Mississippi's Right Wing Red State WELFARE SCANDAL
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Mississippi welfare funds scandal
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In February 2020, the office of the Mississippi State Auditor arrested six people it accused of mishandling federal funds disbursed by the
Mississippi Department of Human Services, including the department's
former director. In May, the auditor's office released a report
identifying $94 million in questionable spending by the department, much
of it being funneled through two nonprofits, the Mississippi Community Education Center and Family Resource Center of North Mississippi. The
auditing investigations have found that the money was made available to
several high profile figures for various purposes, including two retired athletes: former professional football star Brett Favre and former
wrestler Brett DiBiase. The reveal of the state investigation also
triggered a federal investigation.
Background
By the late 2010s, the Mississippi Department of Human Services annually received approximately $86.5 million from the United States federal
government in a Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) block
grant. The federal government required the state of Mississippi to match
what it spent of the grant with its own funds and stipulated that the
state needed to document impoverished families who received direct cash assistance. It did not have strict reporting standards for how the state
chose to use the grant otherwise. State audits regularly criticized the Department of Human Services for lax monitoring controls for federal grant spending.[1]
Misspending
Department funding of nonprofits
On January 11, 2016, Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant appointed John Davis
as the director of the Mississippi Department of Human Services.[2] At the time, the agency was providing a record low number of recipients with
direct cash assistance welfare in favor of other programs, such as job
training classes. The department did not record who the classes served,
and in many instances did not set income level eligibility requirements
for class attendees. Davis halted the department's competitive bidding
process for acquiring contractors and over four years ordered the agency
to grant the nonprofit organizations Mississippi Community Education
Center and Family Resource Center of North Mississippi $65 million and $45 million, respectively, to fund the Families First of Mississippi program.
The nonprofits received the money upfront and not as reimbursements for
tasks performed, as was most common for other nonprofits who worked with
the department as TANF subgrantees.[1]
Brett Favre and Mississippi state officials
In 2020, Brett Favre's involvement with the development and promotion of a concussion treatment drug, Prevasol, by the Prevacus corporation, came
under scrutiny. The nonprofit Mississippi Community Education Center
(MCEC) received $2.5 million in federal grant funds diverted from
Mississippi's TANF welfare funds, as well as tens of millions in public
funds as an element of the scheme. The Mississippi state auditor has
termed the scheme "the largest public embezzlement case in state history".
A grand jury in Hinds County indicted MCEC founder, Nancy New, and her son
Zach in the scheme. Favre had introduced MCEC's founders to top state
welfare officials.[3] A lawsuit filed against former Mississippi Governor
Phil Bryant for his alleged role in the scandal resulted in the
publication of a 2017 text message between Nancy New, operator of the
nonprofit Mississippi Community Education Center, and Favre in September 2022.[4] The message revealed former Mississippi governor Phil Bryant and
some members of his government illegally diverted welfare funding to build
a volleyball stadium at Favre's alma mater the University of Southern Mississippi, with Favre asking New: "If you were to pay me is there anyway [sic] the media can find out where it came from and how much?"[5][6]
Bryant became involved in the scheme when he alerted Mississippi State
Auditor Shad White about possible fraud inside the Mississippi Department
of Human Services.[4] Text messages between Favre, Bryant, and New also revealed how the departure of John Davis, who himself was found to have
been involved in the funds scheme, from the Department of Human Services
would be used to divert attention and aid funding for the stadium
proposal.[7] Favre's daughter played for the school's volleyball team.[7]
In addition, Favre was paid $1.1 million in fees for speeches he never delivered and spent $2 million in fund for a biotech venture he already invested in.[8][9][10]
DiBiase family
Davis was close friends with retired professional wrestlers Ted DiBiase
and his two sons, Ted DiBiase Jr. and Brett DiBiase, and encouraged the
two nonprofits to compensate them for various services which the office of
the Mississippi State Auditor later determined were not performed or did
not serve to benefit needy Mississippians. Davis also frequently involved
the DiBiases in department affairs and built a public agency motivational speaking program with Ted DiBiase Jr. that was funded by the nonprofits.
