I try not to get political. But LA is where I live, and I am here to tell you: There is 0.0 percent chance these results are legit.
Nithya Raman has no base. No one knew who she was until Spencer Pratt torched her on debate stage. She gave a concession speech on Tuesday.
I really hope the federal government and @USAttyEssayli are investigating
(Again, apologize for getting political. Feel free to unfollow if this bothers you.
But a light needs to be shined on what's happening)
🚨 WOW! Erin Brockovich completely destroys the AI data center narrative. She confirms these massive facilities emit a non-stop, 24/7 deafening noise that is literally driving local residents crazy!
She exposes the total lack of environmental oversight. Pure corruption!
They broke his bones, gouged his eyes out, cut out his tongue and castrated him. He died of a heart attack after being set on fire and dragged himself 50 meters across the floor.
Here’s one you won’t hear about.
17-year-old Tyson Goodsell is dead after he was murdered and robbed by two men who were out on conditional release for charges of first-degree attempted murder and first-degree aggravated robbery.
We live in a fucking clown world.
Just received this: this is how vaccine trials are done:
my son had a friend who volunteered for the Emory trials when he was 18 and in high school. Trial would have been ~2019-2020. He became gravely ill after getting vaccinated, thought he was going to die. He contacted the researchers, they told him it could not have been from vaccine, then he was ghosted by the researchers. It’s my understanding he never finished the trials because they stopped communicating with him."
Bought a $1,742.80 camera online from BestBuy.
The FedEx delivery driver stole it. FedEx admitted it.
But BestBuy won’t give a refund. They said we need to “work with local law enforcement.”
Thought everyone should know if you buy from @BestBuy and a @FedEx driver steals what you paid for, your money is gone. Neither company will make it right.
I’ve spent over $30K at BestBuy and will never spend another penny there.
Let’s now introduce you to the woman who’s culpable in the murder of a young lady that was stabbed to death inside the Skyline Chili in Norwood Ohio
She not only gave the animal probation with no bond over a year ago after he assaulted a police officer, a warrant for his arrest was out to no avail.
The murderer was just walking the streets of Norwood for a year until he finally was arrested for the murder of a woman that was just trying to make money for her 2 kids and her ill father.
This is an absolutely heartbreaking and infuriating case. Alyssa “Ally” Hill, a 27-year-old single mother of two young children who was also caring for her ill father, was brutally stabbed to death on June 2, 2026, while working her shift at the Skyline Chili on Montgomery Road in Norwood, Ohio, during the lunch rush.
Feel free to share Aren’t you just sick of judges not “judging?
You have far too much time if you, a middle aged objectively rotund man, spend a beautiful Saturday morning protesting a girl in her mid twenties by saying she should've swam faster 4 years ago because she didn't want to a man in the locker room.
Seek therapy.
It’s abundantly clear that the Democrats actively wanted DC, and this nation as a whole, to be a dump.
They went out of their way to destroy this nation’s beauty and culture.
It was not an accident.
They attempted to conquer and destroy us from within.
Never again.
‘Fraud-fluencers’ crow online about stealing from taxpayers as Joni Ernst demands crackdown on swindlers | Ryan King, New York Post
They don’t even try to hide it.
The rise of so-called “fraud-fluencers” who openly brag online about swindling money from taxpayers and encourage their followers to do the same has alarmed good government crusaders.
Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), who helms the DOGE Caucus, is urging the Trump administration to both turn up the heat on “fraud-fluencers” and study their tactics.
“Scammers I’ve deemed ‘fraud-fluencers’ are putting the ‘con’ in online content and flooding their followers’ feeds with step-by-step guides on how to exploit government programs and steal your hard-earned taxpayer dollars,” Ernst explained to The Post.
“If these fraud-fluencers want to be famous, I’m happy to make their wish come true by sharing their posts with the investigators at GAO [Government Accountability Office],” she went on. “We’ve got to ratio the folks running these rackets and make their next profile pic a mugshot.”
Below are examples of some of the most brazen fraud-fluencers to hit Ernst’s radar.
