Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

FBI Questions Brett Favre After Mississippi Paid Him $1.1 Million From Welfare Funds For Speeches He Never Gave

FBI Questions Brett Favre After Mississippi Paid Him $1.1 Million From Welfare Funds For Speeches He Never Gave
Hannah Foslien/Getty Images

Football quarterback Brett Favre—best known for his more than 20-season career playing for the Green Bay Packers—was questioned by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) after an audit in Favre's home state of Mississippi alleged that state's Department of Human Services misspent $94 million intended for at-need residents, including $1.1 million paid out to Favre's company for two speaking appearances he did not make.

The Mississippi state auditor's office found that federal grant funds diverted from Mississippi's Temporary Assistance for Needy Families welfare funds (TANF), as well as tens of millions in public funds as an element of the scheme. Favre has repaid the fees, but not $228,000 in interest the auditor also demanded.


Favre has not been accused of a crime or charged and has declined to speak with reporters. His attorney has said that he did nothing wrong and that he did not know he was paid with money intended to help poor children.

The scandal first gained attention in 2020, after Favre's involvement with the development and promotion of a concussion treatment drug, Prevasol, by the Prevacus corporation, came under scrutiny.

The nonprofit Mississippi Community Education Center (MCEC) received $2.5 million in TANF funds and a grand jury in Hinds County indicted MCEC founder, Nancy New, and her son Zach in the scheme. New and her son have pleaded guilty to state and federal charges and are cooperating with authorities.

These latest developments have exposed Favre to heavy criticism.





Favre, a prominent Republican who endorsed former President Donald Trump in the 2020 general election, addressed the controversy last year, saying that Shad White, the state auditor, had decided to "continue to push out this lie that the money was for no-show events is something I cannot stay silent about."

White has rejected Favre's defense, saying that Favre is using his "megaphone as a celebrity to drown out the facts, but it will not change the facts.”

More from Trending

Screenshot of Ben Stein as the teacher in "Ferris Beuller's Day Off"; Donald Trump
Paramount Pictures; Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

'Ferris Bueller' Clip Explaining Tariff Disaster In 1930 Goes Viral Amid Trump's Tariff War

People are nodding their heads after a clip from the movie Ferris Bueller's Day Off in which Ben Stein's teacher character explains the disastrous results of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act in 1930 went viral after President Donald Trump's announced tariffs on goods imported from Canada and Mexico.

The scene features a high school economics teacher, played by Ben Stein, lecturing his uninterested students about the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act—a real-life 1930 bill signed by President Herbert Hoover that raised tariffs on imported goods. The law, often blamed for exacerbating the Great Depression, has drawn comparisons to Trump’s recent trade policies.

Keep ReadingShow less
Billy McFarland
Theo Wargo/Getty Images

Mexico Officials Say Fyre Fest 2 'Does Not Exist' Despite Founder's Insistence That It's Happening

Things aren't boding well for a sequel to the failed Fyre Festival, allegedly set to take place on a Mexican island as previously announced by the music festival's founder, Billy McFarland.

The disgraced event organizer was sentenced to six years in prison for financial crimes tied to the 2017 Fyre Festival on the Bahamian island of Great Exuma, in which he defrauded investors of $27.4 million.

Keep ReadingShow less
Robert Pattinson
Warner Bros. Pictures

Robert Pattinson Offers Hilariously Blunt Reason For Wanting To Start Filming 'The Batman 2' Soon

Sometimes it feels like a million years have passed between installments in a series. This is true in books, in comics, and definitely in movies.

For actor Robert Pattinson, the years are extra long, because he is specifically waiting to be called up to act as the titular role in The Batman 2, which will follow on the heels of the two part The Batman, already filmed and half-released.

Keep ReadingShow less
SKIMS Sparks Debate With Massive Blow-Up Doll Of Underwear-Clad Kim Kardashian In Times Square
Robert Smith/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images

SKIMS Sparks Debate With Massive Blow-Up Doll Of Underwear-Clad Kim Kardashian In Times Square

If there's one talent Kim Kardashian has, it's how to get attention, and this week she took it to a whole new level.

A sixty-foot blow-up doll of her underwear-clad likeness has appeared in Times Square as a promotion for her SKIMS clothing brand.

Keep ReadingShow less
Characters from 'Win or Lose'
Disney/Pixar

Disney Slammed For Adding Christian Character To Show After Cutting Trans Storyline

Disney came under fire for cutting a trans storyline and adding an openly Christian character in the new animated Pixar series Win or Lose on Disney+.

The contradictory pivot comes as part of the company's new commitment to significantly alter its diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives in response to a cultural shift towards conservatism pushed by Republican President Donald Trump's second White House term.

Keep ReadingShow less