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The documentary-style segment follows Nick Shirley and David as they investigate widespread fraud in Minnesota, centering on nonemergency medical transportation (NEMT), daycare operations, and the way state funds are billed for services that may not be delivered. They present a pattern where transportation companies appear to underpin multiple fraud schemes across childcare, adult daycare, autism services, and interpreter services, with transportation acting as the “belly of the beast” that ties these lines of fraud together. Key findings and claims include: - The investigation asserts that Minnesota’s NEMT sector is dominated by Somali-owned companies. David notes about 20 NEMT companies in Minnesota, with more than 90% Somali-owned, many hosted in addresses that appear noncommercial or vacant (an apartment, a house, a convenience store, or a vacant building) with little or no signage or staff. - The group argues the average national vehicle count per NEMT company is 20. They estimate Minnesota could have approximately 800 Somali-owned NEMT companies, each with about 20 vehicles, and claim payments from the state are based on electronic submissions of trips and miles, with trips typically paid at about $50 per trip (round trips $100). They contend many trips are never performed, yet payments are made once the electronic form is submitted, with no verification of actual service delivery. - The symposium of fraud is described as consisting of daycares, adult daycares, autism services, and other welfare providers that rely on the transportation brokers to create a paper-trail justifying payments to the providers, even when services aren’t delivered. This paper trail allegedly enables continued state funding for many supposedly operating centers. - Safari Transportation (607 Cedar Avenue South, Minneapolis) and Dreamline Transportation (617 Cedar Avenue South) are presented as examples of fraudulent listings: Safari Transportation is alleged not to exist at the listed address; Dreamline Transportation is said to be housed in a liquor store at 617 Cedar Avenue South, with multiple addresses showing confusing or false registration. On-site checks reveal no functioning transportation company or vans, and staff acknowledge the addresses are misleading. The reporting team notes that the listed addresses often correspond to other, non-transport businesses (e.g., money-wiring shops or liquor stores), with no observable fleet and no evidence of active transportation services. - They visit other addresses tied to transportation, such as Epimonia Transport (at 305/308 area) and Crescent Transportation in Saint Louis Park; Epimonia is described as lacking vehicles and consistency in address listings, while Crescent Transportation is found to be an apartment complex rather than a storefront, casting doubt on the legitimacy of these entities. - The Hopkins Child Care Center is highlighted as an example of large state funding for a facility licensed for 118 children, with reported funding of around $2.25 million for a given year and millions across multiple years, yet the center is observed as shuttered or lacking visible child activity, with many vehicles reportedly idle and windows blacked out. Similar patterns are noted at other daycare centers such as Quality Learning Center and Proud Child Care Center in Eden Prairie, which also show high funding receipts (e.g., $1.9 million for Quality Learning Center in a given year; Proud Child Care Center receiving about $1.25–$1.26 million in recent years), but with no apparent foot traffic or detectable enrollment. - The investigation connects the fraud to political actors and public officials, alleging cover-ups or complicity, and raises questions about accountability for figures like Tim Walz. They assert that investigations and governmental actions have been insufficient or misdirected to address the alleged fraud. - In a broader fraud narrative, they claim millions of dollars were being funneled through TSA at Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport, with whistleblowers recounting large sums (often in the millions) moved by Somali-descent individuals, sometimes via routes through Atlanta to Dubai before wiring money to Somalia. A former TSA narcotics investigator describes routine cash movements at checkpoints, suggesting that declarations of large sums did not trigger meaningful enforcement, and implying the funds were linked to the daycare and welfare networks described earlier. Throughout, the speakers attempt to confront individuals at various sites, record responses, and juxtapose the alleged abundance of funding with the lack of visible services or vehicles. They emphasize that even when fraud is spotlighted, participants often respond with hostility or denial, while security is required to manage confrontations. They conclude with a call for accountability and reforms, asserting that the fraud spans the entire state and that transportation companies are central to the ability to sustain fraudulent payments.

