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Minnesota Democrats using ICE as a distraction from THE scandal

&NewLine;<p>All the news coming out of Minnesota these days involves Immigration and Customs Enforcement &lpar;ICE&rpar;&period; It is driven by daily attacks on ICE by Governor Tim Walz&comma; Attorney General Keith Ellison&comma; Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey&comma; Congresswoman Ilhan Omar and other local officials&period; While there is no direct evidence tying any of the aforementioned public officials directly to the fraud&comma; there are connections and suspicions currently being investigated&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>One is inclined to believe that stirring the immigration pot is strategic – to create a distraction away from the biggest welfare fraud in American History&period; And it has been working until a young independent journalist named Nick Shirley started his own investigation – along with his research partner known only as &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;David”&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>While mainstream outlets tiptoed around the political sensitivities of the scandal – many totally ignoring it &&num;8212&semi; Shirley dove headfirst into the timeline&comma; the oversight failures&comma; and the political reluctance to intervene&period; His reporting has been blunt&comma; unfiltered&comma; and uncomfortably direct&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>He documented how Minnesota agencies continued approving new fraudulent sites even after concerns were raised&period; He highlighted how woke political sensitivities surrounding the Somali community made officials hesitant to act&period; And he exposed the lack of transparency that followed once the scandal finally broke open&period; And he is still producing new reports – new videos&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>In a state where left-wing journalists often treat politicians like extended family members&comma; Shirley’s work has been a dose of cold water&period; He has become a go‑to source for watchdog groups and Minnesotans who feel the mainstream press has been too gentle with the state’s political class&period; His reporting has forced uncomfortable questions into the public conversation—questions that Minnesota’s leadership would prefer to avoid&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>Walz may be seen as the first political casualty of the scandal&period; When the fraud finally hit the front page&comma; Walz withdrew and closed down his campaign for re-election as governor&period; Investigators are now looking into Omar’s husband’s amazing success in going from a modest economic situation to a multimillionaire in a year&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>According to the accounting&comma; more than &dollar;9 billion dollars has been embezzled from the taxpayers&period; It involves money from various state agencies that were intended to daycare&comma; children’s meals&comma; transportation services and other welfare needs&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>While not all the perpetrators are Somali – and not all Somalis are involved – the scandal is centered in the close-knit Somali community – with more than 80 percent of arrests and convictions being Somali immigrants&period; Virtually all of the fraudulent enterprises were Somali run&period; And according to investigators&comma; tens of millions of dollars have been laundered through other American cities and shipped to Somalia in suitcases&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>This was not a subtle operation&period; This was not a few rogue actors fudging numbers&period; This was an industrial‑scale highly organized fraud ring that claimed to be feeding tens of thousands of children who&comma; as it turns out&comma; existed only on paper&period; The money flowed freely—into real estate&comma; luxury cars&comma; overseas transfers and to Somalia&period; It was a criminal enterprise hiding in plain sight&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>Federal prosecutors have described the operation as coordinated&comma; hierarchical&comma; and intentionally deceptive&period; Critics have gone further&comma; comparing it to organized crime—minus the cinematic charm of the Italian Mafia&period; The defendants allegedly shared shell companies&comma; laundered money through real estate&comma; coordinated their stories&comma; and moved funds overseas&period; If this isn’t organized crime&comma; it is at least organized fraud on a scale that would have had the Gambino family taking notes&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>Dozens of daycare centers were receiving millions of dollars each without serving any children – without providing transportation for the elderly or infirmed&period; There were multiple listings in office buildings – and even a gas station and liquor store&period; The fraud was so massive and prolonged that it is impossible to understand how anyone on the government side could have missed it&period; In fact&comma; there has been testimony that the issue had been brought to the attention of Walz and Ellison in the past&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>So&comma; as Walz &amp&semi; Co&period; pound on the ICE and immigration drum&comma; the investigations continue &&num;8230&semi; the arrests continue &&num;8230&semi;the convictions continue&period; Even as media attention is being distracted&comma; the scandal continues to fester&period; What is unfolding largely out of sight at the moment&comma; will be pursued – and will come to a conclusion&period; And in all probability&comma; it will not come out well for Walz&comma; Frey&comma; Ellison&comma; Omar and anyone else who allowed so much of the taxpayers’ money to be stolen on their watch&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>The scandal touches on sensitive political territory&period; &&num;8212&semi; immigration&comma; community nonprofits&comma; federal funding&comma; and political correctness&period; And that is precisely why critics say Minnesota’s political leadership hesitated to act&period; No one wanted to be accused of targeting a minority‑run nonprofit&period; No one wanted to risk political backlash by holding a minority accountable—especially an immigrant minority&period; After all&comma; Minneapolis prides itself as a sanctuary for illegal immigrants&period; So&comma; the fraud continued&period; And continued&period; And continued&period; Until the FBI showed up in town&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>Now&comma; as trials proceed and more indictments loom&comma; Minnesota’s political establishment continues to insist that they were blindsided&period; But thanks to federal prosecutors—and citizen journalists like Shirley—the public now knows better&period; The scandal is not just a criminal enterprise&period; It is a failure of oversight&comma; a failure of transparency&comma; and a failure of political courage&period; It is incompetence and political malfeasance on a grand scale&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>The irony of the situation is almost too rich&period; Minnesota’s government is known for regulating everything from plastic straws to lawn fertilizer&period; Yet when confronted with a nonprofit claiming to feed thousands of children a day from a strip‑mall office&comma; the state suddenly discovered the limits of its power&period; Officials who can spot a rogue gas‑powered leaf blower from a mile away somehow missed a sprawling fraud ring filing paperwork for imaginary meals for imaginary children for more than a decade&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>So&comma; there &OpenCurlyQuote;tis&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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