Brett Favre was allegedly paid $1.1 million in Mississippi welfare money for appearances he didn’t make: audit

jawnswoop

It's A Philly Thing
BGOL Investor
We have a former member who always comes in with a new username and post like he has some sense for awhile, then goes crazy and starts posting bullshit and becomes a complete ass. He then gets banned

I accept you for who you say you are until you show me that you are a problem.

HNIC
Thanks, crazy since I just joined here, willing to be respectful to people who give me respect back since and joining this forum, some folks was saying I'm somebody else when I never heard of those folks before....I feel like some people need to get to know people before they start trying to accused people of something because of what a old member did in the past.

Sincerely, Jawnswoop
 

jawnswoop

It's A Philly Thing
BGOL Investor
We have a former member who always comes in with a new username and post like he has some sense for awhile, then goes crazy and starts posting bullshit and becomes a complete ass. He then gets banned

I accept you for who you say you are until you show me that you are a problem.

HNIC
Dude, has went rampage over a thread that I made, I feel he should be banned for accussing me of being someone else, that I'm not.
 

lightbright

Master Pussy Poster
BGOL Investor
Thanks, crazy since I just joined here, willing to be respectful to people who give me respect back since and joining this forum, some folks was saying I'm somebody else when I never heard of those folks before....I feel like some people need to get to know people before they start trying to accused people of something because of what a old member did in the past.

Sincerely, Jawnswoop
:hmm:..... new tactic huh? Plausible deniability now to the extremes..... okay... bravo....:bravo:



.
 

lightbright

Master Pussy Poster
BGOL Investor
Dude, has went rampage over a thread that I made, I feel he should be banned for accussing me of being someone else, that I'm not.
Aaaaaand you start to slip already "MR. Brand new member".... kind of extreme for someone that's new here to say this for something so small, don't you think?
:lol:

.
 
Last edited:

jawnswoop

It's A Philly Thing
BGOL Investor
Aaaaaand you start to slip already "MR. Brand new member".... kind of extreme for someone that's new here to say this for something so smal, don't you think?
:lol:

.
I find it weird that you are still on this bullshit, I don't know you and you don't know me. So, I'm here to enjoy this forum and not go back and forth with you about something you claim about me being another member..Seek help and a therapist.

Sincerely, Jawnswoop.
 

lightbright

Master Pussy Poster
BGOL Investor
I find it weird that you are still on this bullshit, I don't know you and you don't know me. So, I'm here to enjoy this forum and not go back and forth with you about something you claim about me being another member..Seek help and a therapist.

Sincerely, Jawnswoop.
:yawn::yawn::yawn::yawn::yawn::yawn::yawn::yawn::yawn::yawn::yawn::yawn::yawn:

Pleasantries,
LightBright



.
 

yureeka9

Rising Star
Platinum Member
charles-reese-welcome-to-america.gif
 

mcguyver

Rising Star
OG Investor
We have a former member who always comes in with a new username and post like he has some sense for awhile, then goes crazy and starts posting bullshit and becomes a complete ass. He then gets banned

I accept you for who you say you are until you show me that you are a problem.

HNIC


Bruh why you always put "HNIC" at the bottom of your post. We can see your name at top of the post window.
 

HNIC

Commander
Staff member
Thanks, crazy since I just joined here, willing to be respectful to people who give me respect back since and joining this forum, some folks was saying I'm somebody else when I never heard of those folks before....I feel like some people need to get to know people before they start trying to accused people of something because of what a old member did in the past.

Sincerely, Jawnswoop
The best thing to do is be you. Don't engage with the back and forth, that is just part of joining this board.
In time you are one of the guys. No one is spared on this board including me. They stayed on my ass for years.
 

lightbright

Master Pussy Poster
BGOL Investor
I hope you are wrong, this guy has been doing good job posting chicks. :dunno: :rolleyes:
He's already showed his cards..... he's someone who's been here a minute...... fucking talking about a BAN when I referred to three of his past aliases....who the fuck just joins, then talks whack shit like that.... he sometimes tries to play good boy with legitimate shit to throw the scent off of him...... but he always eventually ends up resorting to the same old schtick in his replies..... notice how JungleBros has well.... gone back to the jungle.... I caught a whiff of OP last Thursday, when he had just joined and had only three replies and came to a post that I made, but I said nothing.... all I had to do was wait till the right time.... and gently start to prod him.... and BAM...he starts to reveal himself :hmm:
sidebar: when you're in a lot of posts you get used to the way that some members reply/respond to things.... sorta like their fingerprints in posting.... male_feminist always had a certain way of posting which would eventually show through the smoke and puffery.... just like Tina every time a new name was used :hmm:


