Ex-gay conversion therapy group continued to operate secretly after court shut it down.

NEW YORK, NY - FEBRUARY 03: Chaim Levin, 22, poses for a portrait in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn on Friday February 03, 2012 in New York, NY. He was raised in the Chabad community and spent nearly two years in JONAH, Jews Offering New Alternatives to Homosexuality. (Photo by Matt McClain for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

In 2015, a New Jersey jury came to a unanimous verdict that the Jewish ex-gay organization JONAH was guilty of consumer fraud for advertising treatments they claimed could change a person’s sexual orientation from gay to straight. Though the court ordered JONAH to shut down, a new complaint from the Southern Poverty Law Center contends that JONAH simply changed its name and continued to offer — and profit from — dangerous conversion therapy.