Nick Shirley walked into senior centers in New York City’s Flushing neighborhood with a camera crew and a laptop full of publicly available government billing data. In 53 minutes of footage, he documented what appears to be one of the largest Medicare fraud operations currently running in America. One center alone was billing for nearly 8,000 patients. The employee Shirley confronted on camera couldn’t deny it. He just asked Shirley to leave.
$190 million. Gone. From a program that actual elderly Americans depend on to survive. Right under New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s nose.
Here’s how the scam works, and it’s almost insultingly simple once you see it. Adult day care centers enroll elderly patients — in this case predominantly Korean and Chinese seniors — and bill Medicare and Medicaid at rates up to $1,600 per patient per visit. The centers are supposed to provide legitimate medical and social services. What Shirley’s investigation found instead were facilities that couldn’t plausibly have served the number of patients appearing in their billing records — and employees who flatly denied having thousands of members while the government’s own public data showed exactly that.
“No one knows who the owner is. Everyone hired in the past month. Impossible to bill for 8,000 patients. 100% fraud.” Shirley’s own summary, posted publicly, is as clean and damning as a prosecutor’s opening statement.
James O’Keefe called it “legendary reporting.” Kevin Corke, the Fox News White House correspondent, said it’s “tip of the iceberg.” He’s almost certainly right. New York City’s adult day care industry has been flagged for fraud concerns for years. Federal prosecutors have brought cases against operators in this space before. And yet the billing data Shirley accessed — which is public, available to any journalist with a laptop and a few hours — apparently wasn’t interesting enough for any major media outlet to act on before a citizen journalist with a camera beat them to it.
It’s amazing what can be revealed when you go to the source.
1. No one knows who the owner is
2. Everyone hired in the past month
3. Impossible to bill for 8,000 patients100% fraud
— Nick shirley (@nickshirleyy) July 11, 2026
This is the same media establishment that claims government fraud is too complex for simple narratives. Too nuanced for easy villains. Too difficult to verify without months of careful reporting. Nick Shirley showed up, asked an employee whether they were overbilling, got the answer on camera, and posted it for 53 unedited minutes. That’s not complex. That’s not nuanced. That’s a guy billing Medicare for 8,000 patients at a center that clearly doesn’t have 8,000 patients.
Nick Shirley uncovers an adult day care in Flushing, Queens with 7,000 phantom members.
Nick: “This public document says you have 7,899 members.”
Employee: “No, we don’t have 7,000 members.”
Nick: “So you’re overbilling then? You’re getting paid $1,600 per patient — that’s how… pic.twitter.com/fuaaoGaEyJ
— jay plemons (@jayplemons) July 10, 2026
The Trump administration’s DOGE operation and the USDA’s fraud crackdown have already demonstrated what happens when someone actually looks at where the money goes: they find fraud everywhere they look. Minnesota, California, Washington state, and now New York. Different programs, different demographics, same basic scheme — exploit a government subsidy system with minimal verification, collect checks, dare anyone to look too closely.
Nick Shirley looked. The receipts are 53 minutes long and sitting on X for anyone who wants to watch them.
The question now is whether federal prosecutors are watching too.
You can watch the full 53-minute video here.


