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White Supremacists Help Raise Hundreds of Thousands For Woman Who Hurled Slur at Black Child

A screengrab of the fundraising campaign on GiveSendGo for Hendrix.

A screengrab of the fundraising campaign on GiveSendGo for Hendrix. (Screenshot/GiveSendGo)

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Blood Tribe

Blood Tribe

August 28, 2023 Updated: February 07, 2025

Over the last week, white supremacists, antisemites and racists have been supporting a woman accused of calling a Black child a racial slur by helping to coordinate her donation drive and raising hundreds of thousands of dollars. They have leveraged the fundraising campaign to spread hateful talking points and legitimize their ideas.

The woman, identified in media reports as Shiloh Hendrix, was depicted in a video that began circulating on social media on April 28, 2025, allegedly accosting a Black five-year-old at a playground in Rochester, Minnesota. In the video, the man recording asks the woman if she called the child a n***er, and she responds by hurling the slur at the man recording as well.

On May 1, 2025, a crowdfunding campaign was created on GiveSendGo—a prominent facilitator of extremist crowdfunding—to raise funds for Hendrix. It is unclear who was authentically involved in creating the campaign, although several X users known to promote extremist and anti-Black rhetoric have since claimed shared responsibility for coordinating the effort. They assert that Hendrix will be the primary recipient of the funds, and the GiveSendGo campaign page indicates this is the case.

The GiveSendGo campaign immediately went viral on X, and the link to the page was mentioned over 25,000 times in the days that followed the circulation of the video. As of this writing, the campaign has received over $700,000 of its $1,000,000 goal from over 26,500 donors, with many of the donation comments containing white supremacist, racist and antisemitic messaging, names and denominations.

White Supremacist Donations Filled with Hate

A COE review of 23,409 donations (as of May 4, 2025, at 1:45 pm EDT) for the GiveSendGo campaign found that 13,031 (or 56%) of donations included a comment and/or a name (the remaining contributors left the space for this information blank). Further review of the donations with a comment and/or name found that 3,935 (roughly 30%) included white supremacist, racist or antisemitic content.

The comments and donation names included a wide variety of racial slurs against Black people, white supremacist and Nazi symbols, and calls for the killing or deportation of non-whites and Jews. Dozens used their donation comment to leverage antisemitic conspiracy theories. Such messages included:  "J3ws are the reason we are in this mess,” “Jews have been flooding our countries with the bioweapons for centuries,” “Jews are using diverse immigrants to dilute the white population” and “The goyim are figuring out Jews are using non-whites to wage their ancient war against God."

Soon, the number of hateful comments ballooned and GiveSendGo disabled the ability to leave comments with donations, though the platform notably did not shut down the campaign itself. After comments were disabled, donors exploited the name field to continue to spread their hatred. Fourteen of the top 20 most repeated donor names include white supremacist or racist references, including the spoonerism “Nate Higgers” (130 times), “white lives matter” (24), and “TND” [Total N***er Death] (19).

Donations were also made in denominations of white supremacist numerical codes such as 14 and 88. At the time of this report, there were 693 donations of $14, 99 donations of $88, and 26 donations that used variations of 1488.

After GiveSendGo disabled comments on the Hendrix campaign, white supremacists continued to use the name and alias fields to spread their vitriol

After GiveSendGo disabled comments on the Hendrix campaign, white supremacists continued to use the name and alias fields to spread their vitriol. (Screenshot/GiveSendGo) 

 

White Supremacists Organize Donations

From the start, the campaign to raise money for Hendrix has been promoted by white supremacist X users. One user, who identifies himself as “Organizer & Admin for the Shiloh Hendrix campaign” in his X bio, has a history of espousing extremist tropes and racist rhetoric, including conspiracy theories about “white replacement” and “white genocide.” Other white supremacist users promoting the campaign have claimed to be in contact with Hendrix herself and clarified that she would be receiving all of the money.

