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🚪 Apple Home hands-free on UWB in a mainstream Schlage lock? Nice. This is where “proximity computing” stops being a demo and starts unlocking your actual front door—finally. #Windows #Microsoft #Apple #SmartHome #Matter #Thread #HomeKey windowsforum.com/threads/sch… #SmartLock
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Replying to @GavinNewsom
Gavin There's been too much fraud. You know it. We know it. AUDITING - EXPOSING FACTS IS NOT ABUSE OF POWER IT IS N E C E S S A R Y Alexander Soofer (Abundant Blessings nonprofit): ~$23M in alleged wire fraud (arrested Jan. 2026). • Cody Holmes and related real estate developers: ~$26M in Project Homekey/homeless housing grants (2025 charges).
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Angel Ruiz retweeted
@GavinNewsom @CAgovernor has repeatedly bragged about Homekey. Yet, the Legislature blocked the audit to prevent taxpayers from seeing the receipts. The truth is finally out. Read the full report and share it far and wide: ocregister.com/2026/06/10/ho… @HUDgov @SecretaryTurner
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💣BURIED BOMBSHELL: When leaders block audits and dodge scrutiny, taxpayers have every right to get furious. California’s Legislature killed a bill to audit Project Homekey — @CAgovernor @GavinNewsom's “phenomenal success.” Thankfully, @CalMatters investigated anyway. 🧵
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"You're not fighting for shit? That's rich coming from the guy simping for Gavin Newsom's record while slinging personal insults at working Americans. Newsom lectures about 'kings enriching themselves' from the White House, but on his watch homelessness exploded over 20%, median home prices hit nearly $1M, people are fleeing the state, and his own Homekey program just got audited for massive waste — canceled projects, weak oversight, and basically zero results after billions spent. That's the real grift destroying working Californians. I fight every single night on the job providing for my family. I fight by staying sober long-term, rebuilding my life, and calling out exactly the failed progressive policies and elite hypocrisy you're defending with playground insults. You fight by hiding behind a screen because you have no actual arguments left. Projection much? The American people see through it. Stay mad and fuck off."
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There you go @CAgovernor your reason for the investigation along with Fireaid, homelessness scam, high speed rail scam, medi-cal and Medicare scams, Homekey program, 911 system, Wildfire Fuel Breaks, are among the many.
California launched a $23 million program to provide hearing aids for kids. Five years later — only 300 have been given out. That’s roughly $76,000 per hearing aid. Retail cost is about $1,400. Taxpayers are funding a system plagued by fraud and waste.
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Sun Rose Apartments celebrated its official ribbon cutting today, marking the completion of final exterior renovations to the 82-unit supportive housing community. Originally a Project Roomkey hotel, Sun Rose was transformed through California’s Homekey program into permanent housing for residents transitioning out of homelessness. This milestone was made possible through an incredible partnership between Placer County, the @CityofRoseville, AMI Housing, the @California_HCD, @DHCS_CA and more —along with support from local elected leaders, regional Continuum of Care partners, and members of our community who championed this project from the start.
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Replying to @CaliforniaGlobe
Project HomeKey High speed Rail (who bought up the land and sold it to the state at a profit?) Trusts and investments in Covid pharmaceuticals
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Replying to @GavinNewsom
Now you know how it feels !! But, you are a crook What is the "Fraud" Connected to Newsom? The Project Homekey Scams: Project Homekey is Newsom’s flagship program that spends billions to buy old hotels and turn them into homeless housing. Federal prosecutors have arrested several developers for submitting fake records to pocket tens of millions of dollars. For example, one developer allegedly stole $26 million meant for homeless housing and spent it on luxury cars and private jets. The State Audit (No Tracking): A massive state audit revealed that California spent $24 billion on homelessness over five years, but the state failed to properly track the money. The state could not prove where all the cash went or if the programs actually worked. COVID-19 EDD Fraud: During the pandemic, the state's unemployment department (EDD) was hit by a massive $33 billion fraud scheme where criminals, international cartels, and prison inmates stole identity data to take taxpayer funds.
