{"id":19336,"date":"2025-11-23T15:38:48","date_gmt":"2025-11-23T15:38:48","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/news2.watchtowatch.top\/1-breakingbreaking-in-a-jaw-dropping-revelation-sec-brooke-rollins-found-5000-dead-people-getting\/"},"modified":"2025-11-23T15:38:48","modified_gmt":"2025-11-23T15:38:48","slug":"1-breakingbreaking-in-a-jaw-dropping-revelation-sec-brooke-rollins-found-5000-dead-people-getting","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/news2.watchtowatch.top\/?p=19336","title":{"rendered":"1 BREAKINGBREAKING: In a Jaw-Dropping Revelation, Sec. Brooke Rollins Found 5,000 DEAD PEOPLE Getting"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/news2.watchtowatch.top\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/11\/252-1763794897-q80.webp\" alt=\"1 BREAKINGBREAKING: In a Jaw-Dropping Revelation, Sec. Brooke Rollins Found 5,000 DEAD PEOPLE Getting\" loading=\"lazy\" style=\"width:100%; height:auto;\" \/><\/p>\n<p>Brooke Rollins, agriculture secretary under the renewed Trump vision for America, dropped a bombshell on the American public. She exposed a rot within the federal welfare system that not only drains taxpayer dollars but also emboldens corruption and inefficiency. Rollins revealed in an interview that nearly 5,000 dead individuals were still receiving SNAP benefits and that over 500,000 instances of duplicate enrollees had been uncovered.This isn\u2019t just a bureaucratic blunder. This is emblematic of a broken system that Democrats have allowed to fester, enabling abuse at the expense of working Americans. For decades, the left has wrapped welfare in the warm language of compassion, but what Rollins reveals is a scheme benefiting fraudsters, illegals, and career welfare recipients while punishing the responsible and the honest.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe found one guy receiving benefits in six different states,\u201d Rollins said. This is not just anecdotal. It\u2019s systemic. It\u2019s widespread. And it\u2019s been protected by blue states that refused to cooperate with federal investigations into their welfare rolls.<\/p>\n<p>Rollins\u2019 testimony reinforces what conservatives have warned for years: that the Democratic Party is less interested in accountability and more invested in creating a permanent dependent class that can be controlled and harvested for votes.<\/p>\n<p>This revelation confirms what President Trump emphasized during both his terms and campaign trail speeches: America must put its citizens first, and part of that is cleaning up fraud and prioritizing the deserving over the deceitful.<\/p>\n<p>Under Rollins\u2019 leadership, nearly 700,000 individuals have already been removed from the rolls. But the job is far from over. Democrat-led states have refused to share eligibility data and have filed lawsuits to block investigations. What are they hiding?<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s no surprise that the Biden administration resisted such reforms. While Rollins and Trump aimed to safeguard the public trust and restore fiscal integrity, the Biden camp seems committed to open-handed spending with little oversight.<\/p>\n<p>The mainstream media barely blinked at Rollins\u2019 revelation. Had a Trump official been caught enabling such fraud, the outcry would be deafening. But when Democrats are the culprits, silence prevails.<\/p>\n<p>The question Americans must ask is simple: Why is the left so afraid of transparency? Why do they fight to keep dead people on welfare and illegals on the dole?<\/p>\n<p>Every fraudulent SNAP card represents dollars stolen from hard-working Americans. It means fewer resources for truly needy citizens. And it means a culture of dependency is being fostered, not the self-reliance and dignity that America First policies promote.<\/p>\n<p>Rollins framed this as a national security issue as well, with illegal immigrants potentially benefitting from these systems through fraudulent documentation. This is not just an economic drain; it\u2019s an attack on national sovereignty.<\/p>\n<p>President Trump has long called for E-Verify, biometric ID, and strict eligibility rules for any federal assistance. His policies, backed by data like Rollins presented, are the only viable path forward.<\/p>\n<p>What this country needs is a full audit of every entitlement program. The rot is deeper than SNAP. If dead people can draw food assistance, who else is bleeding the system dry?<\/p>\n<p>The welfare state must be rebuilt from the ground up. And the only party willing to do that is the one led by Trump.<\/p>\n<p>Blue states are terrified of what audits might reveal: networks of fraud, collusion, and incompetence that date back decades. They would rather sue than comply because exposure would cost them power.