Brett Favre Goes on Welfare
How the former NFL quarterback convinced Mississippi to spend its public assistance money on a volleyball facility.

When people throw around the phrase welfare fraud, it usually refers to individuals bilking the system by falsely claiming to be in need. A lawsuit in Mississippi alleges that it also includes funding for a college volleyball facility and cash payouts to a Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback.
Phil Bryant, a Republican, served as Mississippi's governor from 2012–2020. During that time, the state's poverty rate hovered between 20–25 percent. Today, it has the highest rate of any state in the country, with more than 19 percent of residents living under the poverty line.
The Mississippi Department of Human Services (MDHS) administers Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), a welfare program funded by a federal block grant. It spent over $77 million in 2020, just over half of what it spent two years earlier.
But during that time, the MDHS was rocked by scandal: In February 2020, the Office of the State Auditor arrested six people on charges including fraud and embezzlement, including John Davis, former MDHS director, and Nancy New, director of the nonprofit Mississippi Community Education Center. New and her son Zach have pleaded guilty and are cooperating with prosecutors.
In all, the state alleged that nearly $100 million was diverted from anti-poverty programs, to the benefit of local officials and well-connected individuals. One of those individuals was allegedly Brett Favre, a native Mississippian and one of the most decorated quarterbacks in the history of the NFL.
In January 2020, Favre bragged that "it's hard to get people to donate for volleyball. But we'll be opening an $8 million facility that will be as good as any in the country" at the University of Southern Mississippi (USM), his alma mater and the school where his daughter played volleyball. But as Mississippi Today reported at the time, at least $5 million of that total came from New's nonprofit, which according to the state auditor acted as a funnel through which MDHS officials illicitly laundered state funds. Between 2016 and 2019, the nonprofit received more than $60 million in funding from the state's welfare programs, while raising less than $1.6 million from any other sources. In all, the auditor alleges that New misused at least $77 million, the same amount the state spent on welfare funding in 2020.
According to the state auditor, Favre was also paid more than $1.1 million in speaking fees for appearances he never made, paid by the nonprofit with money from state welfare funds. The state auditor claimed that Favre was unaware of the money's origin, and Favre agreed to pay the money back (though he has struggled to do so in a timely manner).
But a state civil lawsuit reveals that Favre was intimately aware of the misuse of state funds, and even enlisted Bryant's help.
The MDHS agreed in 2017 to help Favre fund the volleyball facility, even structuring the deal to circumvent regulations that prevent TANF funds from being used toward construction. But the MDHS funds were not enough: In July 2019, Bryant texted New, "Just left Brett Favre…Can we help him with his project." Favre's $1.1 million payment for speaking fees was actually intended to finance the project as well, in exchange for ads for the state welfare agency. In a text to New, Favre offered, "I could record a few radio spots…and whatever compensation could go to USM." He also worried, "If you were to pay me is there anyway the media can find out where it came from and how much?"
This is not even the first whiff of scandal. In April, Mississippi Today reported that Bryant had set up a meeting in December 2018 between Favre and MDHS officials in order to secure $1.7 million for Favre to invest in a pharmaceutical startup, Prevacus. Just days before the meeting, the former football star texted Bryant, "It's 3rd and long and we need you to make it happen!!" That money was laundered through New's organization as well. After Bryant left office in 2020, he agreed to a "company package" including Prevacus shares in exchange for introducing the company to investors.
Neither Favre nor Bryant has been charged, though Favre has apparently been questioned by the FBI.
The entire saga, in which a legendary professional athlete uses state funds in a purely personal endeavor that eventually draws the attention of law enforcement, is reminiscent of Curt Schilling's foray into video game development. After helping the Boston Red Sox clinch their first World Series win in 86 years, Schilling founded video game company 38 Studios, which he established in Rhode Island after the state offered him a $75 million loan. The company ultimately defaulted on the loan, leaving the state on the hook for over $100 million.
But Favre's deal is considerably worse: For all of the faults in Schilling's deal, it was overwhelmingly approved by the state legislature. Meanwhile, Favre took part in a series of backroom deals meant to benefit a few well-connected players from the largesse of the state's coffers.
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Hold on there, bub. The "poverty line" is an artificial construct, defined as something like 25% or 50% of the median income. By definition, exactly that percentage of the jurisdiction measured is below the poverty line.