.
 

lightbright

Master Pussy Poster
BGOL Investor
The best thing to do is be you. Don't engage with the back and forth, that is just part of joining this board.
In time you are one of the guys. No one is spared on this board including me. They stayed on my ass for years.
He already fucked up... the back n forth without me doing anything bad... is what gave him away... now if you hadn't interfered.... his talk would've escalated into rants about me.... just like every new name that Tina made up.... eventually revealing herself.... what was that username @L.K. something all caps and periods.... tried to play regular for a minute before getting that BAN....she tried to play normal newbie. but then started spilling shit like she new me for years here

:lol:
 

lightbright

Master Pussy Poster
BGOL Investor
What did I say earlier Nightmare..... yet another slip by this idiot... and our fearless leader's warning him off... "Careful lil sheep... the wolves have caught your scent!!!"

:lol::lol::lol:
sidebar: posting style is like a fingerprint here... you can't play newbie.... and talk shit like "after all these years"


.

.
 

Mrfreddygoodbud

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Brett favre is the fuckin fall guy,

so the real culprits in mississippi can

continue to get away with murder..

brett aint a hundred percent innocent,

but he was far from the master plan

behind all this shit, he is just the tail of the snake,

you gotta get to the head of the snake to stop

that bitch from slithering
 

blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
Favre, other sports figures in welfare fraud case

By ERICA HUNZINGER
October 2, 2022


Mississippi’s largest public corruption case, in which tens of millions of dollars earmarked for needy families was misspent, involves a number of sports figures with ties to the state — including NFL royalty Brett Favre and a famous former pro wrestler.

At the center, though, is the former head of the state’s Department of Human Services, John Davis, who pleaded guilty on Sept. 22 to federal counts of conspiracy and theft and state counts of conspiracy and fraud against the government. Davis has agreed to testify against others in the case. Other people who have pleaded guilty to state charges include a mother and son who ran a nonprofit and an education company.

Here are the sports figures named in a civil lawsuit, which was filed on May 9, as well as the details from that suit, their responses if available and whether they’ve been charged.

BRETT FAVRE

USATSI_11210121_168392832_lowres.jpg

The Hall of Famer, legendary Green Bay Packers quarterback, 1997 Super Bowl winner and University of Southern Mississippi alumnus is one of the celebrity centerpieces of the scandal — though Favre is not facing criminal charges.

The state Department of Human Services paid $1.1 million in welfare money to a nonprofit known as the Mississippi Community Education Center, which then paid Favre Enterprises twice for speaking engagements, “radio and promotional events and business partner development.” The idea was that the money would go toward a new $5 million volleyball facility at Southern Miss, which Favre was building and where Favre’s daughter was playing volleyball.

Favre didn’t make appearances and later repaid the money, though $228,000 in interest is still outstanding.

Texts messages made public in court documents also show that in July 2019, Favre texted with then-Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant to ask if welfare money could be put toward building an indoor practice facility for the football team at the same school. That never went anywhere, with Bryant texting Favre in September that “we have to follow the law.”

Favre also is named in the lawsuit as the “largest individual outside investor” of biotech firm Prevacus (now called Odyssey Health) and suggested that the CEO ask about using Human Services grant money for investing in company stock. It turned into $2.1 million of state money for Prevacus and “corporate affiliate” PreSolMD.

Favre has not responded to the AP’s multiple requests for comment.

TED DIBIASE SR. AND SONS TEDDY AND BRETT

ted-dibiase-million-dollar-man-wwe.jpg

Ted DiBiase Sr. — the Million Dollar Man — was a fixture in pro wresting in the 1980s and ’90s with his gleaming, custom-made belt and “everybody has a price” catchphrase. DiBiase later became a Christian minister. He lives in Mississippi and owns Heart of David Ministries.

His son Teddy, who was a WWE wrestler in the 2000s and 2010s, lives in Mississippi and is connected to Priceless Ventures and Familiae Orientem, two limited liability companies based in the state. Brett DiBiase also lives in the state and owns Restore 2 LLC. Both brothers were pro wrestlers for a time.

The DiBiase ventures and the DiBiase men are all named as defendants in the lawsuit.

Heart of David Ministries received $1.7 million in welfare money “under (the) guise of providing ‘leadership training.’” The organization was ordered to repay about $722,000 in welfare money. The eldest DiBiase also received $250,000 through DiBiase Development Inc. to be a motivational speaker.