<\/p>\n<p>This is a wake-up call to every Republican governor and lawmaker. The time for polite requests is over. Subpoenas and legislation must compel compliance. Any official obstructing this mission is complicit in theft.<\/p>\n<p>Brooke Rollins has done more than expose fraud. She has given patriots the ammunition to demand change. The GOP must seize this moment.<\/p>\n<p>Taxpayers must understand that the stakes are high. Every dollar wasted on a dead man\u2019s EBT card is a dollar not spent securing the border, rebuilding infrastructure, or helping our veterans.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"auto\">In the soft, sorrowful glow of a Charlotte sunset, where the Queen City\u2019s skyline pierces the sky like jagged memories and the air carries the faint scent of magnolias mingled with fresh-dug earth, a small gathering huddled around a freshly turned grave on September 8, 2025. It was the funeral of Iryna Zarutska, the 23-year-old Ukrainian refugee whose life\u2014once a beacon of hope amid war\u2019s wreckage\u2014had been snuffed out in a senseless stab of violence just weeks earlier. Friends clutched tissues, neighbors bowed heads in silent prayer, and Iryna\u2019s mother, Olena, stood trembling beside the casket, her hand resting on its polished wood as if willing her daughter back to life. But one voice was missing from the eulogies, one face absent from the front row: Iryna\u2019s father, Viktor, trapped thousands of miles away in the besieged heart of Ukraine, his plea echoing across oceans like a ghost\u2019s lament\u2014\u201dPlease bring her back to me.\u201d In a story already laced with tragedy, this paternal heartbreak\u2014fueled by Russia\u2019s unyielding grip on its men of fighting age\u2014transforms a daughter\u2019s untimely death into a profound emblem of exile, loss, and the cruel ironies of a world at war.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"auto\">Iryna Zarutska\u2019s odyssey from the rubble-strewn streets of Kyiv to the bustling pizza kitchens of North Carolina was a testament to the unquenchable human spirit, a young woman\u2019s defiant dance with destiny that ended far too soon. Born in 2002 in Ukraine\u2019s vibrant capital, Iryna grew up in a modest apartment overlooking the Dnipro River, her childhood a mosaic of fairy tales, folk dances, and the distant rumble of thunder that would one day become artillery fire. A prodigy with a paintbrush, she graduated from Synergy College with a degree in art and restoration, her canvases alive with swirling abstracts that captured the chaos and color of her homeland. \u201cShe saw beauty in the broken,\u201d her uncle, Mykola, would later say, his voice thick with pride and pain. Animals were her quiet confidantes\u2014stray cats fed from her windowsill, neighbors\u2019 dogs walked with her gentle hand\u2014and her dreams? To become a veterinary assistant, healing the wounded in a world that seemed determined to inflict them.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"auto\">But dreams deferred became nightmares realized in February 2022, when Russia\u2019s full-scale invasion shattered Ukraine\u2019s fragile peace. Explosions rocked Kyiv\u2019s nights, air raid sirens wailed like banshees, and Iryna\u2019s family\u2014mother Olena, sister Sofia (18), brother Dmytro (15), and father Viktor\u2014huddled in a bomb shelter beneath their building, the ground trembling with each incoming missile. Viktor, a 48-year-old mechanic with grease-stained hands and a heart as steadfast as the Black Sea cliffs, was the family\u2019s anchor. \u201cHe fixed everything\u2014cars, fears, us,\u201d Olena recounted in a tearful video call from Charlotte. But as conscription loomed, the government\u2019s decree barring men aged 18 to 60 from leaving the country became Viktor\u2019s invisible chain. \u201cGo,\u201d he urged, shoving passports into Olena\u2019s hands one frantic dawn. \u201cTake the children. I\u2019ll hold the line here.\u201d With hearts heavier than their hastily packed suitcases, Olena, Iryna, Sofia, and Dmytro boarded a refugee train westward, the screech of wheels a requiem for the life they left behind. Viktor watched them vanish into the smoke, his final embrace a promise: \u201cI\u2019ll see you soon. Be strong, my dove.