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Speaker 0: A quiet building in Signal Hill, California, is described as not resembling the headquarters of hundreds of trucking companies. Federal records show nearly 700 freight companies tied to this single address, with roughly 500 listing the same email: WTF FMCSA@AOL.com. CRAX reported this exact address to federal regulators two years ago. The speaker asks, If we all know about it and we reported it, why is something not being done?

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Elizabeth describes a pattern she’s seeing in Portland, Maine that mirrors what’s been found in Minnesota: the use of zombie offices and large clusters of home health care businesses operating from a single location to defraud Medicaid. She notes that among the businesses registered in the Portland area, of the 20-something identified, about 10 are home health care providers. She cites specific examples, including Prestige Home Care, Bright Star Home Care, Atlanta Community Support, Five Stars Home Health Care, and Prime Home Care LLC, as part of this trend. Elizabeth emphasizes that this clustering is a tactic previously observed in Minnesota, where the Minnesota House Oversight Committee on Fraud described it as a giant red flag, pointing to large groups of health care providers located in one building as problematic. She points to a particular building in Portland as evidence: inside this building, 22 different home and community-based health care companies are registered, illustrating the concentration of providers within a single address. Ron Nevins, the building owner, agrees to speak with Elizabeth about what’s inside. He is asked about how many health care companies occupy the space. He responds, “I think I got 10 health care companies, which is probably about half, maybe a little less than half of this building.” He repeatedly references “health care, health care, health care, home health care,” underscoring the focus of the tenants. Elizabeth probes the legitimacy of these businesses, asking whether they are all legitimate. Ron Nevins replies partially: “Some, yes, but some I highly question.” His comment reflects uncertainty about the fidelity or legality of the operations housed in the building, aligning with the concerns raised by the Minnesota case. In summary, the reporting highlights a pattern of many home health care providers co-located in a single Portland building, mirroring Minnesota’s findings of clustered health care entities as a potential red flag for Medicaid fraud. The account cites specific companies and notes substantial occupancy by home health care firms, while also acknowledging doubts about the legitimacy of some of these businesses according to the building’s owner.

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A person went to a secret migrant shelter in Massachusetts and was allegedly reported to the police. The speaker claims the shelter spends $100,000 per month on Lyft rides for illegal immigrants. According to the ex-director of the shelter, the shelter has contracts with Uber and Lyft and pays them directly, even for trips to Boston or New Hampshire. The ex-director estimates Uber and Lyft costs totaled $1,200,000 a year. The speaker also claims the shelter charges taxpayers for empty rooms at $180 a night, and also bills for meals in those rooms. The ex-director alleges there is a tremendous amount of waste and/or fraud. The speaker claims to have exposed millions more in fraud and will post another video if they gain 500 followers.

