Brett Favre To Be Deposed In Mississippi Welfare Scandal

Former NFL quarterback Brett Favre will be deposed in connection with a sprawling welfare scandal in Mississippi later this month. Favre is accused of participating in a scheme that saw millions of dollars in money earmarked for Mississippi’s most at-risk families diverted elsewhere. In particular, Favre is suspected of working with former governor Phil Bryant to use fraudulent funds to help build a new volleyball venue at Southern Miss. The case has been unfolding over the course of the last year, thanks to the work of Anna Wolfe and other journalists at Mississippi Today.

Favre is one of 43 defendants in the case. Of the $77 million prosecutors believed was fraudulently lifted from the state’s TANF fund, Southern Miss is believed to have received $5 million while Favre has paid back $1.1 million he reportedly received for speeches he never gave. Also being deposed at the end of October is former Southern Miss president Rodney Bennett. Bennett was recently hired as the chancellor at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

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Brett Favre Deposition: What You Need To Know

Brett Favre
MADISON, WISCONSIN – JUNE 11: Former NFL player Brett Favre waves as he walks onto the 18th green during the Celebrity Foursome at the second round of the American Family Insurance Championship at University Ridge Golf Club on June 11, 2022 in Madison, Wisconsin. (Photo by Patrick McDermott/Getty Images)

A deposition serves as a baseline for a person’s account of events. The individual being deposed is asked questions under oath and their answers are recorded on audio and video. This allows the prosecution to refer back to the deposition if the individual says something different in court. Depositions aren’t free-for-alls however. That is to say, the prosecution can’t throw random questions at Favre to catch him out. While there is leeway for exploration, the deposition largely has to stick to what Favre himself knows.

There is no time limit on a deposition. However, most depositions only last one eight-hour session. The next step after deposing Favre will come at the trial. If the prosecution chooses to call on Favre to testify, he will have to be careful to ensure that his testimony on the stand matches what he said in his deposition. If his story changes, he will be “impeached” by the prosecution. This means that he would lose any credibility in the eyes of the judge and jury.

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Incriminating Texts Link Brett Favre to $8M Welfare Scandal

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According to a report from Mississippi Today, NFL legend Brett Favre was involved in a welfare scam in which  Favre received over $8 million in funds from Mississippi officials, which has been allegedly proven with texts of the famed QB pressing Miss. officials for the money.

Anne Wolfe’s exposé revealed that Favre had special access to Gov. Phil Bryant and others who controlled the welfare spending, including the state’s welfare chief and a grant-funded nonprofit director. The allegations came about after the former director of the Mississippi Department of Human Services and five others were indicted for misappropriating funds within the state’s Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program. 

Nancy New was among those indicted. She gave Favre $5 million in grant funds to build a volleyball stadium at his alma mater at the University of Southern Mississippi, which could be part of the forthcoming civil suit.

A pharmaceutical company backed by Favre called Prevacus allegedly received $2,5 million in stolen funds from the Mississippi Department of Human Services. In comparison, Farve collected over $1 million for himself, but an auditor says he still owes $228,000 in interest on the money he improperly received. 

Mississippi Today’s messages allege that Favre told Prevacus owner Jake Vanlandingham to offer Gov. Bryant shares in Prevacus, but Bryant denied ever considering taking the stock. Nancy New is accused of giving the $2.15 million to Prevacus in exchange for shares of the stock. 

Farve reportedly received a Ford F-150 Raptor from the state’s then-director of Department of Human Services, John Davis, who was arrested in 2020 on five counts of conspiracy, embezzlement, or fraud. 

MDHS Director Bob Anderson said that the department would be filing civil charges against Favre, but Farve has not been charged with any crime.

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