The question is, is that median income national, per state, per county, or per what? Makes a huge difference. California coastal cities have a huge median income; some below the poverty line in San Francisco could buy a nice home on acreage in the boonies.
The "poverty line" is an artificial construct, defined as something like 25% or 50% of the median income. By definition, exactly that percentage of the jurisdiction measured is below the poverty line.
Nope.
If the median is $50,000, and a poverty line is say 25% of the median, i.e., $12,500, knowing the median tells you nothing about how incomes are distributed and hence you can't know how many people are below $12,500. If 25% of the population earn $40,000, 50% earn $50,000 and 25% earn $60,000. the median is $50,000. and no-one is below the poverty line.
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"The question is, is that median income national, per state, per county, or per what? Makes a huge difference. California coastal cities have a huge median income; some below the poverty line in San Francisco could buy a nice home on acreage in the boonies."
A more accurate look at the poverty rate is by utilizing the Supplemental Poverty Measure (SPM). The SPM takes into account costs of living, governmental "handouts," and other things to form a measure of poverty, rather than relying solely on income.
Last time I looked, California had the highest poverty rate in the Nation.
There is no poverty in Mississippi. There can't be because if there isn't then corrupt Mississippi Republicans can't be guilty of misappropriateing millions of federal dollars that were intended for the poor.
It only makes sense.
Oily Pelosi gets fed taxpayer money for bicycle paths; am I missing a difference?
Well you see Sevo. The difference is that Mississippi took money they were contractually obligated to use for the poor and gave it to a millionare.
That is a vile breach of conduct.
In anothe thread you claimed to be a drug dealer, so I guess legally binding contrats mean something different to you.
“Today, it has the highest rate of any state in the country, with more than 19 percent of residents living under the poverty line.”
“Pandemic” and “Russia.”
Brian and brain dead.
Brainless lefty asshole.
Eat shit and die.
"Eat shit and die." = Sevo.
In another thread you claimed to be a drug dealer.
Don't you have orders to fill?
If only they had drug testing for welfare recipients.
And if the drug test fails?
What do you do, dump them homeles and pennyless in the streets where they will be forced to commit crimes to survive.
You really need to think thigs through more than 0 steps.
It is a chronic RepubliTard failure.
These right-wingers do love their sports socialism
Is Oily Pelosi a right-winger, lefty shit? She gets fed taxpayer money for bicycle paths; am I missing a difference?
"She gets fed taxpayer money for bicycle paths"
And?
You seem to be missing 99% of the cow.
No surprise that brain-dead lefty shit is incapable comprehension.
Is that too many syllables, asswipe?
Maximizing the transfer of wealth from the poor to the hyper rich is the only reason Republicans exist.
Maximizing the profits of the Koch family is the only reason the Reason propaganda organization exists.
It's Favre's fault Mississippi officials are that stupid or ignorant. Maybe Mississippi should spend more on education.
Don't hate the player, hate the game?
"It's Favre's fault Mississippi officials are that stupid or ignorant."
These Mississippi officials aren't stupid or ignorant.
They are Criminally corrupt.
"They are Criminally corrupt."
They're D's, fuckface. No wonder.
Misissippi can't spend more on edication. If they did then people there wouldn't be so stupid that they vote Republican.
These types of public monies fraud schemes are rampant everywhere, all the time. I'm guessing the reason this one gets the news is the size of it in relation to this particular state's ability to afford it.
Try to keep the thefts down to a few million, and throw some DIE language in your charter... that's my 2 cents.
More likely this one is getting media attention because they can attach an otherwise well like celebrity to it.
As a Packer fan I love Brett, he was great on the field and less so off the field. As he is now retired, has his place in NFL history, it is best he just stays on his tracker mowing the lawn.
WOW, what a great way to help those living in poverty with taxpayer money. Don't you just love government.
Well this is Republcian government in action.
It's the same level of corruption in every Republican state.
Just look at Texas and Florida.
"...Just look at Texas and Florida."
Where there seems to be none, steaming pile of lefty shit.
Fuck off and die.
Texas Elected Official Raise Corruption to New Artform
Officeholders in Texas, much more so than in most states, apparently believe that corruption is the primary privilege of office holding. Corruption gives them the power to not only benefit themselves but to please the needs of others in their orbit who need or desire enrichment of some form. Texas’ top law enforcement official, A.G. Ken Paxton, who awaits trial upon a felony indictment for felony securities fraud and is currently under investigation for by the FBI for allegations of corruption and bribery while in office, is just a glaring example of a problem that runs deep in the lone star state.
