Tuesday, July 7, 2026

The Birthday Heist: How Trump's Freedom 250 Took the Money and Lost the Crowd

 https://substack.com/app-link/post?publication_id=4115828&post_id=205944223&utm_source=post-email-title&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=rovhk&token=eyJ1c2VyX2lkIjo0NjUxMDE4NCwicG9zdF9pZCI6MjA1OTQ0MjIzLCJpYXQiOjE3ODM0NTYzMTIsImV4cCI6MTc4NjA0ODMxMiwiaXNzIjoicHViLTQxMTU4MjgiLCJzdWIiOiJwb3N0LXJlYWN0aW9uIn0.itRCdYSHyMKrXd-2reLL8kdyUe2dDwa2s4MuWP1VrNI

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They built a shell company inside a beloved charity, sold access to the President, and rerouted other people's donations. Confusion was the business model and clarity is the antidote.

A Ferris Wheel and a Fraud Allegation

They promised you a birthday party. They built a shell company with a Ferris wheel.

You need to understand what happened on the National Mall over the past two weeks, because a congressional report released on July 2 that I just got my hands on lays out allegations against the Trump White House and its handpicked fundraisers so serious a sitting member of Congress, a lawyer, told reporters he sees evidence of every element of fraud. I spent four decades in courtrooms. When someone with subpoena power starts using the word fraud in front of cameras, you pay attention. So today I fact checked the allegations, separated what we know from what we suspect, and put together the record for you in plain English.¹

Read this. Then decide for yourself whether America’s 250th birthday got celebrated or stolen.

The Party Congress Planned

Start with the version of this story your government promised you. Back in 2016, Congress created a bipartisan body, the United States Semiquincentennial Commission, operating under the name America250, and gave one job to the organization: plan the celebration of our nation’s 250th anniversary. This was supposed to be a decade in the making. Republicans and Democrats sat on the commission together. In August 2024, the group announced former Presidents Bush and Obama, along with the former first ladies, as honorary national co chairs. Congress wrote transparency and accountability requirements directly into the commission’s framework so the public would know where every dollar came from and where every dollar went.

A birthday for all of us, planned in the open, paid for in the open. Hold onto this picture, because everything you’re about to read is a story about what replaced this picture.

The Substitute Nobody Voted For

In late 2025, a new entity appeared: Freedom 250 LLC. Nobody in Congress created this organization. The White House stood up the LLC inside the National Park Foundation, the longtime charitable partner of the National Park Service, a beloved nonprofit with almost six decades of goodwill and deep corporate donor relationships. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum told CNN the operation is run out of the White House. He also testified before Congress in May, saying he was not aware of who made the final decision to create the group. Sit with those two statements together. The man whose department writes the checks says the group answers to the White House and says he does not know who gave the order to build the thing.

Look at who runs Freedom 250 and who raises its money. The National Park Foundation board now includes Chris LaCivita, co manager of Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign. The chief executive of Freedom 250 is Keith Krach, a wealthy Trump supporter from his first administration. The lead fundraiser is Meredith O’Rourke, the national finance director of Trump’s 2024 campaign, the same fundraiser working the donor circuit for the White House ballroom project and other Trump pet projects.

Here is the structural genius of the whole setup, and I use the word genius the way a prosecutor does. An LLC parked inside a 501(c)(3) nonprofit gets to raise unlimited corporate money, keep donors anonymous on request, offer tax deductions, and dodge the competitive bidding, accounting, and transparency rules Congress attached to the actual commission. House investigators called the arrangement a financial black box. To this day, there has been no public disclosure of how much corporate money Freedom 250 has raised. The foundation’s own CEO told Congress in February the donor names will appear in tax filings next year, and every donor who requests anonymity will be excluded from those disclosures.

What They Represented to You

The public pitch was simple. Freedom 250 presented itself as a patriotic, nonpartisan effort to give America a spectacular 250th birthday. Officials described the group as an addition to the official celebrations, working alongside the congressionally chartered commission. Performers were recruited for a National Mall concert series on the understanding they were joining a nonpartisan national celebration. Everyday Americans were invited to free events honoring the country’s founding.

What the Record Shows Instead

Now compare the pitch to the documented facts, because this is where representation ends and misrepresentation begins.

