It’s Not Crazy To Think Fraud Is Bad
Nick Shirley is 24 years old. He is not a network correspondent with a corner office and a team of researchers. He is a self-made journalist with a camera, a nose for fraud, and the audacity to follow money that powerful people didn’t want followed.
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For that, they nearly killed him.
In December 2025, Shirley released a viral investigation into Minnesota’s child care system; empty rooms, blacked-out windows, misspelled signs, ghost daycares enrolling impossible numbers of children while collecting millions in taxpayer money. He showed the world what anyone with working eyes could see: something was catastrophically wrong.
These children were not “learing” at daycare. They weren’t even real.
We weren’t supposed to notice. The response from the liberal media was swift and vicious.
CNN reported that Somalis were “under attack.” The New York Times said the community was being targeted. Governor Tim Walz, the same man who presided over one of the most staggering fraud collapses in American welfare history, called Nick Shirley’s investigative journalism “white supremacy.” Shirley was doxxed. Death threats arrived complete with a location, a date, and a time.
On April 27, Nick recorded a video. “Today is the day I’m supposed to die,” he said.
He is alive and well, and this week vindicated in the most definitive way possible.
On May 21, 2026, the FBI and Department of Justice announced charges against 15 individuals in schemes totaling over $90 million in intended losses across Minnesota’s public health programs, the two largest Medicaid fraud cases ever charged in the district, and the largest autism-related fraud scheme the DOJ has ever prosecuted. Vice President JD Vance, chairing the White House Task Force to Eliminate Fraud, could finally say what we already knew to be true: Nick Shirley was right.
The charges read like a catalog of the rot that Shirley, journalist Chris Rufo, the Daily Wire’s Luke Rosiak, and others had been documenting for months. The Early Intensive Developmental and Behavioral Intervention autism program — which exploded from roughly $600,000 in claims in 2018 to hundreds of millions in recent years — was being systematically looted. Clinic operators paid kickbacks of $300 to $1,500 per child per month to parents in exchange for fraudulent autism diagnoses. Medicaid was then billed for therapy sessions that never happened. Children who genuinely needed services were crowded out by a machine built entirely to steal.
The Housing Stabilization Services program — projected to cost $2.5 million annually when it launched — ballooned to $104 million before the state was forced to shut it down entirely, stranding the disabled and homeless people it was designed to serve. One of the cases charged this week involves a man who required 24-hour care. He received nothing. He was found dead. The day before he died, his provider billed Medicaid for services that, if actually rendered, might have kept him alive.
That is not bureaucratic inefficiency. That’s predation.
The same week the indictments dropped, the ringleader of the $250 million Feeding Our Future scandal, a separate but connected fraud web involving fake meal counts, fabricated invoices, and luxury real estate purchases, was sentenced to over 40 years in federal prison.
This is all just the tip of the iceberg. Luckily, Shirley saw that iceberg before the Titanic America could hit it. He pointed it out, filmed it, published it, and for roughly five months, the media told you he was the problem.
This is the playbook, and by now we should all recognize it. When someone follows the money and the money leads somewhere uncomfortable, the response isn’t accountability; it’s accusation.
Racists and Bigots and White supremacists! Oh My!
The smear is deployed not to refute the evidence but to raise the cost of noticing it. Make the journalist the story. Give the fraudsters victim status. Make the public feel crazy for believing what’s in front of their own eyes.
They made you feel crazy for refusing to wear an N-95 mask in an outdoor park, for refusing a vaccine, for wanting to keep your own money, and for voting for a pragmatic businessman instead of an establishment Democrat. Then they literally shot that businessman turned president, and tried to kill him again and again. They made you feel crazy for caring.
They made Nick feel crazy, his audience feel crazy, and all along, the empty rooms were empty, the kids didn’t exist, and the money was going to luxury cars, lavish homes, and remittances wired through informal hawala networks back to Somalia instead of to the sick children and vulnerable adults it was meant to serve. Federal sources have alleged some of those funds found their way to al-Shabaab. Not a conspiracy theory. A federal allegation.
The media won’t give Nick Shirley a Peabody. They will never say they were wrong. But the FBI executed warrants at roughly 20 locations. The DOJ unsealed the charges. JD Vance said his name on camera, thereby vindicating him. That will have to do.
The Democratic establishment of 2026 is a gaslighting ex who swears the stove isn’t on, the money isn’t gone, and the kids are fine. Spoiler: the stove is on. The money is in Somalia. The kids weren’t real.
The restraining order is called a ballot. Use it.
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