WATCH: Gavin Newsom Exposed as Hiding Massive Fraud “Worse than Minnesota”

In yet another massive stunner of testimony before Congress, conservative online personality Nick Shirley, the brave young man who exposed the Somali daycare scandal in Minnesota and has faced horrible leftist threats for it, revealed that not only was the daycare fraud in Minnesota obscene and infuriating, but that similar fraud is ongoing in California.

That part of the testimony came when Shirley commented on how his efforts to expose the ongoing fraud in Minnesota inspired others to search out the same in other states, and they have found it in red and blue states alike, including everywhere from pro-Trump states like Ohio to far-left states like California.

He said, on that point, “Well, now you’re seeing, since I’ve posted that video, lots of other people have started to go to other locations. For instance, in Ohio or in Maine or in California. They’re also seeing the similar fraud take place in other day cares, for instance, in a lot of other locations.”

A legislator then asked him to elaborate on the fraud in California, saying, “Yeah, I have a particular interest in California, being from that state, and I we know there’s been a lot of fraud. There was $32.6 billion that’s been confirmed in unemployment insurance fraud. There’s 1.2 million fraudulent community college applications. Have you gotten any sense, or have you seen any signs there that sort of are similar to what aroused your suspicions in Minnesota?”

Shirley, responding, said the fraud in California is so obscene that it could even be worse than that in Minnesota, and gave examples. He said, “Yeah, and fraud in California might be worse than the fraud in Minnesota . . . Well, $24 billion went missing for homelessness. They’ve been trying to build this train for years. Yet there’s hardly anything to prove for that.”

Commenting on the examples, the same legislator asked him, “Let’s run through a couple of those, because I mentioned the areas where we have confirmed fraud. But then you also have these areas where you have so much spending, and then we look at what results from that spending, and there’s nothing. So $24 billion in homelessness, and yet the homeless population went up, and a state audit found that they couldn’t even figure out where the money went or what the outcomes linked to that spending were. Is that something that is kind of a red flag for you?”

Shirley, responding, noted that it shouldn’t even take a bit of effort to tell that so much missing taxpayer money is a huge red flag that indicates a very major problem connected to fraud. He said, on that point, “Yeah, it’s a major red flag, and you don’t even have even have to be smart to be able to know that that’s a red flag.”