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Replying to @neeratanden
next time you are with Gavo, ask Gavo and wonder aloud. Here’s a breakdown based on public records and audits as of mid-2026: - Paying homeless to register/sign ballot measures - **Federal action**: In May 2026, Brenda Lee Brown Armstrong (a longtime petition circulator) was federally charged and agreed to plead guilty to paying individuals—including homeless people on LA’s Skid Row—$2–$3 (plus cigarettes/phone cards) to register to vote and sign petitions. This is a felony (up to 5 years). Prosecutors say the investigation continues, with renewed scrutiny of Skid Row activities and ballot harvesting. - Broader probes: U.S. Attorney’s office ( @USAttyEssayli ) has opened multiple election fraud investigations, including voter rolls. Allegations of NGOs paying for repeated registrations surfaced in LA mayoral primary coverage, but no widespread convictions tied directly to state/Dem operations. No evidence of massive outcome-changing fraud proven, per officials. - High-speed rail - **Ongoing failures, no completion**: Massive cost overruns (original ~$33B in 2008 → $126B for Phase 1 SF-LA/Anaheim; full system estimates $200B ). Merced-Bakersfield segment faces $6.5B gap; no full revenue service. Federal funding (~$4B) reviewed/terminated under Trump admin due to delays/noncompliance. - Audits/criticism: State auditor, Legislative Analyst’s Office, and Inspector General reports highlight poor management, transparency issues, and unrealistic timelines (possible 2030s ). New bills for more IG oversight. Billions spent with minimal track laid. - No major prosecutions or project cancellation; scaled-back plans continue amid funding fights. - COVID policies - **Lawsuits/mixed outcomes**: Newsom faced suits over lockdowns, mandates, school closures, and business impacts. Some doctor “misinformation” law challenges succeeded on vagueness/free speech grounds. Retroactive reimbursement laws for COVID services upheld in some cases. No broad criminal accountability for policies. - Settlements: $2B redirected for pandemic learning loss (from existing funds). Broader probes limited; focus shifted to recovery funding. - NGO funneling money back into DNC/Democrats - **National pattern, limited CA-specific prosecutions**: Congressional oversight hearings highlighted “NGO slush funds” and revolving doors (officials → NGOs → donations), but mostly federal/Biden-era examples (e.g., green energy grants). In CA, rural Democratic central committees moved union money to candidates; dark money critiques exist, but no major DOJ convictions tied to Newsom-era “funneling” as described. - Homeless NGOs: Some audits (e.g., LAHSA funding suspension over fraud/weak controls) and criticism of poor oversight, but not direct DNC links proven at scale. - NGO funding for homeless/drug recovery with no measurable results - **Audits confirm tracking failures**: State auditor (2024 report, still relevant): ~$24B (up to $37B in some tallies 2019–2025) on homelessness/housing with poor outcome data. Interagency Council stopped consistent tracking post-2021. Only 2/5 major programs deemed likely cost-effective (e.g., Homekey hotels, family housing support). Unsheltered numbers rose despite spending. - Recent: LA nonprofits faced audits/funding issues (e.g., Weingart Center, LAHSA). Persistent criticism of results vs. billions spent. No sweeping clawbacks or reforms. - Budget expansion with no positive outcomes in education/infrastructure - **Spending up, mixed/poor results**: - **Education**: Per-pupil spending ~$27K (high nationally), with investments in TK, community schools, special ed. Test scores saw some post-COVID gains (Newsom claim), but chronic underperformance in reading/math for many groups persists. Governance shifts proposed; Prop 98 fights over withheld funds. Audits highlight inefficiencies. - **Infrastructure/homeless**: High-speed rail and homelessness as above—billions spent with delays, overruns, and visible lack of results (e.g., more unsheltered in some metrics). - Broader: State auditor/ LAO critiques on transparency and effectiveness. Budgets often use one-time funds; deficits addressed via cuts/delays elsewhere. **Zavala/Michaelson coverage**: Zavala has pressed on transparency (e.g., Capitol projects, some policy outcomes) and interviewed DOJ figures on elections. Less visible deep dives from them on all these exact issues compared to auditors/opposition outlets. These topics often see more scrutiny from state auditor, federal prosecutors, Republicans, or watchdogs than mainstream CA beat reporters. Many issues feature audits exposing problems without structural change in a one-party state. Developments continue (e.g., election probes). Primary sources like state auditor reports or DOJ releases provide the clearest data
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Replying to @GavinNewsom
You allowed fraud after fraud after fraud and can’t account for billions of dollars. Let’s start with project Homekey. That alone should be enough to put you in jail
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Replying to @GavinNewsom
