Mississippi
Brett Favre attempts to add Mississippi Auditor’s book to defamation lawsuit
Former NFL MVP Brett Favre reveals Parkinson’s diagnosis to Congress
During a testimony about the misuse of welfare money to Congress, former NFL quarterback Brett Favre revealed he has Parkinson’s disease.
Former NFL player and Mississippi native Brett Favre has filed a motion to expand his defamation lawsuit against Mississippi State Auditor Shad White.
On Sept. 27, Favre’s legal team submitted a new complaint stating that White’s new book “Mississippi Swindle: Brett Favre and the Welfare Scandal that Shocked America,” through its title and within its pages, defamed Favre.
“The book itself falsely states, among other things, that Favre had been ‘taking money he knew should go to people in “shelters,”‘ and had been ‘trying to hide that fact from the media and the public,’ and also accuses Favre of committing the felony of money laundering,” Favre’s attorneys wrote in the Sept. 27 filing.
White’s book was published in early August, and Favre is now the third person featured within who has publicly called into question their portrayal by White. State Attorney General Lynn Fitch and Mississippi GOP Chairman Mike Hurst told reporters in August they considered the book to stretch truths or mischaracterize them entirely.
Favre initially filed the defamation suit against White in 2023 for social media posts calling his character into question and also about a civil case surrounding the Mississippi welfare scandal, in which individuals and companies collectively took millions of dollars from the state’s Temporary Assistance for Needy Families funds through the Mississippi Department of Human Services.
Favre’s testimony in D.C. ‘I didn’t know what TANF was’: Brett Favre testifies before Congress about MS welfare scandal
More on related lawsuits with Favre What did Shannon Sharpe do? Brett Favre seeks to reinstate defamation lawsuit
Those TANF funds were supposed to be funneled to the state’s poorest and most needy residents, but they weren’t, and Favre has repaid more than $1 million in TANF dollars he received for speaking engagements. White is also suing Favre to pay back about $729,000 in interest he allegedly owes on those funds.
Fitch earlier this year dropped White as a client in the lawsuit with Favre, and White told reporters it was over her office’s portrayal in his book. She is also suing to block White from trying to reclaim the interest funds, saying White does not possess the authority to sue Favre.
Favre has not been criminally charged, but In 2023, the state also named Favre as one of 38 defendants in a civil case filed by the Mississippi Department of Human Service aiming to reclaim about $77 million in misspent TANF funds, $5 million of which paid for a new volleyball stadium at the University of Southern Mississippi.
Grant McLaughlin covers state government for the Clarion Ledger. He can be reached at gmclaughlin@gannett.com or 972-571-2335.
Mississippi
McRae: Mississippi Firsts
The Neshoba County Fair is a Mississippi policymaker’s rite of passage. Every year, leaders from across our state gather to talk about what we’ve accomplished and what still lies ahead. This year was no different. Of course, what’s said at the Neshoba County Fair rarely stays at the Neshoba County Fair, so I thought it appropriate to share my message here with you today.
If I had to sum up this year’s speech in just two words, it would be this: Mississippi Firsts. For example, we became the first state in the nation to launch proactive Money Match programs focused on disaster areas. When families are dealing with the aftermath of devastating storms, the last thing they should have to worry about is tracking down missing money. Instead, we take the initiative, find the rightful owners, and return millions of dollars to Mississippians when they need it most.
We were also the first in the nation to require citizenship verification before returning unclaimed money, ensuring Mississippians come first. That innovation has become a national model, earning recognition in congressional hearings and a seat at the table with the Department of Justice and Vice President Vance’s Anti-Fraud Task Force.
Those innovations have produced real results. Alongside first-in-state-history modernizations, they helped us return nearly $200 million in unclaimed money to our citizens – the first Treasury in Mississippi history to reach such a milestone.
We also broke new ground by becoming the first Mississippi Treasurer to expand the Mississippi Affordable College Savings (MACS) program so families can use their savings for apprenticeships, workforce certifications, and career and technical education. By putting students’ needs first, our program has grown into one of the nation’s Top 6 college savings plans.
Mississippi
‘Mississippi firsts’ from Neshoba County Fair
The Neshoba County Fair is a Mississippi policymaker’s rite of passage. Every year, leaders from across our state gather to talk about what we’ve accomplished and what still lies ahead. This year was no different. Of course, what’s said at the Neshoba County Fair rarely stays at the Neshoba County Fair, so I thought it appropriate to share my message here with you today.
If I had to sum up this year’s speech in just two words, it would be this: Mississippi Firsts. For example, we became the first state in the nation to launch proactive Money Match programs focused on disaster areas. When families are dealing with the aftermath of devastating storms, the last thing they should have to worry about is tracking down missing money. Instead, we take the initiative, find the rightful owners, and return millions of dollars to Mississippians when they need it most.
We were also the first in the nation to require citizenship verification before returning unclaimed money, ensuring Mississippians come first. That innovation has become a national model, earning recognition in congressional hearings and a seat at the table with the Department of Justice and Vice President Vance’s Anti-Fraud Task Force.
Those innovations have produced real results. Alongside first-in-state-history modernizations, they helped us return nearly $200 million in unclaimed money to our citizens – the first Treasury in Mississippi history to reach such a milestone.
We also broke new ground by becoming the first Mississippi Treasurer to expand the Mississippi Affordable College Savings (MACS) program so families can use their savings for apprenticeships, workforce certifications, and career and technical education. By putting students’ needs first, our program has grown into one of the nation’s Top 6 college savings plans.
Mississippi
10-year-old seriously injured in Mississippi County UTV crash
MISSISSIPPI COUNTY, Mo. (KFVS) – A 10-year-old girl is seriously injured following a UTV crash on Friday, June 26.
According to the Missouri State Highway Patrol’s crash report, a 10-year-old girl from Sikeston was driving a UTV southbound on Levee Road, 11 miles east of East Prairie.
MSHP said the crash occurred around 11 a.m. as the vehicle travelled off the left side of the roadway, returned to the road and then overturned.
The girl was taken by ambulance to a hospital in Cape Girardeau for serious injuries.
Copyright 2026 KFVS. All rights reserved.
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