An unidentified speaker in a public session accused the presidential administration of widespread corruption and improper use of taxpayer funds, listing multiple specific allegations and asking a witness about changes at the Department of Justice.
The speaker said, “We’re living through the most corrupt presidential administration in American history,” and named examples they said illustrated the problem: a $300,000,000 ballroom, a $230,000,000 payout, taxpayer spending at properties they described as owned by the president, and Trump-branded wine being sold at Coast Guard exchanges. The speaker also alleged Department of Homeland Security advertising on Truth Social and suggested that federal contracts were awarded in exchange for campaign contributions.
The speaker went on to allege personal benefit and travel spending, saying that “Cash Patel flew his girlfriend around the country on a multimillion dollar jet that taxpayers paid for,” and that Kristi Noem had directed hundreds of millions of tax dollars to companies she is affiliated with before spending roughly $200,000,000 on two private jets for travel. The speaker additionally claimed that “for 12 months, this administration has been taking billions of taxpayer dollars from American people.” Those assertions were presented as allegations in the hearing and were not established as proven facts in the session.
After the list of allegations, the unidentified speaker addressed a witness identified in the transcript as “Mister Beaulieu,” asking how the administration had "welcomed fraud across government by purging DOJ attorneys and shuttering ethics office across the federal government."
Speaker 2 responded that alleged government employee involvement "hasn't been proven yet, but it does seem to be alleged," and expressed concern about the capacity of the Justice Department to prosecute such matters, saying "the public integrity section, has been largely defunded and decimated." The witness framed the point as a procedural concern about the office that would handle prosecution, not as a factual finding about specific individuals.
The session record shows no formal findings or votes on the claims discussed. Speaker 1 said their time had expired before offering further particulars.
The exchange in the session consisted of emphatic allegations by one participant and a measured response from a witness about institutional capacity at the Justice Department; the allegations themselves were presented but not resolved during the meeting.