Patriot Brief

  • What Happened: Nick Shirley and David confronted a Minneapolis transportation company that receives millions in state funds and discovered it operating out of a money wiring business.

  • Why It Matters: The confrontation raised new questions about potential fraud and whether state oversight has missed key connections in taxpayer funded programs.

  • Bottom Line: The video adds fuel to growing concerns that Minnesota fraud networks remain active and largely unchecked.

Nick Shirley and David walked into a Somali run “transportation company” in Minneapolis that reportedly receives millions in taxpayer dollars from the State of Minnesota. What they found was not a clean operation or calm answers. It was chaos.

The so called transportation company was operating out of the same location as a money wiring business. That detail alone raised immediate red flags. These transportation outfits have already been identified as central players in Minnesota’s growing fraud scandals, and this encounter only poured gasoline on the fire.

As soon as questions were asked, the man inside erupted.

“THERE’S NO! WE DON’T KNOW! DON’T RECORD!” he shouted as the situation spiraled.

Nick Shirley calmly pressed the issue. “This is fraud. This is supposed to be Safari Transportation,” he said.

David held up paperwork. “Safari Transportation, State of Minnesota. It’s registered here now,” he stated.

The reaction spoke louder than any denial.

If everything were legitimate, there would be no reason for panic, no reason to shout, and no reason to demand the cameras be shut off. Instead, viewers watched what looked like a business being caught completely off guard by its own paperwork.

This matters because Minnesota taxpayers are funding these operations. The state claims it has cracked down on fraud, yet moments like this suggest there is far more happening under the surface than officials are willing to admit.

This is infuriating. Honest citizens follow the rules, pay their taxes, and expect basic accountability. Instead, millions are flowing through shell operations, questionable transport companies, and money wiring locations while state regulators look the other way.

The truth is simple. Fraud does not clean itself up. It has to be exposed. And judging by this video, there is plenty left to uncover.

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