As Coachella gears up for its 2018 edition, featuring headliners Beyoncé, the Weeknd, and Eminem, new evidence of links to right-wing causes continue to emerge. In July 2016, the LGBTQ advocacy group Freedom for All Americans reported that the charitable organization founded by Philip Anschutz, who owns Coachella organizer Goldenvoice and half of the festival itself through his entertainment company AEG, gave $190,000 to anti-gay groups between 2010 and 2013. The Anschutz Foundation’s tax filings later confirmed those claims, and in January 2017, right when Coachella tickets went on sale, the news went viral, drawing condemnation and prompting a #BoycottCoachella hashtag on social media.

At that time, Anschutz released a personal statement that read, in part, “Recent claims published in the media that I am anti-LGBTQ are nothing more than fake news—it is all garbage. I unequivocally support the rights of all people without regard to sexual orientation.” He added that he had immediately stopped giving to certain groups upon learning of their support for anti-gay causes.

Though the donations the Anschutz Foundation made in 2017 after the release of that statement are not yet available, Pitchfork has obtained the Foundation's latest annual tax filing, which goes from December 2015 through November 2016. It details the dispersal of $63.7 million in grants. This newly uncovered filing shows that in 2016, the Anschutz Foundation stopped giving to the three groups at the center of the original uproar: Alliance Defending Freedom, Family Research Council, and National Christian Foundation. But they did give to a number of other organizations that have a history of making anti-LGBTQ statements.

Here are five examples:

The Navigators ($40,000; donation dated November 15, 2016) A 2013 document on their website lists being LGBTQ alongside incest and sexual abuse as behavior leading to “sexual brokenness.”

Dare 2 Share Ministries ($50,000; August 23, 2016) Greg Stier, who’s named on this group’s website as its founder and CEO, wrote on the site in a 2008 blog post, “Homosexuality is a Satanic perversion of God’s gift of sex.”

Young Life ($185,000; June 21 and November 15, 2016) This Christian youth ministry’s website has a 2017 policy stating that anyone who is “sexually active outside of a heterosexual marriage relationship” shouldn’t work or volunteer for the organization.

Center for Urban Renewal and Education ($25,000; August 23, 2016) This group’s founder and president, Star Parker, said on “Fox & Friends” last year that the Confederate flag and the rainbow LGBTQ pride flag “represent the exact same thing.” She has also said that gay marriage and legal abortion show that "we're sick as a country."

Movieguide Awards ($25,000; July 19, 2016) This annual awards show is held by Movieguide, a reviews site that includes varying degrees of “homosexual worldview” in its ratings criteria. In a 2012 article on the site, Movieguide founder Ted Baehr and editor Tom Snyder referred to “evils like adultery, rape, homosexuality, lying, arrogance, theft, murder, and malice.” They also wrote, “Kirk Cameron was perfectly correct when he said homosexuality is ‘unnatural’ and ‘destructive.’”

(None of the above groups responded to Pitchfork’s requests for comment prior to deadline.)

When reached for comment, Anschutz’s lawyer offered the following statement: