The Grayzone has reviewed a sealed indictment for pro-Palestine donor Fergie Chambers, who was arrested in Spain on dubious money laundering charges concocted by the Trump DOJ. His partner accuses the US government of “political persecution.”
Fergie Chambers, a communist philanthropist and heir to the Cox family fortune, has been jailed in Ibiza, Spain, on the orders of the US Department of Justice. According to a sealed indictment seen by The Grayzone, Chambers now awaits extradition to Washington on dubious federal charges of “international money laundering… with the intent to provide material support to and resources to foreign terrorist organizations.” If deported to the US, he faces up to 30 years in prison.
On July 10, six Spanish police vehicles surrounded Chambers’ car while he drove through Ibiza with his family, before detaining him. Since his arrest, he has been denied bail and contact with the outside world. Chambers’ detention marks the very first time an individual has faced extradition to the US from Spain for supporting the Palestinian cause.
An heir to the vast Cox family fortune, in 2023 he cut ties with his family and sold his stake in Cox Enterprises, receiving an estimated $250 million. Vowing to use this money to fund social activism and international solidarity work, Chambers has since donated over $1 million to humanitarian projects supporting those impacted by the Gaza genocide, and to support pro-Palestine activist groups and news outlets.
The sealed indictment offers no evidence that Chambers has donated any money to “foreign terrorist organizations.” It merely states “Chambers made numerous transfers of funds from banks in the US to banks in Tunisia,” where he relocated in late 2023.
It appears Chambers used those funds for seemingly legal purposes, including investing in local businesses and sponsoring the Club Africain football team, which in May became champion of the Tunisian Ligue Professionnelle. Chambers has bankrolled similar enterprises, along with political and social causes since the early 2000s, including paying the bail and legal fees of imprisoned left-wing activists.
“The Department of Justice is politically persecuting Fergie [Chambers] because he is using his wealth to support Palestine, and help people facing genocide in Gaza. His crime is dedicating his life to building a better society, rather than exploiting people, extract wealth and profit from war,” Stella Schnabel, Chambers’ partner, told The Grayzone. “He should be home safe with our family and continuing his important humanitarian and social advocacy, not incarcerated in a foreign jail facing effective life imprisonment back in the US.”
Chambers’ arrest comes at a time of bitter tensions between the Trump administration and Spanish government, over President Pedro Sánchez’s vocal criticism of Israel’s assaults on Gaza and Iran, and his refusal to allow Washington to use his country to stage attacks on Iran.
Chambers’ arrest occurred the same day the Washington Post reported Secretary of State Marco Rubio invited senior ministers from more than 60 countries to a meeting on tackling the alleged scourge of “transnational far-left terrorism.” Critics, including some US officials themselves, charge that the Trump administration is seeking to abuse powerful counterterrorism tools to crack down on left-wing activists.
In May, Trump’s new counterterrorism czar Sebastian Gorka – a pro-Israel fanatic exposed by The Grayzone in November 2024 as a longstanding British intelligence asset – unveiled a new “counterterrorism plan” which explicitly targets supposed “left-wing extremist groups” at home and abroad. A US counterterror official recently told the Washington Post that targeting left-wing activists with accusations of links to foreign terrorist groups “can unlock certain investigative tools,” including intensive surveillance. The false conflation of Chambers’ support for activism with Hamas financing fits neatly into this vision.
In June, eight anti-ICE protestors were sentenced for a combined 450 years for their roles in a riot outside a Texan immigration detention center. The severity of their punishments in large part hinged on prosecutors successfully arguing their use of Signal to communicate, and attendance at book clubs where left-wing literature was read, demonstrated they were part of a coordinated terrorist conspiracy. Chambers’ sealed indictment indicates the Trump administration’s war on Palestine solidarity is going global.
Facts Only
* Fergie Chambers was arrested in Spain.
* The indictment alleges charges of "international money laundering… with the intent to provide material support to and resources to foreign terrorist organizations."
* Chambers faces extradition to the US on federal charges.
* Six Spanish police vehicles surrounded Chambers' car in Ibiza and detained him.
* Chambers was denied bail and contact with the outside world since his arrest.
* Chambers donated over $1 million to humanitarian projects supporting those impacted by the Gaza genocide and pro-Palestine groups.
* The indictment notes transfers of funds from US banks to Tunisian banks.
* Chambers invested in local businesses and sponsored the Club Africain football team.
* Chambers paid bail and legal fees for imprisoned left-wing activists since the early 2000s.
* The detention is the first time an individual has faced extradition to the US from Spain for supporting the Palestinian cause.
Executive Summary
Full Take
The narrative weaves together financial flows, geopolitical conflict, and evolving domestic security rhetoric. The core tension lies in the discrepancy between the formal charge of providing support to foreign terrorist organizations and the documented use of funds for humanitarian causes and political activism. The framing suggests that wealth accumulation and subsequent advocacy can be reinterpreted through a lens of state-sanctioned political persecution, particularly when juxtaposed against counterterrorism strategies.
The process observed involves linking specific financial transactions (US to Tunisia) with political alignment (pro-Palestine advocacy) to construct an indictment, which is then situated within a broader context of evolving US and Spanish geopolitical friction regarding the conflict in Gaza. The appearance of Chambers' activities—funding activism, supporting left-wing causes, and engaging in international financial transfers—is presented as evidence aligning with narratives pushed by anti-left-wing counterterrorism efforts, specifically referencing the trajectory of groups sentenced for terrorist activity.
The pattern suggests an attempt to use complex financial mobility as a mechanism to enforce geopolitical alignment. The assertion that Chambers' actions are inherently criminal relies on equating broad social solidarity and wealth reallocation with specific terrorist financing, which requires scrutiny of the evidentiary threshold between political funding and illegal material support. Further inquiry must address how domestic security tools, ostensibly aimed at external threats, are applied internally to manage ideological dissent and advocate for state-aligned narratives regarding global conflicts. What criteria justify using international legal mechanisms to prosecute individuals based on the structure of their public advocacy rather than direct operational involvement?
