Normal view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.
Yesterday — 9 July 2025Main stream

Concerns over Medicaid cuts draw crowd to Oakland County town hall meeting

9 July 2025 at 15:07

An audience of nearly 200 people at a town hall meeting in Troy was asked if someone they knew would be affected by Medicaid cuts in President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill.

Nearly all raised their hands.

Four state legislators who represent parts of Oakland County hosted the meeting at the Troy Community Center on Monday, July 7. They and their audience expressed uncertainty and outrage about the bill, which passed the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate by narrow margins last week. Trump signed it on July 4.

State senators Mallory McMorrow, D-Royal Oak, and Stephanie Chang, D-Detroit, and state representatives Sharon MacDonell, D-Troy, and Natalie Price, D-Berkley, hosted the meeting.

Irma Hoops of Oxford came to the meeting out of concern for a 65-year-old friend on Medicaid who is “near suicidal” over the changes, she said.

“I just can’t help but fear there are going to be more people affected,” she said. “This is going to impact all of us.”

She is particularly concerned for veterans. “We owe them the respect to try to stand up to this,” she said.

Supporters of the sweeping tax and spending legislation say the changes to Medicaid, food aid and other programs will encourage personal responsibility and stop those who are scamming the system.

Critics say it will put the lives of those who are already vulnerable at risk.

The bill slashes more than $1 trillion from Medicaid and $186 billion from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or food stamps, according to a release from MacDonell.

It also creates an estimated $2 billion hole in Michigan’s budget; the state administers Medicaid and the food stamp program. The cuts threaten the food and health security of over 2 million Michiganders and would force the state to either slash services or raise taxes to make up the difference, the release said.

Chang said the state will not be able to “backfill” the cuts, and legislators are doing the best they can to minimize the impact on Michiganders.

McMorrow encouraged those with concerns to contact their state legislators – especially if they are Republicans, who support the One Big Beautiful Bill.

U.S. Rep. Tom Barrett, R-7th District, which includes part of western Oakland County, said in a release that he supported the bill because it “delivers on promises made to hardworking families and businesses in Michigan.”

He said it prevents a 22% tax hike on the average taxpayer by making 2017 tax cuts permanent, saving middle-class Americans who earn between $30,000 and $80,000 as much as 15%.

Additionally, it provides the largest border security investment in American history, including funding to build 701 miles of wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, equip border agents with new surveillance technology and hire more agents.

Barrett said the legislation “preserves Medicaid for the people the program is designed to serve: expectant mothers, children, people with disabilities and the elderly.”

He said it requires healthy, able-bodied adults on Medicaid to return to the workforce or do volunteer work. The bill also denies coverage for undocumented immigrants, duplicative or deceased enrollees and other ineligible people, he said.

Trump signs his tax and spending cut bill at the White House July 4 picnic

Midway through 2025, Oakland County’s homicides down nearly 13% over this time last year

What Trump’s big tax law could mean for the youngest Americans

 

 

Concerns about Medicaid cuts drew a packed house to a town hall meeting at the Troy Community Center. Anne Runkle/MediaNews Group.
Before yesterdayMain stream

Feds: Postal workers stole checks from mail, sold them to Oakland, Macomb men

24 May 2025 at 22:09

Residents of Eastpointe and Rochester Hills are among four people accused by federal authorities of operating a $63-million scheme to steal checks from people’s mail and sell them.

Jaiswan Williams, 31, of Rochester Hills; Dequan Foreman, 30, of Eastpointe; Vanessa Hargrove, 39, of Detroit; and Crystal Jenkins, 31, of Detroit, have been charged with conspiracy to aid and abet bank and wire fraud, U.S. Attorney Jerome F. Gorgon announced Friday.

The conspiracy charge carries a maximum penalty of 30 years in prison.

Hargrove and Jenkins were Postal Service employees who “diverted and ultimately stole checks and other negotiable instruments from the mail, including a high volume of tax refund checks issued by the U.S. Treasury,” officials said in a news release. Williams and Foreman administered online marketplaces on which they sold the checks, officials said.

“When public employees break the public trust, they enrich themselves at the expense of the American taxpayer and undermine the institution itself,” Gorgon said in the release. “We will find and prosecute those who exploit their position for personal gain. We are committed to disrupting these shadowy schemes.”

According to allegations submitted by federal investigators, Hargrove and Jenkins sold the stolen checks to Williams and Foreman, who marketed them for sale on Telegram Messenger, a cloud-based, cross-platform instant messaging application. Prices varied based on the face-value of the checks. One of the Telegram channels, named “Whole Foods Slipsss,” was used to advertise high-dollar checks while another channel, “Uber Eats Slips,” was used to advertise lower-dollar checks. “Slips” is a term commonly used in these schemes to refer to stolen checks.

Transactions were completed via other methods using a variety of electronic payment systems. Purchasers of these checks would then attempt to fraudulently cash them using a variety of methods.

According to a report in Reuters news service and other media outlets Thursday, Vietnam authorities have instructed telecommunication service providers to block Telegram for not cooperating in combating alleged crimes committed by its users. Unrelated to the alleged stolen-check scheme, 55 men were arrested in France this week as part of an operation to dismantle a suspected pedophile ring that allegedly operated over Telegram, following a 10-month investigation, according to multiple media reports. Telegram was founded in 2013 by two Russian brothers and is headquarted in Dubai, United Emerites.

Regarding the charges against the foursome, Sean McStravick, acting inspector in charge of the Postal Inspection Service’s Detroit Division, thanked investigative partners for helping to “maintain the integrity and respectability of the U.S. Postal Service.”

“The charges against these four individuals underscore the U.S. Postal Inspection Service’s commitment to securing the nation’s mail system from those who seek to exploit it for personal and financial gain,” McStravick added in the release. “Postal Inspectors utilize every tool at their disposal, including crucial partnerships, to uncover, investigate, and prosecute these schemes to the fullest extent of the law.”

Williams also faces charges on allegations of money laundering for activities dating back to October 2022, and for millions of dollars of fraudulent COVID-19 pandemic unemployment insurance benefit claims submitted between August and December 2020.

The investigation was led by the  U.S. Postal Service Office of the Inspector General with assistant from the Postal Inspection Service, participating investigative agencies included the  Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigations, Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration and Department of Labor Office of the Inspector General.

The case is being prosecuted by assistant U.S. attorneys Ryan A. Particka and Darrin Crawford.

The U.S. District Court building in Detroit. U.S. DISTRICT COURT PHOTO
❌
❌