Up First from NPR - Daycare Fraud Claims Fallout, Epstein Files Mess, Swiss Nightclub Fire
Episode Date: January 2, 2026Somali-run day care centers in Minnesota report threats and vandalism after a viral right-wing video accusing them of fraud prompts federal action with nationwide consequences.The Justice Department m...isses its deadline to release the Epstein files, fueling confusion and conspiracy theories as heavily redacted and unreliable documents trickle out.And Switzerland begins days of mourning after a deadly New Year’s Eve fire rips through a crowded nightclub at a ski resort, killing dozens and injuring many more.Want more analysis of the most important news of the day, plus a little fun? Subscribe to the Up First newsletter.Today’s episode of Up First was edited by Luis Clemens, Dana Farrington, Miguel Macias, Mohamad ElBardicy, and Alice Woelfle.It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Kaity Kline and Christopher Thomas.We get engineering support from Stacey Abbott. And our technical director is David Greenburg.. Our Executive Producer is Jay Shaylor.(0:00) Introduction(01:54) Daycare Fraud Claims Fallout(05:31) Epstein Files Mess (09:27) Swiss Nightclub FireLearn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Somali-American daycare centers in Minnesota say they're being threatened.
Our families and teachers work hard enough without feeling scared to come to work.
Federal officials have not answered questions about what comes next.
I'ma Martinez. That is Michelle Martin, and this is up first from NPR News.
The Justice Department missed its deadline to release the Epstein files.
The documents that are already out are heavily redacted, disorganized, and sometimes not.
is leading. So is this transparency or
a mess that's fueling even more
conspiracy theories? And in Switzerland
at least 40 people were killed when a
fire tore through a packed nightclub at a
ski resort. Many others were injured
at a New Year's party. Investigators
are searching for what rent wrong. Stay with
us. We'll give you news you need to start your day.
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Somali Americans in Minnesota who operate child care centers say they've received violent threats and been targeted by vandalism.
Yeah, this follows a posting of a video last week by a right-wing YouTube influencer who claims to have found evidence of fraud at Somali-American-run child care centers.
The Trump administration responded to the...
that video by cutting federal funding for child care centers, not just in Minnesota, but also around
the U.S. And Paris, Brian Mann, is reporting on this, and he's with us now. Good morning, Brian.
Good morning, Michelle. So Somali American daycare operators in Minneapolis say they're facing
harassment and vandalism. What more can you tell us about this? Yeah, Nasrullah Muhammad spoke at a
press conference at the Nukomas Daycare Center where he works in Minneapolis. And he said there's
been a break-in, there's been vandalism, and some people in the community are scared.
We've been receiving hateful messages through our voice notes threatening us, including one that happened yesterday morning after the break-in.
This is frightening and exhausting.
And Muhammad says sensitive documents have been stolen.
After that press conference on Wednesday, President Trump posted on social media calling Muhammad's account of the break-in a total fraud.
As this situation unfolded, Trump has again attacked Somali Americans in Minnesota, calling them, and I'm quoting here, Michelle, low-lifes.
How did this escalate so fast?
Yeah, the day after Christmas, Nick Shirley, a 23-year-old MAGA-connected social media influencer, posted a video.
He claims it shows Somali-American-run daycare centers are cheating the federal government out of millions of tax dollars.
The video doesn't offer clear proof, and it appears these social media claims have not yet been independently investigated or verified,
but the video went viral.
A lot of conservative media outlets jumped on the story, and so did Trump on his social media feed.
So now the Trump administration is halting funding for child care programs around the country.
Health and Human Services Deputy Secretary Jim O'Neill spoke in a video posted online.
He said child care funds will be released only when states prove they're being spent legitimately.
Starting today, we require a justification, receipt, or photo evidence before we make a payment.
Now, this disruption is going to affect hundreds of thousands of children, especially in low-income families in all 50 states.
