Why does the democrat mob want republicans out of the way so badly? It is all about money. Democrats want sole power to open the US Treasury's vaults for money to squander on projects from which they will skim billions, and it is not just the Biden and Clinton families who are doing that.
When a name such as disgraced football coach Joe Paterno, dead for nearly a decade, shows up on documents applying for a pandemic loan, it’s a pretty good red flag there’s something fishy going on.
But authorities say that’s exactly what one scammer tried to do.
Another stands accused of applying for dozens of unemployment benefits under other people’s identities — a fairly common scam right now, with hundreds of billions of dollars in government assistance available. What made rapper Nuke Bizzle’s attempt stand out is that he posted to YouTube a music video showing himself applying for benefits.
It didn’t help the case of the rapper, whose real name is Fontrell Antonio Baines, that the names on the envelopes he flashed in the video were real victims of his identity theft, according to court documents.
There’s also David Adler Staveley, one of the first people to be charged last year with pandemic fraud. After he was arrested and released on home detention, he faked a suicide, leaving his car near the ocean and a suicide note inside. He pleaded guilty last week to charges of conspiracy stemming from the loan scam and failure to appear, stemming from his fake suicide.
Scammers make billions off of pandemic assistance funds
When a name such as disgraced football coach Joe Paterno, dead for nearly a decade, shows up on documents applying for a pandemic loan, it’s a pretty good red flag there’s something fishy going on.
www.washingtontimes.com
But authorities say that’s exactly what one scammer tried to do.
Another stands accused of applying for dozens of unemployment benefits under other people’s identities — a fairly common scam right now, with hundreds of billions of dollars in government assistance available. What made rapper Nuke Bizzle’s attempt stand out is that he posted to YouTube a music video showing himself applying for benefits.
It didn’t help the case of the rapper, whose real name is Fontrell Antonio Baines, that the names on the envelopes he flashed in the video were real victims of his identity theft, according to court documents.
There’s also David Adler Staveley, one of the first people to be charged last year with pandemic fraud. After he was arrested and released on home detention, he faked a suicide, leaving his car near the ocean and a suicide note inside. He pleaded guilty last week to charges of conspiracy stemming from the loan scam and failure to appear, stemming from his fake suicide.