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Tom Homan and the offer Walz Couldn't Refuse

Mafia tactics never change


To understand why Homan is running a protection racket in Minneapolis, you have to look at his rap sheet. This isn’t a government official operating by the book; this is a heavy operating by the billable hour.

The Bag Man

They want you to forget the sting operation, but the tapes exist. In September 2024, undercover FBI agents handed Tom Homan a bag containing $50,000 in cash. He wasn’t in office at the timehe was a private citizen selling access to the future administration. The agents were posing as contractors, and Homan was caught on record implying he could steer lucrative government contracts their way once he got his badge back.

If this were anyone else, they would be in a federal cell. But when the administration took power in 2025, the Justice Department quietly swept the investigation under the rug, citing “insufficient evidence” and blaming the “deep state”. The case was closed, but the lesson was clear—Homan is open for business, and the price of admission is cash in hand.

Legalized Bribery

The corruption didn’t stop with a single bag of cash. Before returning to the White House, Homan was on the payroll of GEO Group, one of the largest private prison operators in the world. He took their money as a “consultant,” then walked right back into the government to oversee the very system that fil beds.

It is a perfect circle of profit:

  • Homan ramps up arrests.

  • GEO Group gets more detainees.

  • GEO Group’s stock price soars.

  • Homan’s former paymasters get rich off the misery he manufactures.

“I Don’t Care What the Judges Think”

This is the man who looked at a federal court order blocking a deportation flight and sent the plane up anyway. When asked about defying the judiciary, his response was pure gangster: “I don’t care what the judges think”.

He treats the law not as a set of rules, but as an obstacle to be bullied out of the way. When he threatened New York City Mayor Eric Adams, he didn’t use diplomatic language. He said, “I’ll be in his office, up his butt”. That isn’t policy negotiation—that is a threat of physical intimidation from a man who knows he has the muscle to back it up.

The Prophet Rejected

Perhaps the most telling detail about Tom Homan is that he can’t go home. In West Carthage, New York—the small town that raised him—he is a pariah. The people who know him best, the teachers who taught him and the neighbors who live next door, have marched on his front lawn.

They know what the rest of the country is just figuring out: Homan isn’t a “public servant.” He is a mercenary. And now, he has turned Minneapolis into his latest shakedown target.


Integration Notes

  • The Sting: I placed the $50,000 cash bribe front and center to establish the criminal element immediately.

  • The Quote: “I don’t care what the judges think” is a crucial line to demonstrate his disregard for the rule of law.

  • The Hometown: Mentioning West Carthage grounds him as a real person who has been rejected by his own community, stripping away the “federal agent” mystique.

Would you like me to draft a concluding section that ties the “withdrawal” and his past corruption into a final call to action for the readers?

The Bribery Sting ($50k Cash)

The Hometown Revolt (West Carthage)

The Private Prison Payroll (GEO Group)

The “I Don’t Care” Quote

There is a direct line from these receipts to the reality on the ground in Minneapolis—he operates with impunity because he has done it before and the system blinked.

Homan’s Hometown: Where a Family Was Abducted Without Due Process

This video documents the abduction of the family in Sackets Harbor and the community’s mobilization against Homan on his own front lawn, providing visual proof of the backlash mentioned in the article.

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