Source: Fox News Digital, Asra Q. Nomani (March 23, 2026)
Start with the money. That's usually where you find the answer.
Between 2017 and 2025, a tech tycoon named Neville Roy Singham moved $278 million through a layered system of shell corporations, donor-advised funds, and tax-exempt nonprofits into a network of organizations now estimated at 2,000 groups operating across the United States and beyond. The Justice, State, and Treasury departments are reportedly investigating. Fox News Digital, in a five-part series by Asra Nomani, has published the architecture.
What they found isn't a fringe story. It's a blueprint.
The Wedding That Wasn't Just a Wedding
In late February 2017, an elite cadre of Marxist intellectuals, professional agitators, celebrity activists, and ideological fellow travelers gathered on Jamaica's northern coast to celebrate the union of Singham and Jodie Evans, co-founder of CodePink. Over four days of lectures, dancing, and what the official itinerary described as late-night conversation, alliances were formed.
Vijay Prashad, identified in the wedding program as a "Marxist intellectual," sat on a panel titled "The Future of the Left." Medea Benjamin, Evans' longtime comrade and CodePink co-founder, danced barefoot in a bright Indian outfit. According to Fox News Digital's sources, attendees invoked Mao Zedong's doctrine of the People's War β the idea that you don't defeat an empire through armies. You defeat it through networks, ideology, and the patient mobilization of civilian institutions.
These were not amateurs talking theory. These were operators with decades of experience and, now, serious money behind them.
The Architecture
What Nomani's investigation maps is a five-ring funding pipeline. Singham first ran money through two apparent shell corporations and a donor-advised fund administered through Goldman Sachs' philanthropy arm β a vehicle that allows wealthy donors to give anonymously. Goldman Sachs confirmed it terminated Singham's account in February 2024.
From there, $278 million flowed into six nonprofits: BreakThrough BT Media, CodePink, Justice and Education Fund, People's Forum, People's Support Foundation, and Tricontinental. Those six then pushed roughly $163 million into 52 downstream organizations. The cascade continues outward until you reach an estimated 2,000 groups worldwide β many of them active in American streets, American universities, and American politics.
Fox News Digital analyzed 1,663 events hosted by People's Forum alone, from August 2018 through early 2025. Academic participants came from at least 225 colleges and universities.
This is not a donor funding causes he believes in. This is infrastructure.

Shanghai, November 2025
Singham rarely appears in public. Last November he made an exception, walking into the Golden Tulip hotel in Shanghai for the Global South Academic Forum β a conference blessed by the Chinese Communist Party, co-sponsored by East China Normal University, which is administered directly by the CCP's Ministry of Education.
Fox News Digital unearthed video of his remarks.
Standing before his comrades, Singham delivered a rewrite of World War II history, arguing that Soviet and Chinese fighters β not American and British troops β truly won the war against fascism. He offered a statistical formulation: "59.8% socialists dead, 13.1% colonised peoples dead β only 1% Anglo-Americans dead." He condemned Winston Churchill's "genocidal impulses." He quoted Mao. And then, with the clarity that ideologues rarely permit themselves in front of Western cameras, he named his allegiance explicitly.
"If we want to have a new world order that is based on multilateralism that President Xi and CPC and China have proposed," Singham said, "we have to undo the ideological damage that has been done by the narrative of World War II."
He closed by asking the room to honor Soviet and Chinese fighters who, in his telling, have never received proper credit for saving humanity. The video ends with Singham standing at attention as "The Internationale" plays β the global communist anthem β while his colleagues thrust their fists into the air.
The Cuba Connection
None of this exists in isolation. As The Unredacted reported earlier this month, CodePink and the Party for Socialism and Liberation β both nodes in Singham's network β dispatched activists to Cuba to prop up a communist regime that has plunged its own people into total blackouts and mass starvation. They stayed in five-star hotels while ordinary Cubans had nothing. They called it solidarity.
That trip wasn't a spontaneous act of conscience. It was a coordinated deployment by organizations with shared funding, shared leadership, and a shared strategic objective: destabilize American institutions, normalize authoritarian alternatives, and advance the geopolitical position of every regime that stands in opposition to U.S. power β Cuba, Iran, Venezuela, Russia, and above all, China.
The Cuba convoy and the Shanghai conference are the same operation running on parallel tracks. One mobilizes street-level foot soldiers in the Western hemisphere. The other provides the ideological framework from a CCP-blessed academic forum in Shanghai. Singham funds both. Evans moves between both. The messaging is coordinated. The goal is singular.
What This Is
Xi Van Fleet, a Chinese American who lived through Mao's Cultural Revolution, cut to it directly. "Neville Roy Singham and his wife, Jodie Evans, are bringing into the 21st century Mao's dream for a People's War," she told Fox News Digital. "They are bringing to the streets America's worst nightmare of a Red Army that is seeking to destroy the United States and make China more competitive on the world stage."
That's not rhetorical excess. That's pattern recognition from someone who has seen this playbook executed before, on a different continent, against a different population that also didn't see it coming until it was too late.
Mao's doctrine didn't rely on conventional military force. It relied on what today's national security community calls cognitive warfare β the systematic manipulation of how a target population understands its own history, politics, and the legitimacy of its institutions. You don't need to win on the battlefield if you can corrode the will to fight. You don't need to invade if you can get a population to invite the collapse from within.
What Singham and Evans built β from a Jamaican beach in 2017 through the streets of Minneapolis in 2020 to the anti-ICE protests running today β is a machine designed to do exactly that. It has a headquarters, a war chest, a command structure, a propaganda arm in BreakThrough BT Media, and street-level organizers operating through People's Forum. When approached by Fox News Digital at the People's Forum offices in Manhattan, Brian Becker, founder of the Party for Socialism and Liberation, called the reporter "a terrorist." Executive director Manolo De Los Santos compared the scrutiny to McCarthyism. That's the tell. People with nothing to hide don't reach for that line.
The important thing to understand is that these organizations don't need to coordinate every protest, draft every sign, or script every chant. That's not how the model works. The money funds the infrastructure. The infrastructure produces the ideology. The ideology produces the activists. And the activists produce the chaos that, in Singham's own words, must precede the construction of a "new multilateral world order" with Xi Jinping at its center.
China does not need to fire a shot. It needs Americans to lose faith in America. Every protest that paints this country as irredeemably fascist, every media campaign that frames U.S. law enforcement as an occupying army, every academic forum that teaches the next generation that the West was the villain of World War II β all of it serves the same strategic purpose. Weaken the target. Elevate the alternative. Let the network do the rest.
That network now numbers 2,000 organizations. It was built with $278 million in tax-exempt American dollars. And it operated, largely in the open, for nearly a decade before anyone with subpoena power started paying serious attention.
The wedding was in 2017. The investigation is in 2026. That's a long head start.
The Unredacted | Truth Without PermissionGene Goodwin
The Unredacted credits Fox News Digital and Asra Q. Nomani for the underlying reporting. The full five-part series is available at FoxNews.com. Additional reporting by Niikolas Lanum, Kiera McDonald, Hannah Brennan, Mitch Picasso, and Brooke Curto.