40 analysts monitor online extremists 24/7
ADL chief reveals analysts monitor extremists for the FBI Tima Miroshnichenko: Pexels

The Anti-Defamation League's chief executive has disclosed that the organisation employs analysts working round the clock to monitor online extremists and shares the resulting intelligence with the FBI.

Jonathan Greenblatt made the remarks at a synagogue event in Los Angeles, outlining an extensive surveillance operation that tracks activity across social media, messaging apps, video games, cryptocurrency platforms, podcasts, short-form video, Wikipedia and large language models.

Scope of Monitoring and Partnerships

The ADL's operation involves what Greenblatt called a 'whole apparatus' dedicated to measuring, tracking and disrupting extremist activity. He highlighted the 40 analysts working full-time, seven days a week, 24 hours a day, a detail that drew particular attention online. The group also trains thousands of law enforcement officers annually on recognising and addressing hate and extremism.

Greenblatt noted that the ADL remains one of the largest non-governmental trainers of police in the United States in this field, with around 20,000 officers receiving instruction each year. Such collaborations with the FBI are longstanding, dating back to at least the 1970s, when the ADL began sharing information from its monitoring of extremist groups with federal field offices.

He described the effort as part of the ADL's broader work to counter antisemitism and other forms of hate, stating that the group monitors extremists across the ideological spectrum, including left-wing radicals, pro-Palestine activists, Christian nationalists and right-wing radicals.

'We monitor these people, and we share the intelligence with the FBI,' Greenblatt said. The comments, which surfaced widely on social media in January 2026, have prompted renewed debate over the boundaries between combating hate and potential overreach into free expression.

Steps Undertaking So Far

In recent years, the organisation has positioned itself as a key resource for identifying threats ranging from white supremacists to other ideologically motivated actors. The intelligence-sharing arrangement allows the ADL to pass along findings from its online surveillance, which operates without the same constitutional constraints that bind law enforcement agencies.

Critics have questioned whether the scope of monitoring risks conflating legitimate political dissent with extremism, particularly given the inclusion of pro-Palestine and anti-war activists in Greenblatt's list. Supporters argue that the work is essential in an era when online platforms accelerate the spread of hate, as evidenced by spikes in antisemitic incidents documented by the ADL itself.

A post from the verified X account @DaizyGedeon, which shared a clip of Greenblatt's remarks, amplified the statement to thousands, framing it as evidence of broad digital surveillance.

Broader Implications Amid Shifting Ties

The disclosure comes against a backdrop of evolving relations between the ADL and federal agencies. In late 2025, the FBI under Director Kash Patel announced it was severing formal ties with the ADL, describing the group as overly partisan in some contexts and rejecting previous partnerships associated with prior leadership.

Despite this, Greenblatt's comments suggest that ad hoc intelligence-sharing on specific threats continues where relevant. No evidence has emerged of the ADL directly accessing bank accounts, though some recirculated clips included unsubstantiated claims to that effect. The organisation has not commented publicly on any shift in its monitoring practices since the January event.

The ADL continues to publish regular reports on extremism and antisemitism trends, urging a whole-of-society response to online hate. Greenblatt's remarks underscore the group's proactive stance in an increasingly polarised digital landscape.