>If other timelines did exist, Tim Walz is VP in one of them and Somalis are still getting billions
And (You) are an antisemite for noticing!
>If other timelines did exist, Tim Walz is VP in one of them and Somalis are still getting billions
And (You) are an antisemite for noticing!
>F*ck you
If you are addressing the Anons at /qresearch you are much too late, Anon. The Anons at /qresearch were f*cked long ago.
>Everybody WangChung tonight
Wangs are chunged nightly by NightShift at /qresearch, Anon.
>"Ah hyuk hyuk.
Maine nonprofit with Somali ties reportedly sees state funding shut off after fraud claims
Gateway Community Services owner Abdullahi Ali ran for president of Jubaland region in Somalia in 2024
A Maine health services company recently accused by a whistleblower of bilking taxpayers out of millions in Medicaid funds saw its spigot shut off this week as the state Department of Health moved to halt payments from MaineCare.
Gateway Community Services is a Portland company run by a Somali-born man who ran for president - the U.S. equivalent of governor - of Jubaland, Somalia, for what would have been a four-year term beginning in 2024, according to his campaign website.
Ali’s campaign manifesto includes a point saying he would create "robust security infrastructure" to counter Al-Shabab, while reports out of Minnesota claim their Somali-tied funds may have ended up in the hands of the terror group.
The paper reported the state will seek more than $1 million in payments made in 2021 and 2022, with Maine Department of Health spokesperson Lindsay Hammes saying the agency will "continue to hold providers to the highest standards and ensure accountability in the use of public funds."
MaineCare paid Gateway $28.8 million between 2019 and 2024, according to records obtained by the Bangor Daily News through a public records request.
The firm also received almost $700,000 in COVID-era Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) funds to purportedly save 127 jobs, according to the Maine Wire.
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/maine-nonprofit-somali-ties-reportedly-sees-state-funding-shut-off-after-fraud-claims