In a response to the civil lawsuit, DiBiase denied the state’s allegations and requested the suit be dismissed.

Teddy DiBiase received “over $3 million ... in federal anti-poverty funds” over two years for things like “leadership training” through Priceless Ventures and supporting “the multiple needs of inner-city youth” through Familiae Orientem. None of the services were provided.

He also was given by Davis, who considered Teddy DiBiase a friend, the title of the human services department’s director of sustainable change, despite not being employed by the state.

The state told Teddy DiBiase about a year ago he needed to repay $3.9 million. In his response to the civil suit, DiBiase repeatedly says the allegations are “not directed” toward him and because he lacks “knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the truth” of the allegations, he denies them.

Brett DiBiase, who also was a pro wrestler for a while, was an employee of the state human services department for about six months, ending in September 2017. After that, DiBiase was given a $250,000 salary paid in welfare funds from one nonprofit tied to Davis, as well as $130,000 in a separate payment of welfare funds from a different organization to “perform substance abuse training.” DiBiase also created his LLC and received $48,000 from MDHS for more training.

Davis also had welfare money funneled through a nonprofit to pay $160,000 for DiBiase to be a full-time resident at a luxury substance-abuse rehab facility in California.

Brett DiBiase pleaded guilty in 2020 to a felony for the $48,000 payment and agreed to pay it back. The state auditor requested a year ago that he pay back $225,950.

In a July response to the civil suit, he said he is “not guilty of any act, fault, or want of care,” is “in no way liable” to the state and said he “had no personal knowledge of any false misrepresentations or sham agreements regarding illegal use of TANF funds.” TANF is Temporary Assistance for Needy Families.

MARCUS DUPREE


marcus-dupreejpg.jpg

Dupree was widely recruited as a high school running back in Mississippi in the early 1980s, ended up going to Oklahoma and was heralded as a possible Heisman contender, but left midway through his sophomore season and graduated from Southern Miss.

Dupree, who was the subject of an ESPN “30 for 30” documentary in 2010, had two seasons in the NFL and returned to Mississippi.

The president of the nonprofit Marcus Dupree Foundation, he was a “celebrity endorser” and “motivational speaker” for the main two nonprofits involved in the scandal. The lawsuit claims he was given “substantial amounts in TANF funds” but it did not specify how much. Mississippi Today reported he earned at least $100,000.

Separately, his foundation received hundreds of thousands of dollars — some of it TANF funds — that was used to buy a 15-acre property for himself and for “purported ‘lease’ payments” on that same property.

Dupree has not been charged and has refused to follow a state’s order to repay $789,534. In an ESPN report published Sept. 30, he denied the allegations in the lawsuit.

PAUL LACOSTE

September-2016-Cover-1.jpg

Lacoste was a linebacker at Mississippi State in the mid-1990s and played in the Canadian Football League for a year. He became a trainer and owner of a fitness business, and also is the president of a nonprofit called Victory Sports Foundation. Both he and the nonprofit are named in the civil lawsuit.

The suit says Lacoste “directly proposed” to Davis that his nonprofit should get a piece of the welfare money for doing “fitness bootcamps” for public officials — including current Gov. and then-Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves, who was a client of Lacoste, according to Mississippi Today — political staffers and other participants in October 2018. Victory Sports Foundation received $1.3 million for three bootcamps.

Lacoste, who has not been charged, filed a motion in July to dismiss to the lawsuit, claiming the state has “failed to state a claim for breach of contract.” Lacoste also said in filings that Mississippi “pleads a litany of improper, conclusory misstatements” of state and federal law that “lack pleadings of fact for support.”

OTHER SPORTS CONNECTIONS

The Northeast Mississippi Football Coaches Association received $30,000 in welfare money in early 2019 as a donation “in consideration of ... having Ted DiBiase Jr. as banquet speaker.”
 

blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
Trump attorney Eric Herschmann now representing Brett Favre amid Mississippi welfare scandal

By Steve Almasy and Dianne Gallagher, CNN
Updated 5:22 PM EDT, Mon October 03, 2022


An attorney who was part of the defense team for then-President Donald Trump's first impeachment trial is now representing Pro Football Hall of Famer Brett Favre in connection with a massive welfare fraud scheme in Mississippi, a spokesperson for the former quarterback told CNN.

Eric Herschmann said in a statement that he agreed to represent Favre after he did his "independent due diligence" and was convinced he did nothing wrong.