@Elex_Michaelson @ZavalaA next time you are with Gavo, ask Gavo about this - California’s Democratic supermajority legislature, Newsom administration responses, and data gaps often limit outcomes. Here’s a breakdown based on public records and audits as of mid-2026: - Paying homeless to register/sign ballot measures - **Federal action**: In May 2026, Brenda Lee Brown Armstrong (a longtime petition circulator) was federally charged and agreed to plead guilty to paying individuals—including homeless people on LA’s Skid Row—$2–$3 (plus cigarettes/phone cards) to register to vote and sign petitions. This is a felony (up to 5 years). Prosecutors say the investigation continues, with renewed scrutiny of Skid Row activities and ballot harvesting. - Broader probes: U.S. Attorney’s office (@USAttyEssayli ) has opened multiple election fraud investigations, including voter rolls. Allegations of NGOs paying for repeated registrations surfaced in LA mayoral primary coverage, but no widespread convictions tied directly to state/Dem operations. No evidence of massive outcome-changing fraud proven, per officials. - High-speed rail - **Ongoing failures, no completion**: Massive cost overruns (original ~$33B in 2008 → $126B for Phase 1 SF-LA/Anaheim; full system estimates $200B ). Merced-Bakersfield segment faces $6.5B gap; no full revenue service. Federal funding (~$4B) reviewed/terminated under Trump admin due to delays/noncompliance. - Audits/criticism: State auditor, Legislative Analyst’s Office, and Inspector General reports highlight poor management, transparency issues, and unrealistic timelines (possible 2030s ). New bills for more IG oversight. Billions spent with minimal track laid. - No major prosecutions or project cancellation; scaled-back plans continue amid funding fights. - COVID policies - **Lawsuits/mixed outcomes**: Newsom faced suits over lockdowns, mandates, school closures, and business impacts. Some doctor “misinformation” law challenges succeeded on vagueness/free speech grounds. Retroactive reimbursement laws for COVID services upheld in some cases. No broad criminal accountability for policies. - Settlements: $2B redirected for pandemic learning loss (from existing funds). Broader probes limited; focus shifted to recovery funding. - NGO funneling money back into DNC/Democrats - **National pattern, limited CA-specific prosecutions**: Congressional oversight hearings highlighted “NGO slush funds” and revolving doors (officials → NGOs → donations), but mostly federal/Biden-era examples (e.g., green energy grants). In CA, rural Democratic central committees moved union money to candidates; dark money critiques exist, but no major DOJ convictions tied to Newsom-era “funneling” as described. - Homeless NGOs: Some audits (e.g., LAHSA funding suspension over fraud/weak controls) and criticism of poor oversight, but not direct DNC links proven at scale. - NGO funding for homeless/drug recovery with no measurable results - **Audits confirm tracking failures**: State auditor (2024 report, still relevant): ~$24B (up to $37B in some tallies 2019–2025) on homelessness/housing with poor outcome data. Interagency Council stopped consistent tracking post-2021. Only 2/5 major programs deemed likely cost-effective (e.g., Homekey hotels, family housing support). Unsheltered numbers rose despite spending. - Recent: LA nonprofits faced audits/funding issues (e.g., Weingart Center, LAHSA). Persistent criticism of results vs. billions spent. No sweeping clawbacks or reforms. - Budget expansion with no positive outcomes in education/infrastructure - **Spending up, mixed/poor results**: - **Education**: Per-pupil spending ~$27K (high nationally), with investments in TK, community schools, special ed. Test scores saw some post-COVID gains (Newsom claim), but chronic underperformance in reading/math for many groups persists. Governance shifts proposed; Prop 98 fights over withheld funds. Audits highlight inefficiencies. - **Infrastructure/homeless**: High-speed rail and homelessness as above—billions spent with delays, overruns, and visible lack of results (e.g., more unsheltered in some metrics). - Broader: State auditor/ LAO critiques on transparency and effectiveness. Budgets often use one-time funds; deficits addressed via cuts/delays elsewhere. **Zavala/Michaelson coverage**: Zavala has pressed on transparency (e.g., Capitol projects, some policy outcomes) and interviewed DOJ figures on elections. Less visible deep dives from them on all these exact issues compared to auditors/opposition outlets. These topics often see more scrutiny from state auditor, federal prosecutors, Republicans, or watchdogs than mainstream CA beat reporters. Many issues feature audits exposing problems without structural change in a one-party state. Developments continue (e.g., election probes). Primary sources like state auditor reports or DOJ releases provide the clearest data.
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3/5 Programs like Homekey (motel conversions) show some cost-effective wins, but most lack reliable results. The Council stopped serious evaluations after 2021. High housing costs focus on interim shelters over permanent housing = persistent failure.
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Not that I care what you think, you don’t realize how uninformed you are. But Newsom spearheaded a redistricting initiative we passed, CARE Act to help homeless, HOMEKey to renovate hotels into affordable living spaces. He beats dumbass trump at his own games & mocks mercilessly!
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Aqara Smartlock J200の1ヶ月での評価 ・反応が爆速 ・安定している ・HomeKey対応がいい #Aqara #Homekit
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Replying to @AlexPadilla4CA
Hey you were in LA and most of your friends and family are there in some in city hall. Humm. Homekey fraud where sites were bought for 100% more than asking or appraised value in your old district where you tentacles are still there.

Saving LA - Phase III
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Trump Admin Announces $100 Million In Fraud Uncovered In Los Angeles Essayli said the Trump administration is targeting fraud and has recently suspended federal funding to the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority (LAHSA) over allegations of mismanagement. Essayli, leading probes in California’s Central District, has pursued cases involving developers misusing Project Homekey grants and other taxpayer dollars intended for housing as part of broader federal efforts to address unaccounted billions in prior spending. conservativebrief.com/usatty…
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Trump admin yanks funding from LA homeless agency amid explosive fraud probe: 'Necessary step' trib.al/N7EYrwS
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