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Trump administration stays silent as massive Ukraine corruption scandal rocks Zelenskyy’s inner circle

Alleged embezzlement plot shakes Ukraine
Fox News senior foreign affairs correspondent Greg Palkot reports on politicians and partners of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy allegedly participating in an energy corruption scandal on ‘Special Report.’
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The Trump administration has so far remained silent on a widening corruption scandal inside Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s government and inner circle.
The White House did not respond to a request for comment on a $100 million corruption probe announced this week that has already prompted the resignations of senior Ukrainian officials.
Corruption has long been a friction point in U.S.–Ukraine relations. In 2019, the Trump administration paused roughly $400 million in military aid to Ukraine, citing concerns about government corruption. At the same time, Trump’s associates sought information on Democratic rival Joe Biden, who served as vice president under Barack Obama.
Meanwhile, Biden’s son Hunter held a $50,000-per-month board seat at the Ukrainian energy firm Burisma. As vice president, Joe Biden had threatened to withhold $1 billion in U.S. loan guarantees unless Ukraine dismissed prosecutor Viktor Shokin, whom Western governments accused of failing to pursue corruption cases.
RUSSIA’S GAS GAMBLE BACKFIRES AS TRUMP’S ENERGY VISION RESHAPES EUROPE
Shokin later claimed he was fired because he was investigating Burisma, a claim U.S. and European officials dispute.
Justice Minister Herman Halushchenko and Energy Minister Svitlana Grynchuk submitted their resignations Nov. 12, 2025. (Getty Images)
President Donald Trump for months has been working to secure a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine, which the U.S. has provided with around $175 billion in aid since the start of the war in 2022.
Ukraine’s anti-corruption agencies — the National Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU) and the Special Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office (SAP) — said they spent 15 months on «Operation Midas,» a probe that included roughly 1,000 hours of wiretaps. Investigators say the inquiry uncovered a kickback scheme in which contractors for the state-owned nuclear company Energoatom paid 10-15% bribes, totaling about $100 million, to keep government contracts.
According to prosecutors, the alleged ringleader was Timur Mindich, a longtime associate of Zelenskyy and co-owner of his former production studio, as well as an advisor to Justice Minister German Galushchenko. Authorities say Galushchenko, who served as energy minister until July, helped facilitate the money laundering operation and acted under Mindich’s influence.

Ukrainian Energy Minister German Galushchenko, center, is in the middle of an energy corruption probe rocking Ukraine. (Gleb Garanich/File Photo/Reuters)
Mindich fled Ukraine early Monday, hours before investigators raided his home. Both Galushchenko and his successor, Energy Minister Svitlana Grynchuk, said they would resign at Zelenskyy’s request. Five suspects have been arrested, and seven others placed under official suspicion, prosecutors said.
In a statement, NABU alleged that the criminal network transferred funds to «an unnamed former deputy prime minister of Ukraine,» identified internally by the codename Che Guevara. Investigators said about $1.2 million was traced to that individual.
«Using their official connections in the ministry and the state-owned company,» the suspects «ensured control over personnel decisions, procurement processes, and financial flows,» Ukraine’s anti-corruption agencies said.
TOP UKRAINIAN OFFICIALS IN ZELENSKYY GOVERNMENT SUBMIT RESIGNATIONS AMID $100 MILLION CORRUPTION SCANDAL
Zelenskyy has not been directly implicated, but the revelations cast a shadow over a president who built his career on promises to root out graft. He publicly backed the investigation, saying Monday night that «any effective action against corruption is very necessary» and that «the inevitability of punishment is necessary.»
Earlier this year, Zelenskyy faced backlash after proposing tighter presidential oversight of Ukraine’s independent anti-corruption agencies, a plan he later withdrew.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy meets with U.S. President Donald Trump in Washington D.C., Aug. 19, 2025. (Ukrainian Presidency/Handout/Anadolu via Getty Images)
Before entering politics, the former comedian often joked about his country’s entrenched corruption.
«Is it possible to become president and not steal?» he once quipped. «It’s a rhetorical question, as no one has tried so far.» His 2019 election campaign centered on dismantling the oligarch-dominated political system and increasing transparency.
Now, nearly seven years later — with no election planned amid wartime conditions — some Ukrainians view him as increasingly reliant on a small inner circle consolidating its own power and wielding it with limited checks.
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Investigators say some of the laundered money had been earmarked for equipment meant to protect energy facilities from Russian missile attacks. Ukraine continues to face rolling blackouts, with many residents limited to five to eight hours of electricity per day as Russian forces target power infrastructure heading into winter.
Last week, the European Commission praised Ukraine’s «significant efforts» to combat corruption but warned that «limited progress» could jeopardize its bid to join the European Union. The commission also cautioned that reports of political pressure on anti-corruption groups «cast doubt on Ukraine’s commitment» and urged Kyiv to «prevent any backsliding on its notable reform achievements.»
ukraine,donald trump,volodymyr zelenskyy,corruption,crime
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Los hijos de Bolsonaro acusaron al juez Alexandre de Moraes de querer “matar” al ex presidente brasileño