O'Neill says he took this action based on what he describes as entreeves as.
rapid journalists making shocking and credible allegations. NPR asked the Department of Health and Human
Services Press Office if they have concrete evidence of serious or widespread wrongdoing, but we've
had no response. So what happens now to these child care centers, those in Minnesota and around
the country? You know, this is interesting. Speaking at that press conference this week,
Mary Solheim, a child care provider in Maplewood, Minnesota, said this funding freeze could be
devastating for kids and their working parents around the country. Child care is incredibly
expensive, of course, and these subsidies are make or break for many families.
Solheim also voiced dismayed that one social media influencer could disrupt the
child care system so dramatically.
Now, a random YouTube personality can cause this much fear. Our children, our families,
and teachers, and providers work hard enough without feeling scared to come to work every single
day. Now, again, Michelle, NPR has asked federal officials for clarification about what
evidence they have of any wrongdoing. We've also asked what process states will have to go through
now to scrutinize thousands of child care providers around the country in order to get these
federal dollars flowing again. We just don't yet have answers to any of those questions.
That is. NPRS Brian Mann. Brian, thank you. Thank you.
to release all of the Epstein files in its possession.
Now, the DOJ has not fully met a deadline set by a law signed by President Trump.
The relatively few documents that have been made public also have extensive redactions.
It isn't clear that those redactions are justified or in line with what the law intended.
The government also says some of what is released should not be trusted.
And all of this has fanned the flame of conspiracy theories old and new about the life and death of Jeffrey Epstein.
We're joined now by NPR's Stephen Fowler.
December 19th, Stephen, that was the day that hundreds of thousands of Epstein files were supposed to be released.
My desk calendar says it's January 2nd, small fraction of that release, so what's the deal?
Well, the Justice Department says it's working on it, and there could be well over a million more pages to come.
They say they're taking time to review and redact information to protect victims required by the law.
What we do have a is about 40,000 pages, most of them redacted in ways that make them unreadable.
and there's very little new information.
Here's one example.
I found a file that blacked out part of the zip code of the very public U.S. Attorney's Office in New York City,
plus hundreds of pages completely blanked out with no explanation.
And at some point, the DOJ is supposed to explain to Congress what's under those black boxes
and why they haven't shared it.
Speaking of sharing, these new files are posted publicly but aren't organized in any sort of chronological or contextual order
in a way that's led to numerous controversies and conspiracies swirling about in the absence of full files and full transparency into what we're looking at.
Such as what?
Well, there are some documents made public that are fake but are included because under the definition of the law, they are files related to the investigation that are supposed to be released.
There are unverified fantastical claims about Donald Trump, Epstein, and others included in FBI tip forms.
a fake video purporting to show Epstein's death by suicide in his federal prison cell
and a forged letter that appeared to be written by Epstein for convicted sex offender Larry Nassar
that claimed Trump shared a, quote, love of young, newbile girls.
In fact, when the Justice Department posted about the Nassar letter being a forgery,
they also said that, quote, just because the document is released by the Department of Justice
does not make the allegations or claims within the document factual.
All right, so just so we're clear, the federal government is saying that the Epstein files that they
have released very little of are not to be trusted. Well, pretty much. This outcome of distrust
across the board was in some ways inevitable, though. During the 2024 election, President Trump
promised to release the Epstein files. It was part of a campaign message arguing the government
was run by powerful people hiding the truth from Americans. At the start of 2026, many people
agree and believe that President Trump is now one of the powerful few keeping the public in the dark.
The White House disagrees, and I'll note, conspiracies are not limited to Trump's supporters.
I've seen recent viral social media posts that use these unverified salacious allegations
and out-of-context court records to claim without evidence that Trump is accused of criminal wrongdoing
and that the government is altering records to cover it all up.
All right.
So what are you watching for in the coming weeks related to this?
Three things.
One, what is Congress going to do about the Department of Justice failing to meet the deadline and over-redacting documents,
especially since the law doesn't include punishment or enforcement mechanisms.
Two, what actually comes from these million plus documents that do eventually get published.
