Director, Intelligence Project, Mark Potok

   Mark  Potok,  director of publications and editor of SPLC's periodical
   Intelligence  Project,  has  overseen the Center's vaunted research on
   "hate  groups" and "hate crimes" during the dozen years (1997-present)
   he has worked for the Center.

   Potok,  who  left  the  University  of Chicago without graduating over
   thirty  years  ago,  would  seem  to have little academic or practical
   experience  to  qualify  him  as  an  expert  on  dissident groups and
   ideologies.

   http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mark-potok

   Potok's  special  expertise--tabloid-style emotionalism and "branding"
   through well-couched smear or deft innuendo--builds on his twenty-year
   career  as  a  journalist (USA Today, the Dallas Times Herald, and the
   Miami  Herald),  during which he covered the Oklahoma City bombing and
   the  militias.  His  skill  with  shrill and lurid verbiage, joined to
   SPLC's  techniques  for  discerning  "links and ties" (what was called
   "guilt  by  association"  when practiced by Sen. Joseph McCarthy), has
   imbued the Center's invective with a new urgency fed by classic yellow
   journalism  as  well  as  the  take-no-prisoners  zeal  of the classic
   extremist.  Potok's  attacks  on  mainstream figures who have dared to
   differ with the Center are just as revealing: to cite a representative
   instance,   in  SPLC's  blog  he  called  the  combative  conservative
   columnist  Ann  Coulter  "rabid"  and her book Guilty a "foaming-mouth
   tome."

   http://www.splcenter.org/blog/2009/02/13/columnist-ann-coulter-defends-white-supremacist-group/

   Potok has admitted that SPLC's methodology has been suspect: he stated
   that the Center's "number counts for ["hate groups"] initially weren't
   very  reliable"  (while  failing to explain why current counts are any
   more trustworthy [see below]).

   http://socialistworker.org/2006-2/593/593_07_MarkPotok.shtml

   Potok  has  conceded  that  only  a  tiny minority of "hate crimes" is
   carried  out  by "hate groups," but implied that such groups influence
   "hate crimes" offenders. He has also claimed that the FBI reports well
   under 10 percent of all "hate crimes" committed.

   http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5506152

   http://www.splcenter.org/news/item.jsp?aid=19

   In   line  with  SPLC  practice,  Potok  has  concentrated  on  white,
   right-wing,  "nativist,"  and domestic "hate groups." to the practical
   exclusion  of nonwhite, left-wing, and foreign ones (see "Hate Groups"
   below).  Under  his  leadership, the Center's Intelligence Project has
   strained  to  exaggerate the domestic terror threat from the right and
   to  minimize  the  danger of imported Islamist terror, a position that
   the  9/11  attacks  (carried  out by aliens, many here illegally) have
   made  much  less  tenable.  Potok  has  praised a recent Department of
   Homeland  Security  report that, thanks in great part to SPLC's input,
   was  so  focused on lawful and law-abiding groups (including returning
   U.S. combat veterans) that it had to be disavowed; he has whined about
   the  FBI  dragging  its  feet  on  60  "major"  terrorist plots (while
   disregarding their work on radical Muslim plots).

   http://24ahead.com/s/mark-potok

   http://socialistworker.org/2006-2/593/593_07_MarkPotok.shtml

   In  a  revealing  admission,  Potok  recently  stated  that  it is the
   immigration  control  movement  (which  he  called  "a  rush of people
   identifying  with a nation-state and its borders") itself, here and in
   Europe, rather than "hate groups" as such, that concerns SPLC.

   http://socialistworker.org/2006-2/593/593_07_MarkPotok.shtml

   Not  much  is  available  through  the  Internet  on  Potok's life and
   ideological  background  although  he  is  evidently  married  and has
   adopted a child.

   http://www.ushmm.org/museum/exhibit/focus/antisemitism/voices/transcript/?content=2007062

   He  has  given  cordial interviews to at least two hard-core communist
   periodicals,  the  Trotskyite Socialist Worker and the People's Weekly
   World  (formerly the American Communist Party's Daily Worker); similar
   links with dissident groups on the right have been invoked by Potok as
   proof of shared sympathies.

   http://socialistworker.org/2006-2/593/593_07_MarkPotok.shtml

   http://www.peoplesworld.org/reform-blocked-by-racist-groups/

   http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?aid=981