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A documentary-style investigation in Minnesota accuses widespread government-funded fraud across childcare, elder care, and health care services, alleging that hundreds of millions (potentially billions) of taxpayer dollars were funneled to fraudulent businesses, many run by Somali-owned entities, with insufficient or no evidence of actual children or patients being served. Key figures and setup - David: An investigator whose office is in Minneapolis, claiming firsthand exposure to fraud. He frames the problem as deeply entrenched, involving billions of dollars and potentially ties to terrorist groups abroad. - Nick Shirley: The presenter and filmmaker, documenting the investigation, confronting daycare centers, health care providers, and government officials. Main fraud allegations and examples - Childcare and early learning centers: - Multiple Minneapolis daycares listed at the same addresses, licensed for large capacities (e.g., 120 children) but with no children present in long-running site visits. - Examples include Mako Childcare and Mini Childcare Center: combined licensing for 120 children, but vans never moving and no children observed over repeated visits; fiscal year payments ranged from about 714,000 to over 1.6 million dollars for the two centers in various years. - ABC Learning Center and other nearby facilities: windows blocked out, doors locked, no children observed despite licensing for dozens or hundreds of children; payments in the hundreds of thousands to millions per year. - Sweet Angel Childcare and others: similar patterns—license capacity reported, payments received, but no children seen; in one case, ongoing operation with no obvious play area or evidence of childcare. - The video notes cases where two daycares share addresses or switch names (e.g., Creative Minds Daycare reopens as Super Kids Daycare Center) yet continue to receive state funding, suggesting “fraudulent” billing. - Some locations claimed to be open long hours and to serve many children, yet on-site visits found no children, locked doors, or hostile responses when questioned. In one instance, a staffer refused to discuss the operation or provide paperwork. - Specific sums cited include ownership of facilities with payments like 1.26 million, 987 thousand, 714 thousand, 1.6 million, 1.3 million, 1.0–1.6 million in various fiscal years, totaling near several millions per site and aggregating toward millions across multiple centers. - Home health care and other services: - A building housing 14 Somali-owned home health care companies under many different names, all operating from the same location, raising concerns about service provision and billing. - A broader claim that in Minnesota, 14–22 Somali health care businesses at the same address are part of the same ecosystem; government money (state and federal CCAP funding) is disbursed to these entities, with a perception that services may not be rendered as billed. - A separate building contains numerous health care providers; the interviewee asserts that 50–60 million dollars per year could be fraudulently routed through this single building. - Overall scale and claims: - David asserts the fraud is “far worse than anybody can imagine” with estimates initially as high as 7 to 10 billion, later revised publicly to around 8 billion; in total, a major portion of the state budget is implicated. - A central claim is that funds from CCAP (a blend of federal and state money, taxpayer money) are written as checks to providers who may not deliver corresponding services; the state’s checks are allegedly not effectively cross-checked for actual service provision. - Political and procedural dimensions: - The investigation contends that Minnesota governor Tim Walz is responsible for allowing or failing to curb fraud, describing the state as “ground zero” for the issue and criticizing political and procedural inaction. - The documentary frames fraud as nonpartisan, noting Medicaid fraud occurs across parties and administrations nationwide, but then presents a partisan friction as they confront lawmakers at a state Capitol hearing. - At the Capitol hearing, Republicans and Democrats discuss fraud, with some speakers asserting the problem is nonpartisan and rooted in systemic issues across administrations, while others push to hold specific leaders accountable and emphasize the need for transparency and enforcement. Confrontations and outcomes - The team encounters resistance and hostility at several sites, including doors locked, hostile staff, and in one instance, a confrontation resulting in police involvement at a building housing healthcare providers. - The investigators claim to have faced intimidation and even threats; they describe instances of violence toward them for asking questions about child and elder care fraud. - The film documents a tense, complex landscape of allegations, aiming to connect misallocated funds to non-delivered services, with ongoing investigations, raids, and political debate as the state capital becomes a focal point for accountability discussions.

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We found 10,000 people using the same Social Security number. They are brought in illegally and given a number to pay taxes. Companies hire them across various plants and factories, all using the same number. The IRS only checks if there's an employer linked to the number, validating it. This allows these individuals to obtain driver's licenses and potentially influence voter rolls. These workers don't pay taxes as it's deducted by the companies. The government has a $1.7 trillion slush fund, generating $100 million in interest monthly. This information reveals a corrupt system that benefits everyone involved, leading to attempts on the speaker's life.

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A WFA investigation revealed trucking companies are using fake addresses to evade federal oversight. Many companies register at virtual mailbox locations, which is illegal because the FMCSA requires a real physical address where records can be inspected. One building in California has nearly 700 freight companies tied to it, with roughly 500 using the email wtffmcsa@aol.com. FreightValidate reported these issues but questions why action hasn't been taken. The FMCSA stated the address is a legitimate business address for a motor carrier consultant, but regulations state a motor carrier cannot designate the office of a consultant if the motor carrier is not engaged in operations at that location. While some owner-operators may use virtual addresses legitimately, fraudulent carriers have much higher crash rates. The FMCSA is now using facial recognition to verify new applicants, but this doesn't address existing fraudulent companies. FreightValidate believes focus should be on who is operating the company, not who is behind the webcam.

