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>> The Daily Wire exposed a massive fraud scheme this week in Ohio,
“amounting to billions of dollars in Medicaid benefits potentially being scammed.”
And Vice President J.D. Vance is already taking action. >> In this episode, we go behind the scenes with the investigator who brought this fraud to light. The Daily Wire's own Lou Brousy Act. We'll discuss how he found the fraud and who tried to stop him along the way. >> I'm Daily Wire executive editor John Bickley with Georgia Hal.
This is a weekend edition of Morning Wire. [MUSIC] >> The state of Colorado is added again, trying to silence free speech. A law in Colorado forces businesses to use customers preferred pronouns, even if they're biologically inaccurate.
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That's Goldbelly.com, code Wire for free shipping and 20% off your first order. Joining us now to talk about his latest investigative series, his daily wire investigative reporter Luke Rosyac. Luke, great to have you on. Great to be with you. So first of all, how did this investigation into fraud alleged fraud in Ohio get started? What drew you to Ohio to investigate fraud in the first place?
Well, I've been fascinated by Medicaid for many years because people pointed this out when Doge was in its infancy that they're kind of nibbling around the edges and discretionary funding, but a huge portion of the federal budget is actually locked up in what they call not discretionary funding, things like Medicaid. And we were led to believe that there's just nothing you can do about that, it just is what it is. The government has always been kind of secretive about what
went on and Medicaid. It was just a black box, which was a little strange because we're not really interested in trying into people's personal medical information. We don't want the names of patients, but if we're paying for something, it would be helpful to know what it is. And so Doge, as one of its last actions before it kind of left the line light, they released this database and it was something like 40 gigabytes. It was a huge data set and you kind of had to know computer programming
to dive in. But it was a game changer. I mean, I've never seen anything like it. It was a
fundamental breakthrough in terms of government transparency. And it just let you see what companies were building government millions of dollars for services that are not even regular doctors' offices like extra stuff. And so it got to the heart of a lot of the fraud that we've heard about in places like Minnesota, because those are actually all the results of Tim Walsh's, what they call Medicaid waivers. That's let certain states do things that are well beyond the
medical treatment that Medicaid was really designed for. And so the first step in this investigative process was essentially building this massive computer server and doing a lot of programming that would let me mind through all these records adding up to billions of dollars a year. All right. So the stuff you really love to do mine through these databases and what drew you specifically to Ohio then? So Ohio immediately emerged as a top spender on these especially suspicious
payments because it also has waivers like Minnesota and that actually let people get paid to hang out with their own family and they don't have to be like medical professionals or anything. They can literally just provide what they call conversation and companionship to their own family
Members and that's somehow built to this medical program in the last year alone.
dollars for home health care. And this is tremendously easy to defraud. And then at the same time it can be hard to prove fraud, which is a really toxic combination. And we've heard about in Minnesota how the, you know, diagnoses of autism went up a hundred topfold or whatever it was. I mean, you see similar things in Ohio where it's really busting their budget. I mean, everybody wants these home health care servants that aren't really a medical age. They'll just come hang out
in your house. Maybe cook for you, clean for you. And it's probably just your own relatives. It's concentrated in the urban cores and specifically in the areas where there's these refugee
“and immigrant communities. Right. So that's a key element here. You're saying that the immigrant”
communities seem to be the hotbeds. Yeah. I mean, I just started with the data and it's funny because the left will accuse you of racism or actually what I found is these people that are making millions and dollars off the government will accuse you of racism for asking about the industry because they acknowledge it's all immigrants. But I just started following the money. Something really troubling has happened to this quadrant of Columbus, which is the capital of
Ohio because every industry has just left. It's been replaced by these firms that basically get paid by the government to do things that for all of history, everyone has just done for their own family. Daycare is watching your own kids and then this home health care hanging out with their own family members. And you know, the veterans haul has been bought up by some allies that were running like 10 Medicaid businesses out of it and they were fraudulent. A church was sold to a
daycare that's all Somali also very suspicious. And these are people that otherwise may be working in contributing something to society. And now they're in part of this parallel economy. And for those of us that, you know, our taxpayers and don't really live in these areas, it's easy to think
it doesn't exist. But when you just travel to these areas that which are hot spots, I've never seen
anything like the skill of it and it's not hidden. It's all out in the open. The entire economy has been replaced by billing Medicaid for very dubious things. Now, you mentioned Somali's a few times, obviously that was a major association in Minnesota. Are you seeing specifically Somali's associated with this fraud in Columbus as well? Yeah, very much so. I mean, so there's one landlord that own seven buildings that collectively have 288 Medicaid companies in them, bill a no record of billion
dollars to Medicaid. And so you walk in these big office complexes and just picture very long hallways and there's just door after door after door and each one is like a little office. And like first one and when I got off the elevator and one floor was like the Somali education and resource center. And then you get down the hall and it's just like health care this, home health care that, home health, healthcare or something else. And it just goes on and on forever. And all the offices
are closed, something that fraud investigators and policy makers need to be aware of is that you know, all of our systems are designed for Americans. We have social security numbers. We have middle names, our last names are the same as our family members. I mean, none of that applies to
these people. I mean, some one of the guys that was making like $10 million a year, something like that.