Tres de los hijos de Jair Bolsonaro cargaron este sábado con dureza contra Alexandre de Moraes, el juez de la Corte Suprema que dictó la orden de prisión preventiva del ex presidente brasileño, al acusarlo de querer “matar” a su padre.
“El objetivo de Alexandre de Moraes es bien simple: matar a mi padre”, escribió en sus redes sociales el diputado Eduardo Bolsonaro en un extenso mensaje en el que tachó al magistrado de “psicópata”.
Eduardo se encuentra desde marzo pasado en Estados Unidos, donde ha mantenido reuniones con representantes del Gobierno de Donald Trump en busca de ayuda para intentar tumbar el proceso por el cual el ex mandatario fue condenado a 27 años de cárcel por golpismo.
El Supremo ya imputó al legislador por su actuación en EEUU, que se tradujo en aranceles del 50% sobre los productos brasileños, la revocación de los visados a varios jueces del alto tribunal y funcionarios del Ejecutivo, y sanciones financieras contra De Moraes.
“Cualquier régimen de excepción busca eliminar físicamente a sus disidentes; Alexandre de Moraes simplemente sigue el ejemplo de todos los tiranos psicópatas que lo precedieron”, expresó Eduardo.
“Nada de esto nos hará retroceder ni rendirnos. El martirio de mi padre solo encenderá la llama de la justicia en nuestros corazones. Todos los involucrados en el actual intento de Alexandre de Moraes de asesinar a mi padre rendirán cuentas”, prometió.
En la misma línea, el senador Flávio Bolsonaro manifestó que su padre “nunca hizo nada malo” y que la prisión preventiva se basa en una decisión judicial “frágil” construida a partir de “hipótesis”.
“¡Si le pasa alguna cosa, Alexandre de Moraes, es culpa tuya! ¡Si mi padre muere allí dentro, la culpa es tuya! ¡¿Quiere matar a Bolsonaro, Alexandre de Moraes?!”, exclamó en un directo en redes sociales que finalizó entre lágrimas mientras pronunciaba una oración.
Por su parte, el concejal de Río de Janeiro Carlos Bolsonaro insinuó que los problemas judiciales del ex gobernante, quien también está inhabilitado para cargos electivos, forman parte de un plan para acabar con su carrera política y disipar el movimiento de extrema derecha que encabeza en el país.
“El objetivo no cambia: quieren a Jair Bolsonaro enterrado vivo. O muerto, como ya intentaron”, aseguró.
El ex jefe de Estado (2019-2022) fue detenido preventivamente este sábado en su residencia de Brasilia, donde desde el pasado 4 de agosto cumplía prisión domiciliaria por incumplir varias medidas cautelares impuestas en el marco de la causa de golpismo.
Un equipo de agentes condujeron al ex gobernante hasta la sede de la Superintendencia de la Policía Federal de Brasilia, donde permanecerá bajo custodia hasta nueva orden.
Su arresto se produjo en vísperas de que el Supremo ordene la ejecución de su condena de 27 años y tres meses por su papel en la trama que intentó revertir el resultado de las elecciones de 2022.
El Supremo Tribunal Federal lo consideró responsable de “liderar” un plan para desconocer la victoria de Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. El proceso reunió registros de reuniones con altos mandos militares, discursos que cuestionaron sin pruebas el sistema de voto electrónico y documentos que describieron escenarios para activar un Estado de Sitio sin base constitucional.
El juez Moraes fundamenta la prisión preventiva en tres hechos recientes. Primero, la convocatoria de Flávio Bolsonaro a una “vigilia por la salud de Bolsonaro y la libertad de Brasil”. La Policía Federal advierte que un tumulto cerca de la vivienda podía facilitar una fuga. Segundo, la ruptura registrada de la tobillera electrónica a la madrugada del sábado. El magistrado interpreta el episodio como una señal de intento de evasión. Tercero, la fuga de Alexandre Ramagem, exdirector de Inteligencia y condenado por golpismo, que escapa desde Roraima hacia Estados Unidos.
La justicia menciona además la proximidad entre la casa de Bolsonaro y la zona de embajadas, incluida la de Estados Unidos.
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Minneapolis police chief issues apology for linking Somali youth to local crime