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The investigation follows earlier findings tied to unusual activity in some H-1B LCA applications, including businesses allegedly set up in people’s homes and reports of no workers present at the work site. Investigators expand the check to multiple work locations, repeatedly finding locked doors, dark offices, and rooms with furniture but no visible computers, servers, or working staff. They begin near “Suite 78” at the BlazeTV studios area and describe the pattern of “tech” companies lacking technology or personnel on-site. At several locations, expected suite numbers cannot be found, offices appear inactive, or addresses appear inconsistent with what is listed in LCA paperwork. Examples include: - TechBits (Suite 264 referenced in connection with another company), where doors are locked and no one appears present. - Unique Software Solutions (four H-1B visas referenced for 2025), again with a locked door. - Oak Technologies, described as having an HQ at Suite 264, but investigators cannot find the suite in the building listed, then later claim the company appears in a different suite number. - Suite 175, associated with 21 H-1B visas in 2025, where investigators find another locked door with no lights and no one available. - A recurring observation that some locations appear to include card tables or ping pong tables with no workers actually using them. The investigators cite U.S. Department of Labor Fact Sheet 62 F to explain why they can request H-1B employer public access records. They state that public access records must be maintained and made available under the H-1B program, available within one working day of filing the LCA, and that members of the public may capture information by transcription, scanning, or taking photographs. They describe this as enabling “auditing,” while also emphasizing a “major flaw” if the company does not exist or is not operating at the claimed work site. They describe ANA Infosystems (Suite 275) as having multiple 2025 workers listed on-site and seven H-1Bs approved in 2025, but no one is found at the suite; the area is also described as available for renting. They also report that Oak Technologies’ listed new address differs from what the investigators see, and that another company on their list occupies the space. They introduce the idea of “hives,” where multiple businesses list the same suite/address on paperwork and/or claim workers are present there. They describe finding at least 19 companies sharing Suite 290 at 400 East Royal Lane simultaneously, and then another active cluster nearby, with companies from Suite 290 also appearing associated with 320 Decker Drive, Suite 100. Investigators say inquiries there lead to claims of virtual/absent office presence and that companies do not recognize one another or the listed suites, with no physical presence at those locations. A reference is made to an indictment involving Texas residents and an alleged visa fraud scheme that included nonexistent jobs, payments routed from visa seekers to create legitimacy, and consequences described as possible federal prison time if convicted. They then focus on Innovative Datalytics Group LLC at 8105 Razor Blvd in Plano, stating that at least seven H-1B workers were listed to work on-site. Investigators claim the company had no website and that the visa paperwork lists Suite 78; they say they locate only a mailbox where Suite 78 is expected. Because public access files could not be obtained at the business location, they speak with the owner at home, who states she does not know the exact office address and says her husband handled details. She confirms they co-leased the space with another company and that she does not know where the workers are located, including where their residential addresses might be. They later speak with her husband (Arvind), who states the H-1B workers “never came,” describes the company as dormant after plans fell through due to a deal not happening, and says they kept paying them while no employees arrived. They also discuss discrepancies in the documents, including Suite 78 being described in paperwork as the employment location despite investigators finding it only as a mailbox. Additional discrepancies include a missing public access file: investigators note eight LCAs were filed but only seven public interest files were provided. The investigators emphasize that even if workers supposedly never come, public access files must be maintained, and argue the system allows companies to request/produce documentation without verifiable confirmation of physical presence. They call attention to the “holes” between on-site findings and paperwork claims and urge further independent investigation. They also mention that H-1B registration opened on March 4.

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We need to focus on the lies surrounding the topic of HP 1 visas. I've been involved in this issue for over a decade, and it played a significant role in Trump's rise to power. I was present during a historic meeting at Trump Tower with tech leaders, including Elon Musk, where the main concern was the theft of intellectual property by the Chinese Communist Party. Many in the room felt that previous administrations had failed to address this issue. Today, we have Mark Kerkorian from the Center for Immigration Studies to discuss the truth about HP 1 visas and the impact of foreign labor on American jobs. The narrative supporting HP 1 visas is misleading, and we must confront this issue decisively.