\u201d<\/p>\n<p dir=\"auto\">America beckoned as a sanctuary, and Charlotte, with its welcoming refugee programs and Southern warmth, became their harbor. Sponsored by a local Ukrainian Orthodox church, the family settled in a modest duplex in the Plaza Midwood neighborhood, its walls soon adorned with Iryna\u2019s vibrant sketches\u2014sunflowers defying concrete, blue-and-yellow flags woven into abstract dreams. Olena found work as a seamstress, stitching uniforms for a local hospital; the younger siblings enrolled in English classes at the International House, their accents softening like spring thaw. But Iryna? She bloomed. Enrolling at Rowan-Cabarrus Community College in 2023, she juggled art electives with shifts at Bella Napoli Pizzeria in trendy NoDa, where her dough-tossing flair and infectious laugh earned her quick promotions. \u201cShe\u2019d sketch caricatures of customers on napkins, make them laugh till they cried,\u201d her boss, Marco Rossi, shared at the funeral, holding a crumpled drawing of a smiling chef. Fluent in English by sheer will\u2014apps by day, podcasts by night\u2014Iryna volunteered at animal shelters, walking rescue pups through Freedom Park, her radiant smile a bridge between worlds. \u201cAmerica is freedom,\u201d she posted on Instagram in June 2025, a selfie amid Charlotte\u2019s skyline: \u201cHere, I can dream without ducking bombs.\u201d<\/p>\n<p dir=\"auto\">Those dreams curdled into dread on August 22, 2025, aboard the Lynx Blue Line light rail snaking through Charlotte\u2019s revitalized South End. It was nearing 10 p.m., the car half-full with weary commuters\u2014nurses off shift, gig workers scrolling feeds\u2014when Iryna boarded at the 7th Street Station, her pizzeria apron still dusted with flour, earbuds piping Ukrainian folk tunes. She slid into a window seat, texting her mother about a late-night study session, oblivious to the man in the orange hoodie slouched across the aisle. Decarlos Brown Jr., 34, a Charlotte native with a rap sheet longer than a CVS receipt\u2014robbery, larceny, breaking and entering, and a litany of mental health crises including schizophrenia-fueled hallucinations\u2014sat motionless, his eyes vacant voids. Four minutes ticked by in tense tranquility, the train\u2019s rumble a monotonous mantra. Then, without a word, without warning, Brown rose, flicked open a pocketknife, and lunged.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"auto\">Surveillance footage, released by the Charlotte Area Transit System on September 5 amid public outcry, captures the carnage in cold clarity: Iryna curls instinctively, hands shielding her face as the blade plunges\u2014three savage strikes, one slicing deep into her neck, blood erupting in arterial arcs that paint the seats crimson. She collapses, gasping, earbuds tangled in a pool of her own lifeblood, the knife left embedded like a cruel exclamation point. Brown, blood dripping from his sleeve, strips off his hoodie and saunters to the doors, exiting at Archer Avenue Station as if fleeing a bad dream. Chaos cascades: passengers scream, some film frozen in fascination, others bolt for help. Marcus Hale, a 28-year-old graphic designer two rows back\u2014the first witness to rush to her side\u2014kneels, pressing his jacket to the wounds, his shouts for aid lost in the din. \u201cHer eyes\u2026 they were pleading, like \u2018Why me?\u2019\u201d Marcus later recounted, his voice breaking. Paramedics from Station 14 arrived in eight minutes\u2014a praised response\u2014but for Iryna, it was eternity too late. Pronounced dead at the scene, her final moments a stark indictment of urban anonymity.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"auto\">The arrest was swift: a passenger tailed Brown to an alley, where police swarmed, finding him dazed and bloodied. Charged with first-degree murder, Brown faces federal hate crime enhancements after the knife\u2019s handle revealed a carved swastika\u2014a detail Marcus spotted in his desperate aid attempts, transforming random rage into ritualized revulsion. Brown\u2019s history? A revolving door of arrests\u201414 priors, including a January 911 misuse where he ranted of \u201cimplanted chips\u201d controlling him\u2014and untreated schizophrenia that family blamed on \u201csystem failures.\u201d \u201cHe wasn\u2019t a monster; he was broken,\u201d his sister Tracey pleaded. But for Iryna\u2019s loved ones, broken blades cut deepest.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"auto\">News of her death rocketed around the globe, a viral vortex of grief and fury. #JusticeForIryna trended with 7 million posts, vigils lighting Charlotte\u2019s stations with candles and sunflowers\u2014Ukraine\u2019s national bloom. President Trump, in a Rose Garden address, decried \u201csoft-on-crime Democrat disasters,\u201d vowing federal crackdowns; Governor Roy Cooper countered with $2 million for transit cops. The footage\u2019s release sparked debates: transparency or trauma porn? Mayor Vi Lyles urged restraint: \u201cOut of respect for Iryna\u2019s family, don\u2019t share the horror\u2014honor her light.\u201d GoFundMe surged: $250,000 raised for Olena\u2019s family, scholarships in Iryna\u2019s name for refugee artists.