“… Texas is an insanely terrible place to do business: It has corrupt public officials — law-enforcement officers on the cartel dime, judges selling verdicts, members of a drug task force shepherding contraband from Mexico, school-board races in which cash and cocaine are traded for votes — along with a corrupt university system flouting its admissions rules for the family and friends of state legislators, a generous statewide economic-development program that swaps grants for job creation but fails to adequately keep track of either, an out-of-control prosecutor in charge of a state ethics office who, when she is not berating and threatening the police officers who have hauled her in on drunk-driving charges, uses her office as a political weapon — just as her predecessor in the office did — while the state’s Medicaid program alone is a cavalcade of hilariously unethical shenanigans: Texas’s Medicaid-fraud police are so bad at their job and spend so much money that a state audit suggested that taxpayers would be better off if the office did not exist; a former state actuary working on Medicaid fraud is being investigated for fraud; a purveyor of Medicaid-fraud-detection software won a state contract under questionable circumstances that led to the resignation of the top lawyer at the Health and Human Services Commission . . .”
The Chicago Bears are moving to Arlington Heights. They claim no tax money will be involved, but they will need public funds for their planned entertainment center.
And there are no republicans for miles around.
If they used welfare funds, that would be criminal. If they secured public money through the legislature it may be disgusting and a collosal waste of taxpayer dollars, but it isn't criminal.
We can have a discussion about public funding for private companies that will never get covered by the resulting jobs or expansion of the tax base. Those things are awful. But claiming that fraud and public funding are the same thing is nonsense.
>one of the most decorated quarterbacks in the history of the NFL.
I'm not a football fan, so I don't know, but "decorated?" Do they give medals and ribbons for football stuff?
I mean, I vaguely recall most football uniforms being pretty unadorned, and I can't imagine a fruit salad of ribbons on the chest of a player in any environment.
Decorated as in awards. MVP, stuff like that.
It is not at all an unusual construction, I am not sure how there could be any confusion. And if it was a fake confusion over the linguistic construction, it was way too far to go for way too weak a punchline. The bit about codpieces below was better.... but also suffers from throwing in too much stuff. (A subject in which I have much personal expertise. We should all study Fist more closely.)
I also no little about football. Because it's stupid. Their costume decorations seem to consist of cod pieces and fake, overwrought musculature. Pretty medieval shit. Also a lot of ass slapping going on. Or so I'm told. In any case I have no idea where these flamboyant young men could hang the decorations that their flamboyant boy fans demand. Perhaps golden jewelry to adorn their cod pieces?
"Uses state funds for a purely personal endeavor"
Uh...do words actually have to mean anything in your world?
Getting a gym for a public university is not remotely what you could call a "purely personal endeavor "
Personal pet project? Sure
But other than reputational, there is no personal benefit. Even the daughter will not be benefitting.
Scheming to divert funds from one government project to another is enough. We don't have to lie about it.
Oh really?
Ya, Republicans just don't like those black people.
That is why Corrupt Republican Politicians in Mississippi are stealing their money.
But theft is what Republicans are all about, in every state in the U.S.
Just look at how Donald Trump has stolen hundreds of millions from his dumb as dirt followers, and how he stole those nuclear secrets and other classified government documents he removed from the White House, and then his Florida resort.
Man
Woman
Camera
Cheeseburger
Fries
Stolen Nuclear Documents
Traitor Trump goes to prison.
Cool link.
I love that site and have their book. Odd, though. That site used to have charts visually showing each of the correlations. Now I only see the raw data tables.
... Ah, there we go. You linked to his old site. The new one (with the graphs) is at tylervigen.com/spurious-correlations
Do you mean all the stuff I've heard for 50 years about poverty being more prevalent among black people than whites is a spurious correlation?
I am disillusioned.
"Ya, Republicans just don't like those black people."
D's, OTOH are the party of slavery.
Fuck off and die, steaming pile of lefty shit.
Poor Sevo. He is still living in the 1800's.
The Dems haven't been the party of racism for the last 100 years ever since the Dixycrats left the party and joined the Republicans.
I guess you dropped out of public school before grade 5 and didn't learn any American history.