His name is Omar Omar and that's like all we know about them. There's Muhammad Ahmed and Ahmed, Muhammad and these things get all jumbled up in the government computer systems. They don't have birth dates for a lot of these people. If you look up up in public records, it just says January
“first because they may not even know when they were born. And so it is important, um, I think for”
policy members to keep that in mind. Our systems are susceptible to fraud by foreign-born people because our systems have a harder time tracking them, not to mention the fact that they also have the ability to send money abroad in places where we can't track it and also flee abroad. But it's just the sort of a parallel world that I think fraud investigators and police and policy makers are totally uncomfortable or don't have the knowledge to navigate, which is in itself,
just I think an intolerable policy deficit. You mentioned allegations of racism being leveled at people that even ask about the system. What did you personally get blocked by anybody during this investigation? One of the guys like chase me down a hallway saying, I'm going to tell everybody your racist and we're just saying, well, we're just asking about the government program and we're just knocking on doors, whatever the dollar amounts are reported in the government
database and since you're only knocking on some molly doors, I'm just going to tell everybody your racist. And it did kind of seem like a threat. It seemed like a strategy, like that's my strategy.
“Pretty on the nose there. Yeah, and he said, you don't pay my bills. What do I care about journalists?”
And, you know, the irony is that we very much do pay the bills of home health care aids. Other people were very indignant. They didn't feel like they had to justify this money.
I talked to somebody that has like 30 charges in the courts, you know, Ohio. He basically threatened
Me, started listing the names of like my family members.
some sort. And he said, yeah, you know, I do have a very long criminal record. I was just too dumb.
“I didn't know what the law is. So that's, in the best case scenario, they're just saying, yeah,”
I'm just dumb. I don't even know what the law is in America, but they paid me a million dollars.
The overall takeaway was he had no fear. Probably correctly that he's, there's no threat here. Nobody's going to come and knock and nobody's going to really be investigating. You just fill out the form and the government pays you. And there's no real common sense or nobody actually visiting these places where you'll see like there's clearly nobody in many of these offices. Is there anyone whose job it is to be tracking this kind of thing? Or is there actually not a
person assigned to do that? So I didn't get the sense that the Ohio Department of Medicaid was super interested in fraud in my limited interactions with them. The Ohio Attorney General is very angry. He testified to the state legislature about how he doesn't really have the power to
do things. He can't even do subpoenas because there's basically a turf dispute between bureaucrats
and the local prosecutors want to reserve that power for themselves. But local prosecutors don't
“have the technical knowledge about these obscure programs. I think that there's an inherent”
problem in the Medicaid program, which is your plan with other people's money, meaning the program is run primarily by the state, but the money comes mostly from the federal government. So some
of these states kind of look like it, look at it like free money coming into their economy. Even
if it's mostly wasted, it's not their state money. It's federal money, which is I think a reason to look at getting rid of waivers entirely. The Trump administration has changed some things recently, the doge dataset was a huge win as I mentioned for transparency. And we also have this fraud
“task force that's ramping up. I think, again, though, what I found is strong indications of fraud,”
but then also indications that they're moving money around and popping things up under new names or new proxies. And so I think what you see is a game of whack-a-mole that's somewhat futile. So I think at the end of the day, there is very much a solution here that the Trump administration I believe has the power to do, which is rescind the waivers for home healthcare. And that would restore fairness, I think, because we're all paying for Medicaid as federal taxpayers, that some
states don't get extra services than others. We return it to just doing real normal medical care, like it was intended to. And just end this home healthcare business because it's not even worth the time. It's just too much money going out the door with too little in return. It's just those things got to be killed. Really upsetting that we can't track down taxpayer money, like you said, millions, maybe billions in taxpayer money, but that solution that you've offered seems
perfectly reasonable. Luke, thanks so much for reporting, very fascinating stuff, and we appreciate you coming on. Thanks, Randy. That was Daily Wire, investigative reporter, Luke Rozyak, and this has been a weekend episode of Morning Wire.