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"auto\">Yet amid the maelstrom, the deepest wound was Viktor\u2019s exile. In war-torn Kyiv, where air raids punctuate every hour and conscription patrols snatch men from streets, Viktor Zarutsky\u2014mechanic by trade, father by fate\u2014received the call at dawn on August 23. Olena\u2019s sobs crackled over a spotty line: \u201cOur girl\u2026 she\u2019s gone.\u201d Viktor, 48 and drafted into a territorial defense unit since 2022, collapsed against his workbench, tools clattering like falling stars. Ukraine\u2019s martial law, ironclad since the invasion, forbids men of fighting age to flee\u2014 a bulwark against brain drain, but a barrier to healing. \u201cI begged the embassy,\u201d Olena later shared, her eyes hollow. \u201cThey offered to fly him, but the rules\u2026 he\u2019s trapped.\u201d Viktor, manning checkpoints near Bakhmut\u2019s ruins, could only watch via grainy Zoom as his daughter\u2019s casket was lowered. \u201cPlease bring her back to me,\u201d he pleaded in a recorded message, voice raw as shrapnel: \u201cMy Iryna, my light\u2014how can I bury you from afar? The bombs take everything, even this goodbye.\u201d<\/p>\n<p dir=\"auto\">The funeral on September 8 at James Funeral Home was a tapestry of tears and tributes. Over 300 attended: pizzeria pals with flour-dusted aprons, college classmates clutching her sketches, Ukrainian expats in vyshyvankas chanting hymns. Olena\u2019s eulogy fractured the air: \u201cShe escaped shells for safety, only to meet a knife. But Iryna loved America\u2014her sketches sing of it. We\u2019ll bury her here, where her dreams took root.\u201d The Ukrainian embassy\u2019s offer to repatriate the body was gently declined: \u201cShe\u2019d want Charlotte\u2019s soil,\u201d Mykola affirmed. Viktor joined virtually, his pixelated face gaunt under helmet light, toasting with unseen vodka: \u201cTo my dove\u2014fly free, even if I can\u2019t.\u201d Neighbors whispered of the irony: a father fighting faceless foes, denied the dignity of dirt on his hands at her grave.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"auto\">Iryna\u2019s legacy lingers like a half-finished canvas: a GoFundMe mural of messages, animal shelter donations in her name, art classes for refugees at Rowan-Cabarrus. Marcus Hale, the witness who couldn\u2019t save her, founded \u201cRails of Remembrance,\u201d bystander training workshops. Brown\u2019s trial looms in November, federal charges promising the death penalty\u2014a cold comfort to a family forever fractured. Viktor, from his frontline foxhole, sends weekly videos to Sofia and Dmytro: \u201cTell Mama I fight for Iryna\u2019s peace.\u201d But his plea\u2014\u201dBring her back\u201d\u2014echoes eternally, a father\u2019s cry against borders and bullets.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"auto\">In Charlotte\u2019s humming heart, where trains carry both promise and peril, Iryna Zarutska\u2019s story isn\u2019t just tragedy\u2014it\u2019s a torch. She fled war for welcome, only to find violence veiled as chance. Her father\u2019s absent embrace at the graveside? A stark symbol of conflicts that consume across continents. As sunflowers wilt on her stone, and Viktor\u2019s war rages on, one truth endures: in the face of such heartbreak, pleas like his demand we build bridges, not barriers. Iryna\u2019s light, though snuffed, still guides\u2014urging us to bring our lost ones home, in body or in unbreakable bond.<\/p>\n<p><strong>\u201cAmerican Pickers\u201d star Mike Wolfe has faced a series of tough blows in recent years.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>After saying goodbye to his longtime friend Frank Fritz and closing his famous Nashville antique shop, Wolfe is now recovering from a serious car accident.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s often said that misfortune never comes alone \u2014 and\u00a0Mike Wolfe\u00a0knows that better than most. The past years have been tough for the Master picker, several tragic events have deeply affected him.<\/p>\n<p>And now he\u2019s been hit by yet another misfortune.<\/p>\n<p>The \u201cAmerican Pickers\u201d star and his girlfriend, Leticia Cline, are now recovering after a terrifying car accident in Columbia, Tennessee on Friday.<\/p>\n<p>Wolfe, 61, shared the news with fans on\u00a0Instagram stories, posting a photo of his heavily damaged blue vintage car.<\/p>\n<p>He wrote, \u201cBy the grace of God, we\u2019re both safe and okay. We are both receiving excellent care and while Leticia is still in the hospital, she is expected to make a full recovery.