Who really bought the Berkeley Springs castle?

As a non-profit, VDare is required to file annual financial reports with the IRS.  VDare’s 2017 report is available directly from the IRS website.

https://apps.irs.gov/pub/epostcard/cor/223691487_201712_990_2019022816132630.pdf

All of the organization’s reports have been collected by ProPublica, and are available at:

https://projects.propublica.org/nonprofits/organizations/223691487

These reports show a small organization struggling to raise enough money to cover expenses – and mostly failing.  VDare’s net assets were small and dropping:

2017:    $163,982

2016:    $178,813

2015:    $335,318

2014:    $650,044

2013:    $1,047,395

2012:    $1,522,319

2011:    $127,763

Aside from one good year (2012, when they raised $1.8 million), revenues never exceeded $500,000, and the 2012 money was almost entirely spent.  So how was VDare able to close on a $1.4 million cash real estate deal?  As recently as Dec. 10, 2019, the site was struggling to raise $200,000 to fund its website publishing

https://vdare.com/posts/help-us-raise-200-000-to-fund-high-impact-america-first-journalism-in-2020

while hailing its previous haul of $100,000 in its last year-end campaign. 

VDare has been silent on the source of its $1.4 million for the castle purchase, begging the question of who really bought the castle. It’s reasonable to assume that whoever put up the cash will have a large say in how the castle is used, and by whom.

It is also reasonable to assume that the purchase of the Berkeley Springs real estate represents a marked shift in the group’s activities, and was not part of their routine, money-losing business.  One thing is clear:  the attempt by VDare and the Morgan Messenger to present the smiling Brimelow family as the owners of the castle is an attempt to obscure the true owners:  VDare and whoever gave them the money.