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Speaker 0: Massive fraud is going on here in the state of Minnesota, especially in Minneapolis. Explain to me what's going on with the day cares. Speaker 1: One of the things I've noticed is there’s an exceptional number of childcare centers set up mostly in Minneapolis, but also in Saint Paul. I wondered how many kids are there in the Twin Cities. I visited facilities near my office and saw there aren’t any kids there. I’d go to another one and there aren’t any kids there either. I spoke with someone outside who said, “We’re all full,” yet when I looked inside the door was open and there was a couch and a table with a couple chairs and no kids. I asked if the kids were outside playing or what kind of place this was, and the staffer said, “You go,” and followed me down the street to my car. That made me think something was going on, and this was maybe five years ago. Speaker 1: This fraud is so massive. When the dust settles on this, it’s going to be found to be the largest fraud in the history of the country and probably the world. The ones I’ve gotten data on average about $2,500,000 a year, and a lot of them will say they have anywhere from 80 to 120 children. Speaker 1: I’ve been to literally 40 or 50 of these childcare centers, and there never has been a single child at any one of them ever. Morning, afternoon, evening. Some say they’re open till 10:00 at night. I go there in the morning, I go there in the afternoon, I go there at 9:00 at night. Nobody. There are no kids there ever.

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Speaker 0 highlights a quiet building in Signal Hill, California, that seems unlikely to be the headquarters for hundreds of trucking companies. Federal records reportedly show nearly 700 freight companies tied to this single address, with roughly 500 of those companies listing the same email: WTF FMCSA@AOL.com. The segment notes that CRAX reported this exact address to federal regulators two years ago, and asks, "Because if we all know about it and we reported it, why is something not being done?"

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Speaker 0 asserts that illegal immigrants are using Meta's Facebook to buy fake IDs and Social Security cards, access human smuggling services, and illegally work for Uber, DoorDash, and Instacart through online flea markets. Key examples and claims: - A page titled “obtain your license to drive from The United States here” advertises multiple fake driver’s licenses in several videos, alongside fake Social Security cards and even credit scores. The page claims the IDs can pass an authenticity check and can pass under a black light, revealing a hologram security feature typically applied to real government-issued driver’s licenses. Fake licenses are advertised for every state, and the page owner can create an ID for any required state; instructions were provided on what information would be needed. - This page is described as one of many across the US advertising the same service. - Variations exist for obtaining work: ads on Facebook pages promoting activation or rental of Uber Eats, DoorDash, or Instacart accounts. Migrants can buy an already activated food delivery account or rent one from another user. - A woman posted an image reading “rent account for DoorDash” in Spanish; she stated the rental price as $500. Alongside a driver’s license and Social Security number, a bank account is also needed to start a food delivery account, and bank accounts can also be rented. On a Latinos in the Bronx, Queens, Manhattan, and Brooklyn page, someone is advertised renting out a bank account for $25 a week. - Before migrants can access illegal work, they must enter the country. Facebook allegedly allows advertisements of human smuggling services. A page titled “Coyote five zero two” has almost 100,000 followers and regularly posts videos of large groups of migrants walking through and being smuggled through Mexico; comments suggest they can be brought over from Mexico into the US within twenty minutes, with smugglers offering faster and cheaper options. - A page named “Flea Market of Phoenix” posted a smuggling video showing migrants climbing over the border wall. The page has over 72,000 followers. After inquiries, the author described services as “El Brinco” (the jump) and stated his service would be fast, easy, and secure, sending two videos: the original ad of smugglers hoisting a ladder and another showing a trail to get over from Mexico to the US in thirty minutes or less. In further messages, the smuggler discussed pricing: $7,500 per person, plus a $1,000 per person finder’s fee for referrals. - The narrator notes that creating or obtaining fake identification or smuggling a person across the border would typically be a felony, and working illegally would risk deportation. Nonetheless, Meta is described as allowing this illegal activity to take place on Facebook daily, with online flea markets found in cities and states across the US, even in places without sanctuary laws for illegal immigrants.