The spokesperson declined to comment on what prompted the change in representation, which was first reported by Axios.

Favre is a defendant in a civil suit brought by the state against more than 35 people and entities in connection with the welfare fraud scheme in an effort to recover some of the funds. He has not been charged criminally.

The state auditor has said about $77 million intended for the state welfare program, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, was being misused, including being spent on officials' personal expenses and by charities on projects unrelated to the welfare program.

According to investigators, more than $4 million was used to a build a Favre-backed volleyball center at the University of Southern Mississippi, his alma mater, and where his daughter played the sport at the time.

Favre's previous attorney said the football legend's fundraising efforts were honorable and he didn't know money initially meant for families in need was used.

Herschmann said in a statement: "Brett enthusiastically tried to help his alma mater, a public university, that needed and wanted his help. Attorneys for the University and the State knew that the donations came from (the Mississippi Community Education Center non-profit) and ok'd them.

"To be clear, Brett had no idea that welfare funds were being used or that others were involved in illegal conduct."

Earlier this month, John Davis, the one-time head of the Mississippi Department of Human Services, pleaded guilty to two federal counts and 18 state counts of conspiracy and fraud in connection with the welfare fraud scheme.

Herschmann left a prominent law firm after nearly 25 years to become a senior adviser to Trump in 2020 and was on his impeachment defense team. He has been subpoenaed by the federal grand jury investigating the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol and also gave videotaped testimony to the House committee investigating the insurrection.

CNN is told Herschmann was introduced to Favre through a mutual friend.

Favre's longtime attorney, Bud Holmes, referred CNN to a public relations firm.

Favre -- who made more than $130 million in his 20-year NFL career, according to the sports salary tracking website Spotrac -- retired after the 2010 season.

eric-herschmann-impeachment-hearing-abc-jef-200129_hpMain_1x1_992.jpg

Trump attorney Eric Herschmann appearing at President Trump’s first impeachment trial
 

blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
Brett Favre Wanted To Use Prison Labor For His Projects; New Texts Show He’s Been Scamming Poor People And Children Since 2015

BySamuel-Clement
Published17 hours ago


The Brett Favre Mississippi Welfare Scandal hasn’t gone to rest, and here is the new update via Mississippi Free Press;

Between 2016 and 2019, the Mississippi Department of Human Services and nonprofits associated with it allegedly misspent more than tens of millions of dollars in federal Temporary Assistance For Needy Families funds that should have gone to the poorest families in the poorest state. More than $5 million of those funds went toward a volleyball-stadium project at the University of Southern Mississippi favored by retired NFL quarterback Brett Favre and $1.1 million went to Favre himself.

This timeline focuses on that element of the welfare scandal, including text messages with Favre and others revealed in court filings by former Gov. Phil Bryant and by Nancy New’s nonprofit, the Mississippi Community Education Center. The text messages are not a complete record, however; Bryant’s texts include redactions; New’s texts do not indicate redactions, but nevertheless appear to leave out important exchanges. When necessary, text exchanges that were spread across multiple pages in the court filings have been stitched together.

Though New, former MDHS Director John Davis, and four others have faced criminal charges, prosecutors have not accused Favre nor Bryant of a crime.


Favre actually suggested that prison labor be used for all of his projects.

“New did not tell Governor Bryant that she and Davis had arranged to contribute $4 million in TANF funds to the project,” Bryant’s filing reads. “She simply explained that she was helping Favre gain university approval of the project and it appeared the university would ultimately approve it. Just as he had indicated to Favre, Bryant told New that he would assist them in raising private donations and corporate sponsorships to help fund the project.”

The project involved New’s nonprofit entering a five-year, $5 million lease of the university’s athletic facilities, which it would purportedly use to provide programming to the community’s underserved population. The filing explains that the lease agreement was approved by university attorneys, then the Institutes for Higher Learning’s appointed Attorney General’s Office attorney. A USM announcement said the project would be funded by Mississippi Community Education Center and private donations.

Later, in May of 2018, Favre reached out again to Gov. Bryant for help constructing lockers for the facility.

“I’m still trying to save money on [the] Vball facility,” Favre texted.

Favre even suggested “the prison industry possibly as a builder.”


For at least the last seven years Favre has been scamming poor people and children. He is not a good man.

Click Above Links For More Information

FZp76GVVUAA2_pO.jpg:large
 

playahaitian

Rising Star
Certified Pussy Poster








LET'S NOT FORGET
 
Top