And three, what will the political fallout continue to be,
especially as President Trump continues to call this a hoax,
attacking Democrats and Republicans who disagree with them?
That's NPR's Stephen Fowler in Atlanta. Stephen, thanks.
Thank you.
Switzerland declared five days of morning for the victims of a New Year's Eve fire that tore through a bar at a luxury ski resort in the Swiss Alps.
Authorities say at least 40 people have died and more than 100 people are injured, many of them seriously.
NPR's Ruth Sherlock is a Rome correspondent and she's with us now to tell us more about this. Good morning, Ruth.
Good morning.
So what can you tell us about the latest information?
An investigation is underway in the resort town of Kranz Montana in the Swiss Alps.
Officials do say this was not.
a deliberate attack. Over night, mourners gathered in the freezing temperatures, holding vigils
and laying candles and flowers outside the bar, and this bar, La Constellation, was a favoured
hangout for young people, including sometimes teenagers as young as 15. This fire happens
during a crowded New Year's Eve celebration. At about 1.30am, smoke was reported coming out onto the
street. Police say emergency services got there in minutes, but it was already too late. The regional
intensive care ward is full, and some of those with the most severe burns have been flown
to Italy for specialist treatment. Switzerland's president, Guy Parmelan, has called the incident
one of the worst tragedies that Switzerland has experienced, and flags will be lowered for five days.
We've been hearing from people who were in or near the bar that night. What are they saying?
Well, I mean, just awful eyewitness accounts. This was a basement nightclub, and 16-year-old
Axel Clavier described trying to get out from there to the BBC.
He says, we thought we were going to suffocate because of the smoke.
We didn't know where to exit.
There was a huge crowd and I was alone.
I told myself I wasn't going to make it.
He eventually did manage to get up the one narrow staircase and smash a window to escape.
Witnesses outside the bar described seeing people coming out,
some of them with their clothes on fire.
And this is high season for skiing.
there's about 3 million visitors to this town each year, according to official statistics.
It's believed that there are people from several countries among the dead.
Italy says six citizens are missing after the fire and 13 are wounded.
So you were telling us earlier that the officials don't believe that this was deliberately said.
So what do we know about the cause of the fire?
Well, officials have not yet confirmed a cause for the fire.
Two women who escaped the club told French media that they saw a barman,
carrying a barmaid on his shoulders and that she was holding a champagne bottle
with lit sparklers and that that had set fire to the wooden ceiling.
Videos shared on social media appear to show flames spreading above the bar.
And there's a YouTube video from 2024 posted by a channel with the bar's name
that shows women wearing motorcycle helmets carrying bottles of alcohol topped with sparklers
as they walk through the establishment.
Another question is whether the bar was full beyond its capacity of 300 people that night.
So there is clearly lots here to look at in this investigation.
For now, though, officials say their priority is to identify the bodies of the victims,
and they say that that itself could still take many weeks.
That is. NPR's Ruth Sherlock.
Ruth, thank you.
Thank you so much.
And that's up first for Friday, January 2nd.
I'm Michelle Martin.
Enemy Martinez, fear of civil unrest or domestic political violence is driving a new group of people to gun ranges.
What I'm talking about is protecting my self.
from a situation where there may be some kind of chaotic civil unrest and the streets become
something we don't recognize. Some of the political left feel targeted by the administration's
policies and decided to arm themselves to protect their families and communities. This weekend on
the Sunday story, NPR's Frank Langford joins us to explain what's driving more liberals to exercise
their right to bear arms. Listen to the Sunday story right here on NPR's A First podcast.
Today's episode of Up First was edited by Louise Clemens, Dana Farrington, Miguel Macias, Mohamed El Bardisi, and Alice Wolfley.
It was produced by Zied Butch, Nia Dumas, and Christopher Thomas.
We get engineering support from Nisha Hines, and our technical director is Carly Strange.
Our executive producer is Jay Shaler.
We hope you'll join us again on Monday.