From 2017 to 2019, DiBiase Jr.'s companies Priceless Ventures LLC and
Familiae Orientem were paid over $3 million by the organizations. During
Davis' tenure, the Department of Human Services also awarded grants
totaling over $2 million to the Heart of David Ministry, a nonprofit owned
by Ted DiBiase.[1] The Northeast Mississippi Football Coaches Association
was revealed to have received $30,000 in welfare money in early 2019 as a donation "in consideration of ... having Ted DiBiase Jr. as banquet speaker."[11]
Prevacus
In December 2018, Jake VanLandingham, the owner of a Florida-based pharmaceutical startup company that developed concussion treatments,
Prevacus, was introduced to an official at the Mississippi Community
Education Center by a Mississippi investor. VanLandingham had several
phone calls with nonprofit staff and a meeting before signing an agreement
with the organization.[2][12] Text messages from November 2018 also
revealed that Brett Favre, who had invested in the company since 2014,
played a prominent role in connecting VanLandingham with Mississippi
Governor Phil Bryant.[13] Later messages Bryant not only agreed to use
welfare money as a source for project grant money, but also sought to
become an investor in Prevacus after his term as Governor ended.[13][14] However, Bryant's ambition of becoming an investor in the company were
thwarted by the arrests of John Davis and Nancy New.[14]
Other
The Mississippi Community Education Center used TANF funds to provide $5 million towards the construction of a volleyball stadium at University of Southern Mississippi (in the form of a brief lease for one event), paid a mortgage on a ranch in Flora, Mississippi, owned by former football player Marcus Dupree, and funded a fitness program run by former footballer Paul Lacoste. Dupree was also paid by the Mississippi Community Education
Center and Family Resource Center of North Mississippi for a statewide
lecture tour.[1]
Auditing and criminal investigations
On June 21, 2019, following the conducting of an internal audit, concerned employees at the Department of Human Services informed Governor Bryant
that agency funds may have been misspent. Bryant forwarded the information
to State Auditor Shad White, who initiated an investigation.[12] Davis announced his retirement from the directorship the following month.[1] On February 5, 2020, following the delivery of indictments in the Hinds
County Circuit Court, special agents from the office of the State Auditor arrested several people whom they accused of embezzling TANF funds: John
Davis, Department of Human Services employee Latimer Smith, Brett DiBiase,
and Nancy New, Zach New, Anne McGrew, officials of the Mississippi
Community Education Center.[15][2] The defendants initially pleaded not guilty.[8]
Despite the involvement of federal funds, White did not inform any federal authorities about his office's investigation. U.S. Attorney for the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi, Mike
Hurst, stated in a press release: "We in the United States Attorney's
Office and the FBI only learned ... from media reports about the
indictments and arrests, at the same time the general public did."[16]
White subsequently shared his office's findings with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and a federal inspector general.[12]
Following the arrests, the Department of Human Services announced it would require stringent documentation from subgrantees and began an internal
inquiry to determine if any current agency employees were involved in the impropriety. In early May, White released the Single Audit of the
department for the 2019 fiscal year. The auditor's office deemed $94
million of the agency's spending questionable.[1]
Brett DiBiase would plead guilty in December 2020 to making fraudulent statements and paid $5,000 in restitution.[17] As of September 2022, he
was still not yet sentenced for his crime.[17] In April 2022, Nancy and
Zach New pleaded guilty to charges of bribery of a public official, fraud against the government, and mail fraud.[17] Nancy New would also pleaded
guilty to racketeering.[17]
On September 2022, Davis was indicted in a federal court and pleaded
guilty court to one count of conspiracy and one count of theft from a federally-funded program. He then pleaded guilty in state court to five
counts of conspiracy and 13 counts of defrauding the government. The state court sentenced him to 90 years in prison, with 58 of those years as a suspended sentence.[18]
On March 2, 2023, Brett DiBiase pleaded guilty to one federal charge of conspiracy to defraud the United States.[19] On April 20, 2023, Ted
DiBiase Jr. would receive a federal indictment as well.[20]
Civil proceedings
In October 2021, the state auditor's office sent demand letters to various recipients of the misspent grant money, asking for repayment.[8] In May
2022, the Department of Human Services filed a lawsuit against 38
defendants to claw back about $24 million in misspent funds. Former
federal prosecutor Brad Pigott and the office of the Mississippi Attorney General represented the department. The defendants included Brett Favre,
Marcus Dupree, Paul Lacoste, and the DiBiases.[21] On July 22, the
director of the Department of Human Services, Bob Anderson, fired Pigott
from his position as lead counsel on the state's lawsuit. Pigott alleged
the decision was politically motivated.[22] Anderson initially attributed
the dismissal to Pigott's failure to inform his superiors about his plans
to subpoena documents concerning the volleyball stadium from the
University of Southern Mississippi before saying that the state needed a
larger legal team. Pigott was replaced the following month by attorneys
from the firm Jones Walker.[23]
In August 2023, the Mississippi Supreme Court denied Brett Favre's request
to be removed as a defendant the civil lawsuit.[24] The decision came
nearly four months after a Hinds County judge dismissed a similar request
as well.[25][26]
References
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