The political firestorm surrounding Gateway Community Services, the Somali-run nonprofit accused of defrauding Maine’s Medicaid system, is rapidly escalating, and the blast radius now fully engulfs the very legislators who attempted to shift national attention onto former President Donald Trump just days earlier.

What began as a whistleblower complaint about fraudulent billing has evolved into a widening probe raising serious questions about the conduct, judgment, and transparency of three Somali-American state representatives, Deqa Dhalac, Yusuf Yusuf, and Mana Abdi,  two of whom maintained direct professional ties to the organization now under scrutiny.

Rep. Deqa Dhalac, who served as Gateway’s assistant executive director during the period the alleged misconduct occurred, has become a central figure in the unfolding scandal. Gateway billed Medicaid for services that clients say never happened, a claim the whistleblower says was not an accident, but a deliberate organizational practice.

Rep. Yusuf Yusuf, who “works closely” with Gateway according to his official biography, is also tied to the organization as investigators piece together its internal structure and financial operations.

Rep. Mana Abdi, the third lawmaker who jointly condemned Trump, is now under renewed scrutiny after a resurfaced video showed her saying:

“Oh my God, this is just getting worse as a Black person.”

Political observers note that while the lawmakers loudly attacked Trump’s rhetoric, none have addressed the very real allegations now aimed at Gateway, nor their own proximity to the nonprofit’s operations.

THE FRAUD ALLEGATIONS WERE NOT SMALL — THEY WERE SYSTEMIC

According to the former billing manager, Gateway routinely billed Medicaid for caretaker hours clients never received. Clients reported no visits. Billing still went through. This wasn’t sloppy paperwork, the whistleblower describes a deliberate pattern.

These accusations strike at the heart of Maine’s public-funded safety-net programs. If the claims prove accurate, the scheme may have siphoned significant taxpayer money into an organization trusted to serve vulnerable communities.

National media has been picking up on the story as Maine media continue to ignore it.

[RELATED: National Media Picks Up Maine Wire Reporting on Fraud Allegations Surrounding Somali-Run “Non-Profit”]

To date, Dhalac, Yusuf an Abdi have not answered basic questions about what they knew of Gateway’s billing practices, when they knew it, and whether their various statements about Trump and the difficulties of assimilating in the U.S. are in fact a diversion from the issue closer to home.

Their silence is notable and increasingly difficult to ignore.

REPUBLICANS CALL FOUL: ‘THE PUBLIC DESERVES THE TRUTH’

Republican lawmakers have demanded a full accounting, calling the allegations “credible,” “serious,” and “urgent.” They argue that if MaineCare funds were exploited, the public deserves transparency, not deflection, not distraction, and certainly not carefully crafted political theatrics.

The lawmakers condemned Trump after the whistleblower stepped forward, but before the public learned of Gateway’s alleged misconduct.

Critics argue that looks less like advocacy and more like misdirection.

As pressure mounts, key questions remain unanswered:

  • How long did Gateway bill MaineCare for phantom services?
  • How much money is unaccounted for?
  • Why have elected officials with direct organizational ties offered zero transparency?
  • And how many warning signs were ignored before taxpayer dollars were allegedly misused?

The lawmakers expressing ire at Trump may hope the controversy fades. Recent events have suggested it won’t – not as long, that is, as Mainers continue to demand accountability and not as long as Gateway’s alleged actions remain unaddressed.