• Loading stock data...
Thursday, January 8, 2026
exclusive
Media

Who Is Funding The Attack Ads Against LIV Golf?

  • A new group, 9/11 Justice, has spent more than $230,000 running anti-LIV commercials this summer.
  • The effort mirrors dark money political campaigns as contributions to the group are anonymous.
9/11 Justice
Chris Pedota/USA TODAY NETWORK

Dennis McGinley held up a photo of his brother, Danny, who was among the nearly 3,000 killed during the 9/11 terror attacks. 

“You’re taking money from an evil regime,” Dennis McGinley said as images of Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson and Bryson DeChambeau flashed in the background.   

The emotionally raw ad was part of a campaign launched against LIV Golf over its ties to Saudi Arabia. Many of the people affiliated with group behind the ad, 9/11 Justice, are plaintiffs in a lawsuit filed against Saudi Arabia that alleges the government “knowingly” provided support for the attacks. 

Nearly 21 years after the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon carried out by 15 Saudi citizens and four others, the emotional impact of 9/11 hasn’t faded. Members of 9/11 Justice have gotten their message out in interviews on ABC News, CBS News, CNN, and many other outlets. 

Between the commercials and the news coverage, 9/11 Justice has reached an estimated 9 million television viewers. 

The astonishing part: 9/11 Justice didn’t exist until just a few days ahead of the first U.S. LIV Golf event, where the first ads ran in June. And exactly who has paid more than $230,000 on anti-LIV Golf commercials remains a mystery.

A Front Office Sports investigation shows the secrecy behind the group is by design, utilizing tactics reminiscent of “dark money” political campaigns. 

While not revealing the donors to 9/11 Justice, president and co-founder Brett Eagleson did offer some clues in an interview with FOS. 

“The money is coming from deep-pocketed individuals and entities that share in our pursuit of justice and they want us to succeed,” said Eagleson, who lost his father in the terror attacks. “We need to protect our donors because we are up against some really nasty people, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. They would do anything to discredit our donors.”

Eagleson added that even though the group is new, he’s among the many people associated with it that have been critics of Saudi Arabia and its business ventures in the U.S. for years.

The group was founded days before LIV Golf’s U.S. debut in Portland and is run as a social welfare group under Section 501(c)(4) of the U.S. tax code. That means while it has non-profit status, it’s not required to disclose donors. Most public interest organizations and charities exist under 501(c)(3) in the tax code, which requires them to list the source of top donors. 

The loophole that skirts both IRS and Federal Election Commission disclosures has been utilized for years in dark money campaigns to run ads without knowing who funded them. The first notable example can be traced back to the group Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, which spent millions in a campaign against Democratic candidate John Kerry during the 2004 presidential election.

As such, there’s no definitive way to tell who exactly is funding 9/11 Justice. But FOS, through interviews and research, has been able to identify some details of the group. 

  • 9/11 Justice was incorporated in Delaware on June 27, 2022 according to public records. 
  • The website’s domain was registered on June 22 and launched the same day.
  • Media Ad Ventures, a Virginia-based ad buying company with ties to the GOP, placed the ads in Portland, according to FCC filings.
  • An open letter titled “An Open Letter to PGA Tour Members” was on the page at launch per The Internet Archive. The letter was signed by 1,650 people who either lost loved ones or survived 9/11.
  • That list of names is identical to a letter sent by the law firm Kreindler & Kreindler to President Biden in August 2021 that sought the release of documents related to the FBI’s investigation into Saudi Arabia’s involvement in the terror attacks. 

Kreindler & Kreindler issued the following statement to FOS: 

“We represent thousands of members of the 9/11 community, many of whom for years have been passionate and outspoken advocates, in the pending litigation against Saudi Arabia for its role in the 9/11 terrorist attacks. While many of our ideologies likely overlap given our shared goal of justice for the 9/11 community and several of our clients are involved in the group, 9/11 Justice is a wholly independent organization unaffiliated with our firm. Neither the firm nor any of our individual partners have funded or helped arrange funding for 9/11 Justice. We do not oversee, advise, or materially support their efforts in any way. As we approach the 21st anniversary of the attacks, Kreindler & Kreindler’s focus remains on prosecuting this case and obtaining justice for 9/11 families.”

The PGA Tour — which is the target of an antitrust lawsuit filed by LIV Golf and some of its golfers — hasn’t had any direct involvement with 9/11 Justice, a source close to the PGA Tour told FOS. 

Beyond the ads buy, 9/11 Justice also paid the travels costs for several people who lost loved ones or survived the terror attacks to protest outside the LIV events in Portland and Bedminster, New Jersey. 

