a conversation in which the postmaster told his supervisor to backdate mail-in ballots received after November 3. Hopkins then recanted this claim to USPS investigators.
Hopkins and O’Keefe have since tried to claim that the postal worker was coerced by investigators, even releasing what appears to be two hours of uncut audio of the interview with investigators. However, that two hours of tape reveal that Hopkins was quick to say it’s possible he made the wrong assumptions, telling investigators, “I didn’t specifically hear the whole story. I just heard a part of it, and I could’ve missed a lot of it.”
The GiveSendGo campaign is listed as started by Hopkins, and the header image is a photo of a James O’Keefe tweet that was quote-tweeted by then-President Donald Trump. The description of the fundraiser claims that it will “help me now that I have been put on unpaid leave from my job in Erie and have been ostracized by most of my coworkers.” Months later, the fundraiser has accumulated more than $236,000 from over 5,700 individual donations.