The Small Business Administration just hit pause on Minnesota's funding, and it's not a routine budget thing. The agency is investigating what it describes as one of the largest state-level Paycheck Protection Program fraud cases in American history, involving $430 million in suspected fraudulent activity.
SBA Freezes Minnesota Funding Over $430 Million Fraud Investigation Linked to PPP Loans
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Following the Money Trail
On Monday, SBA Administrator Kelly Loeffler announced the funding freeze while the agency digs into the PPP fraud allegations. Loeffler didn't mince words about where she thinks the blame lies, pointing directly at oversight failures under Minnesota Governor Tim Walz's watch.
"This Admin will not continue to hand out blank checks to fraudsters," Loeffler said on X, adding, "We will not rest until we clean up the criminal networks that have been stealing from American taxpayers."
The scale here matters. According to conservative activist Benny Johnson, Loeffler said investigators uncovered "half a billion dollars of fraud within days" and identified state officials allegedly facilitating the schemes. That's not loose change hiding in the couch cushions.
When a YouTuber Does the Heavy Lifting
Here's where it gets interesting: much of this came to light through reporting by YouTuber Nick Shirley, who documented widespread misuse of federal aid by small businesses. His investigation found centers that received millions in grants but showed little or no actual activity. Shirley reportedly uncovered over $110 million in fraud in a single day of investigation.
Vice President JD Vance praised Shirley's work on X, saying he did more useful journalism than the 2024 Pulitzer winners. Elon Musk chimed in too, noting that Shirley's work reached more people than the combined daily readership of all U.S. newspapers.
Political Fallout and Accountability Questions
The political implications are playing out predictably. Education Secretary Linda McMahon criticized Walz for allowing billions in taxpayer fraud, highlighting that the Trump administration stopped $1 billion in student aid fraud this year while working to address Minnesota's problems.
Rep. Tom Emmer of Minnesota praised President Donald Trump, his cabinet, and journalists for pressing Walz to answer long-ignored questions, declaring that accountability is coming and that Minnesotans deserve better.
Neither the SBA nor Governor Walz's team immediately responded to requests for comment.
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