Rapper thief
In a 2020 YouTube video that garnered more than half a million views six years ago, Memphis-born rapper Nuke Bizzle (real name Fontrell Antonio Baines) crowed about ripping off tens of thousands in your money.
“And I just woke up to 300 Gs. Stole 60K off an SBA. It’s time to ball like the NBA,” he rapped. “I’m swiping 10K a day. Counting up bills like a CPA.”
The rap he performed was titled “EDD,” short for “Employment Development Department.”
The Justice Department charged Baines that October with stealing $1.2 million in unemployment benefits using other people’s identities.
He ultimately pleaded guilty in July 2022 to one count of mail fraud as well as unrelated drug and weapons charges. He was sentenced that December to six years and five months in prison.
Illegal immigrant moocher
Leonel Moreno, a Venezuelan TikToker, openly boasted of sneaking into the US illegally thanks to “Papa Biden” and encouraged other migrants to do the same.
“I didn’t cross the Rio Grande to work,” Moreno explained in one post while flashing a wad of $100 bills.
Moreno was later deported by the Trump administration.
‘FRAUD is Dope’ podcaster
In April, the Feds threw Georgia native Jonathan Dupiton back in jail for allegedly trying to steal benefits through stolen identities.
Dupiton had a podcast with the motto “F.R.A.U.D. [Finally Rich After Unstoppable Determination] is Dope.” He was already in a halfway house after his conviction in a food stamp swindle when he took at least $3 million in unemployment benefits under false pretenses.
After admitting to conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud as well as aggravated identity theft, Dupiton was sentenced to seven more years in prison, followed by three years of supervised release.
‘People just selling SBA information’
Ernst also cited the curious case of Miami-based Danielle Miller, who flatly told New York Magazine in February 2022 that “I more so consider myself a con artist than anything.”
Miller fleeced more than $1 million from the Small Business Administration and lived large, sporting Chanel, Gucci, Prada, and other posh brands while private jetting around the world when she wasn’t driving a Rolls-Royce convertible.
“You can literally go to a dot-com website … and join a group of scammers, and they’re all just bragging and sending pictures,” she told the outlet. “[T]here’s a bunch of chats of people just selling SBA information. It’s really right at your f—ing fingertips.”
In September 2023, a Boston federal judge sentenced Miller to five years in prison after she pleaded guilty that March to wire fraud and identity theft.
This past December, a Florida judge sentenced the social media influencer to 16 years behind bars on Sunshine State bank fraud charges.
‘Eva & Her Minions’
The hosts of the YouTube show “Behold Eva & Her Minions” complained about the trauma they went through after being arrested in early 2019 for stealing nearly $94,000 in Social Security benefits.
Billy Altidor and Evanie (Eva) Louis, both of Florida had flaunted their lavish lifestyle on YouTube.
In a video titled, “We were arrested,” the pair somewhat copped to their mistakes, claiming they were not perfect.
Altidor was sentenced in March 2020 to two years in prison, while Louis received a year and a day for theft of government fund and identity theft.
‘You better start lying’
Louisianan Koya Unek bragged on TikTok about fibbing to get $35,000 in Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits by feigning homelessness.
“People be like, ‘Girl, how do you get food stamps? I wish I could get food stamps.’ Bitch, you better start lying,” Unek told her TikTok viewers.
“If it’s free, I want it,” she said. “Who wants to keep spending money on food? It’s too much.”
Unfortunately for Unek, the cops saw her video, too and arrested her on fraud charges last year. The case remains pending.
https://t.co/SIJaFFDijU
🚨UPDATE🚨
For context, 4 out of the 6 teens that testified today were black.
Teen 3 said Austin Metcalf told Karmelo Anthony he was not going, "to fight you at a track meet, dude."
Teen 4 said Austin never got to grab Karmelo because Karmelo stabbed him so fast.
Teen 6 said said Karmelo's vein in his arm was visible and it appeared he was grabbing something from his back pack. That something ended up being the knife that was used to kill Austin.
The Daily Mail also is reporting that all the teens testified and said Karmelo was asked repeatedly to leave the tent.