Posts Tagged ‘Yuan Yao’

Followup: Flashy Car Daycare Commie Fraudster Indicted

Thursday, May 14th, 2026

Remember Yuan Yao, the flashy car-driving daycare owner accused of fraud and ties to the CCP? He’s been indicted.

Attorney General Ken Paxton has filed suit against a North Texas businessman and his company, alleging they operated fake childcare businesses in order to fraudulently sponsor foreign workers through the H-1B visa program.

The lawsuit, filed in Collin County, names Yuan Yao and Golden Qi Holdings, LLC as defendants. The state alleges Yao, identified in the petition as “a citizen of the People’s Republic of China,” operated websites advertising childcare services that “do not exist.”

Why the hell are foreign nationals even eligible for such subsidies? Shouldn’t they be limited to American citizens?

Convict him, seize all his money and property and deport him.

According to the lawsuit, examples of the alleged sham businesses include Allen Infant Care Center and DFW ABA Center, both tied to an address at 600 S. Jupiter Road in Allen.

The state alleges the businesses falsely claimed to provide legitimate childcare services “in part to fraudulently sponsor H-1B visas for employees.”

There needs to be a crackdown at the national level on par with what Paxton is doing in Texas.

The filing heavily references recent reporting by Blaze TV and Texas Scorecard personality Sara Gonzales, who visited the Allen address and “did not find any child-care at all.” Instead, according to the petition, she found “an empty building and a playground overgrown with vegetation.”

The lawsuit also cites Gonzales’ interview with an individual familiar with the property who allegedly claimed Yao “sells visas” and sponsors workers who are then paid “next to nothing.”

According to the petition, the defendants filed visa petitions and labor condition applications for positions including software developers, business intelligence analysts, financial analysts, web developers, and market research analysts.

The state alleges those filings were tied to childcare facilities “which were not in operation.”

Texas also alleges neither Allen Infant Care Center nor DFW ABA Center is licensed to operate as a childcare facility.

How do you even obtain government subsidies to run a child care if you’re not licensed to run a child care? Is that not a step in the process? Does no one check?

It’s like the entire system was designed from the ground up to enable fraud.

The attorney general’s office is seeking temporary and permanent injunctions blocking the defendants from advertising or operating childcare facilities in Texas without licenses, along with civil penalties under the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act and Human Resources Code.

“Let this be a warning to anyone considering trying to scam the H-1B visa program,” Paxton said. “I will continue fighting to ensure that the H-1B program serves the interests of Americans, not Chinese nationals, and that those who abuse the program are held accountable to the fullest extent of the law.”

Yao had enough red flags that it shouldn’t have taken an investigative reporter interviewing him to put him on the government’s radar. Is it too much to ask that various federal agencies to least start with combing their database for non-citizens collecting big subsidy checks?


*Feel free to sprinkle the word “allegedly” into that headline if you’re so inclined…

Daycare Fraud, Visa Fraud, Flashy Cars, And Communism

Sunday, May 3rd, 2026

Here’s a story that has a little bit of everything: Welfare state fraud, visa abuse, and ties to communist China.

A North Texas daycare operator is facing scrutiny after a video surfaced showing a journalist confronting the business owner over dozens of H-1B visa filings tied to his companies, including for positions that appear unrelated to child care operations.

In the video, BlazeTV and Texas Scorecard personality Sara Gonzales visits Allen Infant Care Center, formerly known as Golden Acorn Academy, which she says is connected to Golden Qi Holdings LLC and DFW ABA Center, an autism behavioral therapy provider. According to Gonzales, the entities have collectively sponsored at least 37 H-1B visa workers and filed more than 50 labor condition applications with the federal government.

Those filings include positions such as market research analysts and supply chain analysts—jobs atypical of a daycare.

When confronted, the owner Yuan Yao declined to answer detailed questions and struggled to respond in English. When approached on camera, he told Gonzales, “I only can tell you, everything is legal,” while repeatedly directing her to contact his attorney.

Gonzales also pressed for access to required H-1B records which the Department of Labor requires to be made available to the public. Yao did not provide the documents during the interaction and again referred her to legal counsel.

The video further includes allegations from an individual whistleblower identified as familiar with the business, who claimed, “He sells visas,” alleging that foreign nationals paid as much as $20,000 for sponsorship.

The individual also alleged that workers were underpaid after arriving, saying the owner “gets them to work for him for next to nothing.”

Gonzales also raised questions about whether the facilities tied to the businesses were actively operating, noting during her visit that “this day care just closed” and appeared to be undergoing changes.

According to Gonzales, the businesses have also received government funds in the past, including Paycheck Protection Program loans totaling more than $100,000 that were later forgiven.

So far, so scummy, just another case of welfare state fraud being perpetrated by foreigners like the numerous Minnesota Somali day care cases. But take a look at the video:

In it the whistleblower says “He’s getting his money from somewhere and I think he’s getting it from his dad. His dad’s high up in the [communist Chinese] government.”

But what really attracts my attention is his car. “Isn’t it interesting that he’s got this amazing nice car? It’s so crazy. How is he earning his money when he has a crap hole like this and a crap hole like that?”

With scissor doors and a rear-engine profile, you might be forgiven for thinking this reflective rose-painted (wrapped?) monstrosity is a million-dollar hypercar like a Lamborghini. What it actually appears to be is a BMW i8 Roadster. With a starting price around $135,000 and hybrid powertrain putting out some 369 horsepower, the BMW i8 Roadster was a pricey sports car, but still falls well short of hypercar territory. (A Lamborghini Aventador, sold at the same time as the i8, came in at 690-740 horsepower, and sold for over half a million dollars.)

You know, if I were a communist-connected foreign national committing welfare and H1-B visa fraud, I would think you would want to keep a low-profile and drive something like a Honda Accord, a Toyota Camry or a Ford F-150. What you don’t want to do is drive a reflective rose-colored European sports car that yells “Look at me.”

I suspect that state and national law enforcement are now going to look very closely indeed at Mr. Yao…