In red hats that read “9/11 Justice,” they talked to several media members to draw attention to the Saudi-backed tour. Some held pictures of loved ones that were killed. 

The group won’t have a formal protest for this weekend’s event outside Boston, although their commercials will run on the Golf Channel, ESPN, NESN, and Fox News Channel. The ads run Thursday through Sunday in the local markets where LIV is playing.

Per data reviewed by FOS earlier this week, 9/11 Justice will spend at least $40,000 to run the ads in Boston.

Eagleson said the plan is to keep a similar effort going for LIV Golf events in Chicago and Miami to close out the season and, likely, in 2023. 

“When people talk about LIV, they aren’t talking about golf,” he said. “What they are talking about is 9/11. They’re talking about [slain Washington Post journalist Jamal] Khashoggi. They are talking about all the other bad things the Saudis are involved in. It’s been a good opportunity for us to insert ourselves into the dialogue.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Dec 11, 2017; Orlando, FL, USA; New York Yankees outfielder Giancarlo Stanton (27) talks with Yes Network during the winter meetings at Walt Disney World Swan and Dolphin Resort.
exclusive

Yankees RSN and Comcast Reach Deal, Preserving Local Access

After nearly a year of acrimony, a new agreement is quietly struck.
Napheesa Collier
exclusive

WNBA Hasn’t Countered Players’ Latest Offer As Deadline Closes In

The deadline for the sides to reach a labor deal is Friday.
exclusive

Tiger Woods’s 50th Birthday Party Has Jon Bon Jovi and a Title..

The golf superstar is hosting a belated 50th birthday bash.

Featured Today

Hockey in Florida Was Once a Risk. Now It’s Thriving

The state of Florida has become a traditional—and highly lucrative—market.
Dec 30, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic (77) reacts after scoring a basket against the Detroit Pistons during the second half at Crypto.com Arena
January 4, 2026

Why Pro Sports Team Valuations Will Keep Climbing in 2026

Asset scarcity and increasing media-rights deals underpin soaring valuations.
Imagn Images/Front Office Sports
January 2, 2026

FOS Crystal Ball: Predictions for the Business of Sports in 2026

Here’s what FOS journalists think could be on the horizon.
Heated Rivalry (L to R) - Connor Storrie as Ilya Rozanov and Hudson Williams as Shane Hollander in Episode 104 of Heated Rivalry. Cr. Sabrina Lantos © 2025
December 24, 2025

Hockey Needed Some Virality. Then Came ‘Heated Rivalry’

No one was prepared for the Canadian show’s smash success.

TGL Ratings Hold Steady Despite ESPN Schedule Shift

The season opener had an audience of 646,000 viewers on ABC.
Jul 13, 2025; Wimbledon, United Kingdom; Darren Cahill and the support team for Jannik Sinner of Italy react during the menÕs singles final on day 14 at All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club.
January 7, 2026

Pam Shriver, Brad Gilbert Out at ESPN As Network Revamps Tennis Coverage

Darren Cahill’s future is still up in the air after nearly 20 years at ESPN.
Dec 25, 2011; Green Bay, WI, USA; An NBC TV camera during the game between the Chicago Bears and Green Bay Packers at Lambeau Field. The Packers defeated the Bears 35-21.
January 7, 2026

NBCU Betting on Big February Sports Run to Reignite Peacock Growth

Despite a fast-growing set of sports programming, subscribers have plateaued.
Sponsored

ESPN Edge Innovation Conference 2025: Inside the Technology Shaping the Future of..

At ESPN Edge Innovation Conference 2025, ESPN showcased how AI, immersive tech, and a rebuilt direct-to-consumer platform are redefining the future of sports media.
opinion
January 7, 2026

The New Brady Rules: Why NFL QBs Turned TV Talents Are Double-Dipping

Tom Brady started it, and now other NFL TV stars want dual gigs.
Jacksonville Jaguars safety Antonio Johnson (26) celebrates a pick six during the second quarter in an NFL football matchup at EverBank Stadium, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Jacksonville, Fla.
January 7, 2026

NFL Sees Highest Viewership in More Than 35 Years

The league posts its second-best viewership total on record.
The Warner Bros. studios in Burbank, California, U.S. November 18, 2025.
January 7, 2026

WBD Rejects Paramount Again

The TNT Sports parent company will continue with its planned Netflix merger.
January 6, 2026

Main Street Sports Crisis Pushes RSN Rights Closer to League Control

The regional sports broadcaster misses another set of scheduled rights payments.