Not to be outdone with its controversial "Hate Map" that almost caused mass murder, the Southern Poverty Law Center is now targeting conservative women.

Clare Lopez, one of the women on the SPLC list, made these comments Wednesday on "Washington Watch": Lopez "This list amounts to a hit list. We know that there is a tracked history there of people turning to the list – offered by and [published] on their website at the Southern Poverty Law Center – to attempt and to actually commit violence. "This gets to also the listing of women who have violated Islamic law and slander. The Islamic law on slander is not like the American one. It says that anything offensive to Islam or a Muslim is slander … and slander, whether it's truth or not, can carry the death penalty under Islamic law. That's what makes this a hit list." Clare Lopez, former CIA staffer

VP for Research and Analysis

Center for Security Policy

The newest list is "Women Against Islam," 12 conservative leaders described by the SPLC as the core of the "anti-Muslim radical right."

One of the women listed is Cathie Adams, who leads Texas Eagle Forum and complains, first of all, that SPLC is not a real law center.

"It is a left-wing radical group that wants to target individuals, to shut us up," she tells OneNewsNow.

Adams

But Adams says she won't be silenced, saying that her supposed radical view is that "beheading people and treating women as second-class citizens is very wrong."

OneNewsNow first reported on the list in a June 24 story.

A second name on the "Women Against Islam" list is Sandy Rios, who lives in Washington, D.C. and serves as director of governmental affairs for the American Family Association.

Rios points out that the "Hate Map" operated by SPLC was used as the source by Floyd Corkins, who targeted the Family Research Center in 2012 for its anti-gay views.

"And nearly committed mass murder if he hadn't been stopped by a security guard," who was shot fighting him, Rios points out.

The American Family Association is listed as a "hate group" on the SPLC website.

Corkins admitted to the FBI that he used the "Hate Map," and he entered the FRC office intending to kill its employees and put Chick-fil-A sandwiches on their dead bodies.

The attack at FRC and Corkins' use of the "Hate Map" garnered little attention in the mainstream media but conservative organizations took notice.

And now this newest stunt by the SPLC puts women's lives in danger, says Rios.

"So here they are featuring twelve women with their photos, their locations, knowing full well that the Islamic State and their lone wolf associates are very interested in killing people who oppose Islam," says Rios.

Still another name on the list is anti-Sharia activist Pamela Gellar. She garnered attention by hosting a "draw Muhammad" contest in Texas, where two Muslims were shot and killed attempting to kill Gellar and other attendees.

Rios points out that Gellar now has 24-hour security due to threats on her life, including from ISIS.