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Chaya from Lives at TikTok explains she investigated an unmarked building in Burnsville, Minnesota, where nine health care companies are operating out of a single location, all with Somali names. She notes there are likely more than the nine discovered. One of the entities is Grace Care Center, run by Saeed Ahmad, which the site claims has a facility for kids with autism. She reports numerous red flags on that site, including slogans like “We cure your chill,” and suggests it is aimed at offering care for children. When contacting the listed numbers for these businesses, many do not work: some ring endlessly, others are disconnected. Most of the companies do not have websites, reviews, or additional information available. One company at the location does have a website, but it contains many spelling errors. The site’s gallery uses stock images that do not lead anywhere. Other links on the site do not function, redirecting back to the homepage. The “About Us” section states it was founded by Omar, accompanied by a stock image of a white woman, even though Saeed Ahmad is the founder. The contact information is described as fake, including a fake address, phone number, and email address. Chaya emphasizes that the situation appears highly suspicious.

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I asked if the same social security number was used on at least 20 different CHNV supporter applications, and you acknowledged being aware that it happened at least 3,200 times, according to a DHS report, which you don't dispute. I then asked about the same phone number being used on at least 20 different supporter applications, at least 3,300 times, according to the same report. I asked if you agree with the report's accuracy. While you don't have the report in front of you, you don't disagree with that number. The same email address was used on at least 20 different supporter applications nearly 2,000 times. I pointed out that the same 184-word text response was used on over 1,800 applications by nearly 190 supporters, and over 460 nonexistent zip codes were used on applications for over 2,800 aliens. I asserted that this program is rife with fraud and that DHS had approved over 80,000 CHNV supporters in the US on a temporary basis as of August 6th, 2024.

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In Columbus, Ohio, in front of the Great Minds Learning Academy, one of several day care centers associated with the Somali community, speakers discuss a report by Nick Shirley about fraudulent daycare facilities in Minneapolis. They note this is the second-largest Somali community in the United States and intend to investigate further. The team attempts to visit the first center, knocking and ringing the doorbell, but no one answers and the door is locked. They speak with a local man who says the daycare is owned by Somalians and mentions that he has never seen children there, noting that the center “use[s] the back door,” so they don’t see anyone coming in or out. He lives in the same building and confirms that he has not seen kids at the location. Another speaker reiterates, “I’ve just seen it the building itself. I’ve never seen nobody come out the building or go into the building.” The group proceeds to the back of the building, as suggested, but finds nothing there. They decide to move on, noting there are many more centers to visit, and plan to go around the city to speak with people at additional locations. They sign off with a plan to continue the investigation and stay tuned.

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We found 10,000 people using the same Social Security number. They are brought in illegally and given a number to pay taxes. Companies hire them across various plants and factories, all using the same number. The IRS only checks if there's an employer associated with the number, validating it. These individuals then use the number to obtain driver's licenses, leading to voter suppression. The government ignores this issue and these individuals don't pay taxes, as companies deduct them. The government has a $1.7 trillion slush fund, generating $100 million in interest monthly. This information is unsettling, revealing a corrupt system benefiting everyone involved.

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The speaker discovered strange documents in a database at work. One document praised Satan and was traced back to a Satanic book. The speaker found it suspicious that only higher-ranking employees could add documents to the database. They also found a document about depopulation, but couldn't determine if it supported or opposed it. The speaker then stumbled upon an address related to the Wuhan lab in China, which had the number 666. They verified this information on Google and took a screenshot. The speaker got in trouble for sharing the screenshot at work.

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Speaker 0 visits a location in California described as “home to a porta john and a giant empty parking lot,” yet inside this empty lot there are “registered voters.” He states that there are “26 registered voters for this exact location. 100 Sunset Avenue in Venice. 26 people registered to a porta john and an empty parking lot. Where do their ballots go exactly? So who's picking up the ballots? Who's voting for the people in this lovely porta john empty lot? Ask the question.” He concludes, “I think you know the answer.”

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Since September 19, officers from our fraud detection and national security directorate working in teams have conducted over a thousand site visits across the Minneapolis Saint Paul area as part of this operation. What they found should shock all of America. Focusing on a list of over a thousand target cases involving more than 900 individuals, our officers encountered blatant marriage fraud, visa overstays, people claiming to work at businesses that can't be found, forged documents, abuse of the H-1B visa system, abuse of the F-one visas, and many other discrepancies. Over the course of the operation, our officers found indication of fraud, noncompliance, or public safety and national security concerns in nearly a little less than fifty percent of the cases interviewed.

