Emily Jashinsky
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Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem promising arrests are coming Tuesday on Newsmax.
As of this moment, no arrests have been made, but AM Update and The Megyn Kelly Show will stay on the story.
The House Judiciary Committee holding a hearing yesterday on fraud and theft of taxpayer dollars.
Among the witnesses, conservative influencer Nick Shirley, who's reporting on Somali-run, taxpayer-funded businesses in Minnesota has drawn national attention, racking up more than 140 million views on X alone.
Shirley, in December, publishing a 42-minute video showing visits to Somali-run daycares and healthcare companies, he alleges are collecting millions in public funds each year without providing legitimate services.
Shirley discovering up to $110 million in potential fraud in a single day, including at this daycare facility.
That reporting triggering a multi-agency federal response, including a freeze by HHS on child care payments in Minnesota, along with additional freezes from other agencies pending audits.
That scrutiny taking center stage at yesterday's hearing.
Here, part of Shirley's opening statement.
One witness, Scott Dexter, a former police officer and fraud investigator, testifying just how blatant the alleged fraud appeared on the ground.
Democrats repeatedly shifting focus away from Minnesota, arguing fraud happens everywhere rather than engaging directly with the specific failures exposed in Minnesota.
but because they hired his friends.
Congressman Kevin Kiley of California, a Republican, agreeing that fraud in other states is worth investigating.
A former prosecutor in Minnesota saying the fraud could amount to as much as $9 billion.
Coming up, President Trump announces a deal between the U.S.
and NATO on Greenland, and the House Oversight Committee votes to hold Bill and Hillary Clinton in contempt of Congress.
Hours after a highly anticipated speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, President Trump announcing that the U.S.
and NATO allies have reached a framework for a future agreement on Greenland.
The announcement coming after a day of back-to-back meetings between Mr. Trump and other world leaders as uncertainty over the future of the semi-autonomous territory and the NATO alliance hung in the balance.
Earlier in the day, President Trump moving to ease immediate tensions by explicitly ruling out the use of military force to take Greenland from NATO ally Denmark, though the broader campaign remained active with the threat of additional tariffs looming.