Deguello Report

Deguello Report
AuthorUnknown (possibly Robert DePugh)
LanguageEnglish
SubjectAmerican far-right movement
PublisherDistributed anonymously
Publication date
July 1976
Publication placeUnited States
Media typeReport
Pages54
OCLC857796652

The Deguello Report on the American Right Wing (sometimes called just Deguello, the Deguello Communication, or the Deguello Report) is an anonymously written, 54-page report that purports to document the supposed infiltration of the far-right movement in the United States by Jews, socialists, and homosexuals. The report itself claims to be written by intelligence agents sympathetic to the movement. It was not formally published, but began to circulate among members of the far-right in 1976. It was published in 2000 in the Encyclopedia of White Power, which collected primary sources relevant to the far-right, listing the report as one of two "movement reports".

The report is conspiratorial and has been noted as an example of the paranoid ideology of the American far-right in the 1970s. Academic Jeffrey Kaplan summarized the report as accusing high profile figures in the movement of "being secret communists taking part in a communist conspiracy, of being secret Jews involved in a Jewish conspiracy, secret homosexuals involved in a homosexual conspiracy, or in most cases a combination of the three". Its distribution was highly controversial within the far-right, resulting in controversy and speculation; the identity of the author of the report has never been proven. Several commentators identify its author as Minutemen founder Robert DePugh, though he denied this.