More massive fraud in Minnesota

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Republican Iowa Senator Joni Ernst recently alleged that Democratic Representative Ilhan Omar attempted to secure an earmark exceeding $1 million for a questionable “substance abuse clinic” located within a Somali-owned restaurant. During a January 8 interview on “Varney and Company,” which resurfaced on social media, Ernst pointed out numerous red flags regarding the clinic’s legitimacy and connected it to previous fraud cases involving Somali daycares in Minnesota. She described the earmark request as being from “members of Congress,” implying a trend of misuse of public funds.
·Ernst explained that the earmark was intended for a so-called substance abuse clinic but was associated with IRS documentation that listed three individuals sharing a residential address. Following her concerns, the earmark was withdrawn from the spending bill, highlighting a concerning pattern of financial irregularities “flowing to bad actors in Minnesota,” according to Ernst.
 
What about Crazy Trump's Trump University fraud????
 
What about Crazy Trump's Trump University fraud????
BWAHAHA

There's that 35 IQ again.

Trump University was a 10 day real estate seminar that promised to "teach the investing strategies of real estate mogul Donald Trump." The problem was that what was "taught" was widely available on the internet. There was no fraud involved, thought the claims were misleading. The court found It was highly overpriced for what it provided. Overall the case was politically motivated and these types of seminars are extremely common.

You're a dumb one Starkey - dumb as a stump.
 
BWAHAHA

There's that 35 IQ again.

Trump University was a 10 day real estate seminar that promised to "teach the investing strategies of real estate mogul Donald Trump." The problem was that what was "taught" was widely available on the internet. There was no fraud involved, thought the claims were misleading. The court found It was highly overpriced for what it provided. Overall the case was politically motivated and these types of seminars are extremely common.

You're a dumb one Starkey - dumb as a stump.
Despite its name, the organization was not an accredited university or college. It conducted three- and five-day seminars (often called "retreats") and used high-pressure tactics to sell them to its customers. It did not confer college credit, grant degrees, or grade its students. In 2011, the company became the subject of an inquiry by the New York Attorney General's office for illegal business practices, which resulted in a lawsuit filed in August 2013. An article in National Review called the organization a "massive scam."

 
Despite its name, the organization was not an accredited university or college. It conducted three- and five-day seminars (often called "retreats") and used high-pressure tactics to sell them to its customers. It did not confer college credit, grant degrees, or grade its students. In 2011, the company became the subject of an inquiry by the New York Attorney General's office for illegal business practices, which resulted in a lawsuit filed in August 2013. An article in National Review called the organization a "massive scam."


So you repeated what I already posted.

You are again showing off your 35 IQ....
 
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