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Cline revealed on her own social media that she had hit her jaw on the shattered car window during the crash. She later shared the extent of her injuries:<\/p>\n<p>\u201cBroken jaw (in a few places), broken ribs, sternum, collapsed lung and a lot of swelling on my spine. My mouth will be wired shut but I still got my brain and that\u2019s all that matters.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Despite the trauma, Wolfe tried to reassure fans, posting later that evening:<br \/>\u201cIt\u2019s been a rough nite but now there\u2019s light at the end of the tunnel.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In another photo, Wolfe could be seen reclining beside Cline in a hospital bed, where she wore a neck brace.<\/p>\n<p>Cline also shared an update: \u201cHopefully I get surgery tomorrow.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Wolfe thanked fans for their support, writing, \u201cThank you for respecting our privacy at this time and we appreciate all of your love &amp; prayers. God bless.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Earlier this year, Wolfe made the difficult decision to close his Nashville store, Antique Archaeology, after 15 years. In a heartfelt Instagram post, he reflected on what the shop meant to him:<\/p>\n<p>\u201dThis place has meant the world to me \u2013 not just the brick and mortar, but the people. The community. The visitors from all over the world who came through those doors, shared their stories, and reminded me every day why I started this journey in the first place.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Wolfe explained that the closure was about finding a slower pace of life in his home state of Iowa: \u201cThis isn\u2019t goodbye \u2013 it\u2019s just a new rhythm. I\u2019ll forever be grateful for every moment in that Nashville space, and for all of you who made it more than just a shop. You made it home.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>He also reflected on the impact of losing his longtime co-star and friend, Frank Fritz, who passed away in September 2024 from complications following a stroke.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cEvery day we think about Frank on set. He was such a big part of the show. He was my friend since 8th grade. And a lot of times when we are traveling through a property there are so many things that capture our attention that connect us to him,\u201d Wolfe shared with the New York Post.<\/p>\n<p>Mike\u00a0was by his friend\u2019s hospital bedside\u00a0as Frank took his final breaths.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI was there for about an hour before he passed, and I was holding his hand and rubbing his chest when he took his last breath. I took my fingers and I closed his eyes.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong>Car accidents are unpredictable, and it doesn\u2019t take much for things to turn seriously wrong.<br \/><\/strong><br \/><strong>We\u2019re sending all our best wishes to Mike Wolfe and Leticia for a swift and full recovery, hoping they face no serious complications from this frightening accident!<\/strong><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Brooke Rollins, agriculture secretary under the renewed Trump vision for America, dropped a bombshell on the American public. She exposed a rot within the federal welfare system that not only drains taxpayer&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":19335,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[6],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-19336","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-breaking-news"],"aioseo_notices":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/news2.watchtowatch.top\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/19336","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/news2.watchtowatch.top\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/news2.watchtowatch.top\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/news2.watchtowatch.top\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/news2.watchtowatch.top\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=19336"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/news2.watchtowatch.top\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/19336\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/news2.watchtowatch.top\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/19335"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/news2.watchtowatch.top\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=19336"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/news2.watchtowatch.top\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=19336"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/news2.watchtowatch.top\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=19336"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}