White supremacists are using the Hendrix incident, coupled with the April 2025 fatal stabbing of a white teen, Austin Metcalf in Frisco, Texas, to promote the false Black-on-white crime narrative that Black people are inherently violent and are a threat to white people. This narrative has been a major driver for donations to the Hendrix campaign, with white supremacists pushing supporters to her campaign in a bid to outraise another GiveSendGo campaign, one benefiting Karmelo Anthony, the Black teen accused of stabbing Metcalf. Hundreds of comments on the Hendrix campaign page reference Metcalf or Anthony.

On X, white supremacist influencer Nick Fuentes referred to the Hendrix fundraiser as “a middle finger” to certain Black people, including Anthony, concluding that “White people have had enough.”

Nick Fuentes compares the Shiloh Hendrix incident to instances of 'black-on-white crime' often touted by white supremacists

Nick Fuentes compares the Shiloh Hendrix incident to instances of 'black-on-white crime' often touted by white supremacists. (Screenshot/X) 

 

Several prominent white supremacist influencers and groups appear to have donated to the Hendrix fundraising campaign, using the campaign to promote themselves and their groups. Prominent white supremacist influencer Paul Miller AKA Gypsy Crusader, appears to have donated $50 to Hendrix, calling her a “based queen.” Alleged organizers of the campaign have named Miller as one of the individuals “directly involved in running & administering” the crowdfunding effort.  Miller claimed on X that he was “very proud to be part of it.”  Chris Pohlhaus, the founder and leader of Blood Tribe, appears to have donated $20. White supremacist Ryan J. Murdough of the New England White Network (NEWN) also appears to have donated at least $75, writing, “You have support from all over the nation. Please consider moving to New England. You have a pre existing [sic] network of racially aware White [sic] families already here waiting for you,” along with links to his Gab account. An individual promoting the white supremacist group Hate Club donated $20 and included the 14 Words in their message. Similarly, a user promoting the American Blackshirts Movement (ABM) donated $14, urging viewers to join ABM and “forget white guilt.” The Pennsylvania chapter of White Lives Matter (WLM) appears to have donated $14 and included a link to the group’s Telegram channel.

Several donors promoted the antisemitic Goyim Defense League (GDL), with one large $1,488 donation calling Black people “savages” and including a “shoutout” to GoyimTV, the network’s video streaming service. Many of the donations included links to GDL websites. A well-known affiliate of the network appears to have donated $14 to Hendrix, thanking her for “calling out these j*wish [sic] funded 3rd world bioweapons,” along with a link to the network’s propaganda website.

Various Active Clubs also ostensibly donated to the campaign, also using it to promote themselves. Palmetto Active Club (SC) appears to have donated $60, and Tribal Active Club, (AZ) Wyoming Active Club and Great Plains Active Club appear to have donated $20 each.

The prominent  “Western Chauvinist” Telegram channel, affiliated with the Proud Boys, made and forwarded several posts supporting Hendrix, with one reading, “White guilt is over.  We have officially destroyed it.”  The same post was shared by the white supremacist Atlantic Nationalist Club (ANC). An X account affiliated with the white supremacist group Blood Tribe made a repost to the platform praising Hendrix that linked to the GiveSendGo campaign.

On the Ground Impact

Beyond providing online and financial support, white supremacists have demonstrated their backing for Hendrix in the physical world. For example, during a May 3 demonstration in Toronto, Canada, a group of white supremacists—including individuals associated with Nationalist 13 and several Active Clubs—chanted, “Shiloh Hendrix did nothing wrong.”

Several white supremacist groups also distributed propaganda related to the incident. The white supremacist National Organization for Vital Action (NOVA) placed several stickers at the Rochester, Minnesota, playground where the incident took place, with one sticker reading, “Access to whites is not a human right,” and another reading, “White unity.” A Midwest-based Active Club also made a post showing the group’s stickers in Rochester. American Freedom Party (AFP) posted stickers with Hendrix’s face and the caption, “Stand against anti-White terror campaigns,” at unknown locations in central Massachusetts.