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The speaker asserts that in their affidavit they list 19 points and describe spending 27 hours at the TCF Center. They state they are a mother with two children and two degrees, and claim they would never write an affidavit under oath just to write it, noting that you can go to prison for this. They explain that they was initially supposed to work at the Detroit Department of Elections building, an order by their manager, Nick Economagunas, whom they identify as part owner of Dominion. They claim they have emails confirming the arrangement and that they were trained on the adjudication and tabulation process. An email allegedly instructs them to park in a lot and be shuttled to what they call the “Chicago Warehouse.” The speaker asserts that there was illegal activity at that location, stating that there are pictures of people carrying ballots out of the place and vans full of ballots leaving. Around 4:30 AM, they say there was an announcement that a new shipment of ballots was arriving, and that these boxes of ballots were brought in by “mister Baxter” from the rear of the room. They personally witnessed Mr. Baxter carrying boxes from the rear basement of the TCF Center to the tables. They describe each box as containing approximately 600 ballots, and note that the tables were 10-foot tables and about seven tables in total, all full of boxes of ballots. They estimate that about 50,000 ballots were brought in, clarifying that not all ballots were necessarily from the rear entrance, but that there were far more ballots than the ones brought in from the rear entrance. They recount the timeline as starting at 6 AM, with shipments arriving around 4:30–5 AM, and three rounds of activity earlier in the night—from around 10 PM to 1 AM and 1 AM to 4 AM—followed by the arrival of the 4:30 AM boxes. With the shift change, most volunteers, who had expected to be there from 10 PM to 5 AM, left at 5 AM, leaving the speaker to stay. The shift change occurred, and at 6 AM, Baxter and his management team resumed on the microphone. They allegedly stated, “this is what democracy is is supposed to look like,” and the whole room cheered in response to the new shift.

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A building in Signal Hill, California appears to be the headquarters for nearly 700 freight companies, according to federal records. Approximately 500 of these companies share the same email address: WTFfmcsa@aol.com. CRAX reported this address to federal regulators two years ago. The speaker questions why no action has been taken despite the report.

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The speaker states that the woman who owns the building housing a child care service recently opened a restaurant there as well. This same woman previously ran Samala Child Care, which was rated in 2015 for stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars and had its license revoked. The speaker notes that under a different variation of her name, she also operates the Hu Yu Child Care Center. The speaker then claims that a Google search for the Hu Hu You Child Care Center yields a video featuring the mayor of Minneapolis. In that video, the mayor is playing very loudly Somali music and is wearing a shirt that shows pride in Nicolette Street. The speaker asserts that he is very proud of his community and all of the fraud that they have all committed together.

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The first speaker contends that Congress is trying to give $5,000,000,000 of your money for refugee resettlement programs, and that money ends up in places like this. The second speaker identifies the International Rescue Committee as the largest refugee NGO in the country, noting that they get government funds and subcontract the work out to places like this. The first speaker describes the Somali American Community Center as a location that receives grants from the IRC in order to help refugees resettle in America. The second speaker reports that when they went in, they found this: an almost completely abandoned retail space that hasn’t filed taxes in almost ten years. The first speaker states that almost every business in the area is focused on getting refugees on taxpayer funded welfare programs. The second speaker asserts that this is how the largest refugee city in the country is funded. The first speaker adds that this is how over 87% of Somali immigrants end up on taxpayer funded public assistance. The second speaker notes that they spent three days in Little Somalia in Atlanta, Georgia. The first speaker concludes by saying that in the largest refugee center in the entire country, this is what they found.

