🚨 BREAKING. Scott Bessent just announced the Internal Revenue Service is launching MASSIVE AUDITS of financial institutions that facilitated the laundering of Minnesota funds.
Read that again.
Banks. MSBs. Financial middlemen.
Anyone who helped move dirty money is about to get TORCHED.
For once, the IRS is being deployed FOR AMERICANS FIRST — not against working families.
Follow the money.
Audit everything.
Prosecute whoever broke the law.
Music to my ears.
Thank you, Sec. Bessent. 🇺🇸
FOLLOW ME, THE NEXT DROP WILL BE SHOCKING
CBS News said there was no evidence of fraud.
The NYT said the Somali community was being targeted
CNN said there was "little evidence."
Tim Walz said it was “white supremacy” to expose fraud
Today: $90M busted and 15 charged.
IT WAS ALL FRAUD AND THEY KNEW.
The Mayor of Charlotte is demanding people stop posting this reminder of the lovely innocent Iryna Zarutska butchered by a savage on Charlotte public transit. He was on probation by a liberal activist judge.
From payday to prison in the blink of an eye. Troopers pull over this moving truck and discover a massive 1.7m dollar drug bust.
What started as a routine traffic stop on I-70 in Ohio turned into one of the largest cocaine seizures in Madison County history. Andrea Celaya-Rodriguez, 27, was behind the wheel of a Penske rental truck, claiming she was moving her life to Pennsylvania.
But Ohio State Highway Patrol troopers noticed something off immediately. Her body language—rigid, clutching the wheel, and trying to "hide" behind the door pillar as she passed the cruiser—was a massive red flag.
The Details:
The Bust: A K9 unit alerted to the vehicle, leading troopers to a produce bin in the cargo area. Inside? Three duffel bags stuffed with 110 pounds (50 kilograms) of cocaine.
The Street Value: Estimated at a staggering $1.75 million.
The "Job": Celaya-Rodriguez later admitted to the DEA that she met a man in Mexico who offered her $50,000 to drive the "shoe boxes" (kilo bricks) from Arizona to New York.
The Fake Move: Her rental agreement showed the truck was due back in Tucson, AZ, in just four days—a logistical impossibility for a cross-country move, which helped troopers dismantle her cover story.
The Legal Fallout:
Despite the roadside discussion about "working with them," the case went federal. In February 2025, Celaya-Rodriguez pleaded guilty in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio to possession with intent to distribute cocaine.
She now faces a recommended sentence of 33 to 41 months in federal prison. It’s a stark reminder that in the world of high-stakes interdiction, a "quick $50k" often costs you years of your life.
That gut instinct of the officers led them to a huge hit that would have been on the streets if it was not for this great job by these troopers.