"U.S. Attorney says Minnesota government fraud could exceed $1 billion."
Yes—as I've been reporting for decades.
While this headline may shock the public and spark a new wave of performative concern, for those of us who have lived under the weight of this corruption, it’s not breaking news. It’s confirmation.
But here’s the question no one seems to be asking:
Which state agency do taxpayers fund to file those documents, sign off on those payments, and execute fraud oversight in Medicaid and welfare programs?
Answer: The Minnesota Department of Human Services (DHS).
The very agency tasked with managing care, accountability, and safety is also the one through which much of this billion-dollar fraud has flowed. And somehow, their role still goes unmentioned in these so-called revelations. Their fingerprints are on every payment, every disbursement, every signature—and every cover-up.
That’s how I ended up in this rental.
That’s how I ended up living next to yet another sexual predator.
That’s how I became another victim caught in a web of systemic betrayal.
I have said it before, and I’ll continue to say it: everything that has happened, and is happening now—the infestations, the retaliation, the targeted silencing—is connected. These are not isolated events or unfortunate coincidences. They are symptoms of a much deeper, long-running sickness within the institutions entrusted with our welfare.
It’s been 22 years.
Twenty-two years of fraudulent operations.
Twenty-two years of harm, of complicity, of silence.
Already a year of publishing exposés and still being invisible.
And yet, when a federal investigation does begin to scratch the surface, the narrative is carefully sculpted to blame civilians, frontline workers, or outside vendors. They’re always looking for small businesses, community groups, or “bad actors” to pin the blame on. But the fraud inside DHS has always dwarfed the fraud against it.
In fact, the fraud committed against DHS is often orchestrated by those operating within it. It’s not a mistake. It’s a model.
So once again, the real victims—those abused by the system, retraumatized by state placements, medical neglect, coerced proximity to abusers, and housing retaliation—are left out of the story. We are rendered invisible. Our voices are never included in the headlines. Our names do not appear in the reports.
I cannot stop publishing the truth.
Even when no one in power listens.
Even when I remain unsafe.
Even when it seems like America is not ready to help me—or anyone like me.
But ask yourself this: Where are the victims of these “treatment centers” and housing placements now?
Oh, that’s right. Invisible.
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