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Speaker 0 presents a video focused on data and evidence of alleged irregularities in the 2020 election, asserting that there has been no comprehensive place to see widespread fraud until now. He states the video is “pure data” and invites viewers to consider the statistical anomalies in three states (Michigan, Wisconsin, Georgia) in the early hours of 11/04/2020, when Biden received major vote spikes after trailing Trump. - He analyzes 8,954 individual vote updates and identifies a clear statistical pattern across nearly all updates, with four notably aberrant updates: two in Michigan, one in Wisconsin, and one in Georgia, all occurring in the same five-hour window in the middle of the night when counting reportedly stopped in some places. - In Michigan, a 06:30AM update shows Biden at 141,258 votes to Trump’s 5,968, described as the most extreme update in all datasets across all states, followed by a noticeable ratio change in nearby updates. In Wisconsin, a single update allegedly moved Biden from trailing by over 100,000 votes into the lead. In Georgia, a 01:34AM Eastern Time update shows Biden at 136,155 to Trump’s 29,115. They claim these four spikes exceed the states’ margins of victory, making the spikes not only abnormal by percentage but also by magnitude. They conclude that if these four unlikely updates had not happened, the presidency could have been different. - Detractors are cited as arguing human error, but the video questions where evidence of corrections is, and notes that California shows only one anomalous update in percentage, not enough magnitude to shift outcomes. - A “consistently identical ratio of Biden to Trump votes across time” is highlighted as allegedly impossible, with a Florida example showing 100 identical ratios over several days. The video asserts a computer algorithm is involved, termed a weighted race distribution, associated with Diebold voting machines (known as early as 2001), implying values rather than simple counts. - In California, a single update is shown with Biden receiving about 65% and Trump 32% for one vote, raising questions about how one vote could go to more than one candidate. Speaker 0 then links these patterns to alleged connections between Diebold and Dominion Voting Systems, claiming Dominion acquired ESNS in 2010, which had previously acquired Diebold, and that Dominion’s software is licensed from Smartmatic. They also note that forensic audits show errors and that the mainstream narrative claims these issues are misinformation. They reference NBC News and PBS findings on how easy it is to hack voting machines or cast fake votes. Next, Speaker 0 notes eyewitness and video evidence from Georgia: poll worker Ruby allegedly was filmed in the backroom with absentee ballots, and at 10:30PM on November 3, media and poll watchers were told to leave, yet Ruby and others remained, pulling ballots from under a table and distributing them to counting stations. They describe Ruby running the same stack of ballots to the machine three times, observing a large Biden surge after 01:34AM Georgia time, and question whether a ballot can be counted more than once, citing Coffey County, Georgia as an example of someone claiming to scan the same batches repeatedly. Speaker 0 references Raquel Rodriguez, arrested for election fraud in Texas over video evidence of ballot harvesting, and asserts that cybersecurity evidence indicates Dominion and Edison Research used an unencrypted VPN with easily accessible credentials allowing foreign access, asserting that China, Iran, and other countries accessed the servers, contradicting claims that Dominion machines were not connected to the Internet. They mention Dominion’s association with a Chinese-registered domain, and board members with Chinese nationality, alleging conflicts of interest through corporate ownership and licensing from Smartmatic. Speaker 0 highlights that Antrim County, Michigan audits found high error and adjudication rates in Dominion, with an 68 o 5% error rate far above federal guidelines, missing logs for 2020, and reprogramming of election event designer cards during the safe harbor period. They point to subpoenas and the lack of access to logs, and to affidavits from poll workers claiming illegal activities, non-equal treatment of observers, counting without proper oversight, shredding ballots, and other irregularities. Speaker 7 concludes with a claim that many Americans distrust the 2020 election and urges viewers to download and share the video, demand election reform, and notes that the video’s credits will continue with data readers, while warning of erasure or fact checks by tech platforms.

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reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
I gave a statement because the same social security number was used on at least 20 different CHNV supporter applications. Are you aware that this happened at least 3,200 times, according to the DHS report? I am also aware that the same phone number was used on at least 20 different supporter applications at least 3,300 times, also per the report. Do you agree with that number? And the same email address was used on at least 20 different supporter applications nearly 2,000 times. When we find fraud, we cure it. And yet nearly 2,000 times, the same email address was used on 20 different supporter applications. Also, the same 184-word text response was used on more than 1,800 applications by nearly 190 different supporters, and more than 460 nonexistent ZIP codes were used on support applications for over 2,800 aliens.
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