The hearing featured repeated assertions from witnesses and majority members that a large share of suspect Medicaid home‑health billing in Ohio involved providers and beneficiaries from Somali and Bhutanese immigrant communities. The majority’s opening statement said "many of them are Somali" and cited estimated population figures in Ohio; investigative reporter Luke Rosiak and several members reiterated that many company names and owner names in their reporting appeared to be foreign‑born.
Ranking Member Simon and Sen. Nickie Antonio responded sharply. Simon said fraud must be investigated but warned that "one bad actor...don't and should never define an entire program," and she urged that oversight not be used as a pretext to gut programs that millions of Americans rely on. Antonio described fear in immigrant communities and said oversight should be careful not to demonize people who rely on care; she also highlighted the positive work of prior oversight bodies and the human stakes for seniors and people with disabilities.
Members across the aisle pressed witnesses for evidence linking specific individuals to corporate structures, campaign contributions and criminal activity. Rep. Jordan and others asked about a state representative whose law office was located near clustered provider addresses and whether campaign donations from provider owners existed; Rosiak said he had seen examples where provider owners contributed to campaigns but did not provide definitive evidence tying all claims together in the hearing.
Committee members entered multiple news reports into the record and asked staff to follow up on campaign finance and corporate registration questions. No law‑enforcement witness testified to systemic criminal prosecution of an interstate criminal enterprise during this hearing; several speakers urged that any criminal allegations be pursued through appropriate investigative and prosecutorial channels rather than by broad public accusation.