House Republicans are finally moving to hold a shadowy foreign-based financier to account after months of reports tying Neville Roy Singham to a web of nonprofit groups that allegedly funneled money to far-left organizers behind violent anti-ICE protests. The Oversight Committee, led by Chairman James Comer with Representative Anna Paulina Luna driving the declassification taskforce, has ramped up demands for documents and explanations about Singham’s funding and foreign ties. This is exactly the kind of plain-spoken oversight hardworking Americans expect when foreign influence starts appearing in our streets.
In a heated committee hearing, Rep. Anna Paulina Luna moved to subpoena Singham and argued that his network “has been funding extremist organizations, fueling division and civil unrest,” especially the riots that roiled Los Angeles last summer. The motion to compel his testimony passed by voice vote, showing that Republicans are united in demanding transparency from billionaires who spend in secret to destabilize our communities. If Singham thinks he can hide overseas and keep buying chaos, Congress just signaled he’s wrong.
Republican investigators spell out a disturbing pattern: a dark-money circuit of shell nonprofits and media outlets that critics say route donations to groups like the Party for Socialism and Liberation and other radical outfits accused of organizing violent demonstrations. The Oversight releases cite reporting that ties these outfits to coordinated protest activity and question whether Singham’s network should have registered under FARA if it was acting at the direction of a foreign principal. Americans deserve to know whether U.S. citizens are serving as conduits for foreign propaganda and agitation on our soil.
Those concerns aren’t speculative. Reporting and committee correspondence point to previous referrals and warnings that Singham’s operations look like an organized influence campaign, and lawmakers are asking the Treasury to evaluate asset freezes or sanctions where appropriate. This isn’t partisan theater; it’s a sober response to serious allegations that must be investigated fully and quickly to protect law enforcement and public safety. Our security depends on shutting down any foreign-backed networks that profit from chaos and undermine the rule of law.
Representative Luna hasn’t stopped at subpoenas — she and Chairman Comer have publicly urged Treasury and the State Department to consider freezing assets and visas if Singham continues to hide and refuse cooperation. That hard line is the right approach: if rich ideologues are bankrolling riots and using U.S. nonprofits as cover, they should face real consequences, not platitudes and press conferences. Americans will not tolerate a system where the powerful buy influence and lawlessness while ordinary citizens pick up the bill.
Meanwhile, Democrats and media elites who cheered chaos for clicks must stop pretending this investigation is mere Republican grandstanding. Holding foreign-influenced financiers accountable is a bipartisan defense of our democracy and communities, not a political stunt. If the Left truly believes in peaceful protest, it should welcome scrutiny into who’s pulling the strings and laundering money to incite riots.
Congress must now follow through: issue the subpoena, demand documents, and, if necessary, hold Singham in contempt and pursue criminal referrals. Patriots who work, play by the rules, and keep their neighborhoods safe deserve nothing less than relentless oversight and decisive action against those who would weaponize charity and NGOs to tear America apart.
The American people are watching. Lawmakers who take this fight seriously will earn voters’ trust; those who look the other way will share responsibility for every broken window and beaten-down small business. This is about more than politics — it’s about protecting our country from foreign-backed subversion and restoring order to our cities.

