Meet Candace Taylor, a Slidell woman living the high life in a Lamborghini while—wait for it—milking Medicaid like it’s her personal trust fund.
The state of Louisiana just slapped her with a fraud charge, and frankly, it’s about time. For those keeping score at home, that’s one luxury car, six businesses raking in over $9.5 million, and somehow, a government health plan meant for struggling families still footing her medical bills. Bravo, Candace. Bravo.
Taylor, affectionately nicknamed the “Medicaid Millionaire” by Attorney General Liz Murrill’s office (you’ve got to appreciate the poetic touch), has been under investigation since the Louisiana Health Department raised a red flag. Apparently, her paperwork said “low-income,” but her bank account screamed “private jet and bottle service.”
BREAKING: Candace Taylor, 35, was arrested for Medicaid fraud. Records revealed that Taylor had deposited more than $9.5 million across bank accounts. She made multiple six-figure withdrawals to fund property purchases, cosmetic surgery, high-end jewelry and ‘luxury services,’… pic.twitter.com/5oGbYW4U4W
— Futurist™ (@americasgreat) July 30, 2025
This wasn’t a one-time clerical error either—this went on from 2021 all the way into 2024. A cool $480,994.09 deposited, most of it from her own business dealings, and somehow, she still found it necessary to reapply for Medicaid. Twice. Under a fake name. With inconsistent details. Because if you’re going to lie to the government, why not make it confusing?
Let’s just pause to marvel at the sheer audacity. While actual low-income families sit on hold for hours trying to get a dental appointment covered, Candace was out here wiring $100,000 to an exotic car dealer, dropping another $13,000 like spare change for a Lamborghini Urus, and casually cutting six-figure cashier’s checks for property and plastic surgery. We’re not even in satire territory anymore—this is just absurd reality.
And it doesn’t stop at flashy cars and facelifts. She was making $4,000 a month on paper while conveniently forgetting to mention that she owned the business in question. Meanwhile, her actual income put her miles above the Medicaid cutoff. Because nothing says “I need government help” like spending $45,000 on Audi car payments and flaunting your lifestyle on social media.
Let’s be real: this is what happens when entitlement culture meets lax oversight. The government spends billions on programs like Medicaid with very little accountability, and then they’re shocked—shocked!—when someone takes advantage of the system. This isn’t just about one woman’s luxury shopping spree; it’s about a bureaucratic structure that’s so bloated and blind that a multi-millionaire can waltz right through the cracks, all while pretending to be in need.
And don’t forget who pays for this circus. You, me, and every taxpaying American who works hard, plays by the rules, and gets told we’re being selfish when we question runaway government spending. People like Candace Taylor are rare, but they’re not unicorns. They’re what happens when personal responsibility gets replaced with loopholes and hustle culture in the worst sense of the word.
HOLY SHT 🚨 @TheJusticeDept just charged (324) people caught defrauding Medicaid for over ($14B) dollars
Meet Candace Taylor (35) she was able to buy a Lamborghini while collecting Medicaid
The liberal media isn’t reporting on her involvement, so you folks know what to do pic.twitter.com/913oFWHErt
— @Chicago1Ray 🇺🇸 (@Chicago1Ray) July 31, 2025
You can call it fraud, deception, theft—whatever you like. But at the end of the day, it’s just another chapter in the ever-growing saga of “government program, meet grifter.” Maybe next time, before someone drives a Lamborghini off the Medicaid lot, we could tighten things up just a tad. Or maybe we’ll just hand out tax-funded Teslas next year. Who knows?