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Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara apologized to the Somali community for a comment he made connecting «East African kids» to crime.
«The Somali community here in Minneapolis has been welcoming and has shown love towards me, and I appreciate it,» O’Hara said at a news conference on Thursday. «Over the last three years we have been working together to try and address some of the real serious problems that we have in our community.»
«We have to be honest at times with the problems that we’re having in our community, and we need our community to help us fix those problems together because it’s real and it’s serious. At the same time, if people have taken anything that i have said out of context in a way that’s caused harm, I apologize, and I’m sorry for that because that’s not my intention at all,» O’Hara added.
In an interview with WCCO earlier this month, O’Hara was speaking about a deadly Halloween shooting as well as juvenile crime plaguing the city when he made the comment. Alpha News reported that the Dinkytown area, where the shooting took place, has seen a series of crimes including assaults, robberies, shootings and auto thefts.
TRUMP TERMINATES DEPORTATION PROTECTIONS FOR SOMALI NATIONALS LIVING IN MINNESOTA ‘EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY’
Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara speaks during a press conference regarding the Annunciation Church shooting in Minneapolis, Minn., Aug. 28, 2025. (Tim Evans/Reuters)
During the interview, he stated that the young people committing the crimes were not «poor kids from Minneapolis,» but rather kids that come from out of town who take «mommy’s Mercedes-Benz to Dinkytown, and they don’t know where they are.»
«Groups of kids, groups of East African kids that are coming from surrounding communities and not just one community, kind of all over the place,» O’Hara told WCCO.
After the interview, a petition on Change.org demanded an apology from O’Hara, saying that the East African community of Minneapolis «has already been carrying the weight of unfair scrutiny for years» and that the chief’s comment would «deepen that burden.»
The Minneapolis Somali community has faced scrutiny on a national level in recent days after a bombshell report revealed a series of alleged financial schemes that ended with terrorists getting taxpayer dollars. Ryan Thorpe and Christopher F. Rufo of the Manhattan Institute found that Al-Shabaab, an al Qaeda-linked terrorist organization in Somalia, was receiving funds that could be traced back to Minnesota.
«Every scrap of economic activity, in the Twin Cities, in America, throughout Western Europe, anywhere Somalis are concentrated, every cent that is sent back to Somalia benefits Al-Shabaab in some way,» a former official who worked on the Minneapolis Joint Terrorism Task Force told Thorpe and Rufo.

Women walk along a tree-lined street in Minneapolis’ Cedar–Riverside neighborhood, home to one of the largest Somali communities in the U.S. (Michael Dorgan/Fox News Digital)
Following the report, President Donald Trump announced he was ending Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Somalis in Minnesota.
The Secretary of Homeland Security may designate a country for TPS if nationals cannot return safely or if the country «is unable to handle the return of its nationals adequately.» Countries currently under TPS are Burma, El Salvador, Ethiopia, Haiti, Lebanon, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, Ukraine, Venezuela and Yemen.
«Minnesota, under Governor Waltz, is a hub of fraudulent money laundering activity. I am, as President of the United States, hereby terminating, effective immediately the Temporary Protected Status (TPS program) for Somalis in Minnesota. Somali gangs are terrorizing the people of that great State, and BILLIONS of dollars are missing. Send them back to where they came from. It’s OVER!,» Trump wrote on Truth Social.
Rufo, one of the authors of the bombshell report, said Trump’s announcement was a «great start» but that there is still more work to do.
«Canceling TPS for Minnesota Somalis is a great start. Next: review all asylum, refugee, and citizenship applications for any hint of fraud or technical error; then initiate denaturalizations and mass deportations up to the furthest limits of the law. They have to go home,» Rufo wrote on X.

Women walk along a tree-lined street in Minneapolis’ Cedar–Riverside neighborhood, home to one of the largest Somali communities in the U.S. (Michael Dorgan/Fox News Digital)
MINNESOTA TAXPAYER DOLLARS FUNNELED TO AL-SHABAAB TERROR GROUP, REPORT ALLEGES
House Majority Whip Tom Emmer, R-Minn, who praised Trump’s decision, wrote a letter on Friday to U.S. Attorney for the District of Minnesota Daniel Rosen demanding an investigation. The letter was also signed by Emmer’s fellow Minnesota Republicans, Rep. Pete Stauber, Rep. Michelle Fischbach, and Rep. Brad Finstad.
«It is alleged that Minnesota’s Somali community, the largest in the nation, has been sending millions back to Somalia via the hawala network, an informal money trafficking network which is notorious for funds ending up in terrorist networks, and in this instance, Al-Shabaab,» the letter reads.

House Majority Whip Tom Emmer (R-MN) speaks during a press conference with members of the Republican Study Committee and other members of House Republican leadership, on the 28th day of the government shutdown in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 28, 2025. (Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images)
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The lawmakers cited the various cases involving members of the Somali community, including the Feeding our Future fraud scheme, fraud in the Housing Stabilization Services program, Child Care Assistance program and Minnesota’s Early Intensive Developmental and Behavioral Intervention program.
«It is bad enough that these individuals are defrauding our state, taking services and funds away from children and the most vulnerable, but now there is a good reason to believe that Minnesota taxpayer dollars are going straight into terrorists’ hands. These new allegations present not only a serious betrayal of taxpayer trust, but also a grave threat to our national security,» the letter states.
Fox News Digital has reached out to Walz’s office for comment.
politics,minnesota,homeland security,terrorism,crime,minneapolis st paul
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