Multiple musical acts, including The Commodores, Martina McBride, and Young MC, withdrew from the Mall concert series after learning the event was far more politically charged and far more tied to Trump than organizers let on when they signed up. After the withdrawals, the opening night was rebranded as a Trump rally, complete with a thirty minute speech in which the President recounted his own fictitious accomplishments and called democrats communists at what was billed as the nation’s birthday kickoff.

Americans who wanted free tickets to the June 24 opening were routed through a Trump branded registration site, 45.donaldjtrump.com, connected to WinRed, the Republican Party’s official fundraising platform. The sign up flow asked for email addresses and cell phone numbers and included consent language for fundraising messages. A Freedom 250 spokesperson blamed a vendor and said the language was corrected. A former senior Interior Department lawyer called the data collection alarming and potentially illegal depending on how the information gets used, and a leading watchdog group called the forced sharing of personal data deeply concerning, because names, emails, and cell numbers are the most valuable currency in modern political fundraising. A department wide NASA email even encouraged federal employees to shop the Freedom 250 store, and the link resolved to the Trump campaign website.

The public noticed. A national poll released around the holiday found a majority of Americans believe the 250th celebrations have grown too political. Three quarters of Democrats said so. Half of Republicans said so too. Advertised as nonpartisan, registered through a campaign portal, and rejected as partisan by half the President’s own party. You do not need a law degree to see the gap.

The Fraud Allegations

On July 2, Democratic staff on the House Natural Resources Committee released a 55 page interim report, and the central allegation should stop you cold. According to sources interviewed by committee investigators, donors who intended to give to America250, the real, congressionally chartered commission, were handed wire instructions containing Freedom 250’s banking information, including the routing number and the account number. Money solicited in the name of the nation’s nonpartisan birthday commission allegedly flowed into the President’s substitute entity without the donor’s knowledge.

The report goes further. Prospective donors and sponsors who wanted to give to America250 were allegedly told by the Trump administration they did not have a green light to do so. Stop and absorb this one. The federal government allegedly telling private companies which charity they were permitted to support. The report also describes an aggressive outreach campaign in which Freedom 250 cold called America250’s existing corporate sponsors and pressed them for millions, generating so much brand confusion some corporate executives reportedly did not know the two organizations apart. The committee Democrats say this conduct, if proven, would potentially violate several laws, including federal wire fraud, federal charitable solicitation fraud, and the charitable solicitation laws of the District of Columbia, where Freedom 250 operates.

Rep. Jared Huffman, the committee’s ranking Democrat and a lawyer, told the press he knows better than to pronounce a crime from the House floor, and then said the evidence shows every element of fraud. On national television he confirmed the committee has whistleblowers and an open investigation, and he pledged a far deeper probe with real subpoena power if Democrats retake the House in the midterms.

As a trial lawyer, let me translate. Federal wire fraud requires a scheme to defraud, a material misrepresentation or deceptive conduct, intent, and the use of interstate wires to carry out the scheme. Handing a donor the wrong routing number so a check meant for one charity lands in another entity’s account, if the evidence proves up, hits every one of those elements. This is the reason a careful lawyer in Congress chose those precise words. He was drawing you a map.


The Price List

Follow what the money bought. Reporting in February revealed a tiered donor menu for Freedom 250. Packages ran from 500,000 dollars up past 10 million. Give a million dollars and you were offered a private thank you reception hosted by the President and a historic photo opportunity. Give 2.5 million and you were offered a speaking role at the July 4 celebration in Washington. The sponsors named on Freedom 250’s own website include defense contractors and firms with billions in federal contracts and live regulatory business before this administration, names like Palantir, Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and UnitedHealth Group. At least fourteen companies gave to both organizations, which tells you corporate America understood exactly which entity offered proximity to power.

Now add the part almost nobody is talking about. According to the committee report, the Freedom 250 CEO traveled to Davos in January to personally solicit foreign government officials and business leaders, and Trump appointed ambassadors held fundraising events overseas seeking foreign donations. The group denies accepting foreign money and has offered no accounting of the solicitations themselves. Foreign cash flowing toward an entity controlled by presidential allies, with anonymity on request, raises constitutional questions under the Emoluments Clauses this country has litigated before, and you deserve straight answers about every foreign dollar solicited in your name.

Follow the Taxpayer Money

Congress allocated 150 million dollars for the 250th anniversary in last year’s tax and spending bill, money routed through the Interior Department. According to the committee report, White House officials agreed America250 would receive 100 million of those funds. In November, the number was cut to 50 million. As of the report’s release, America250 had received 25 million and was struggling to execute a decade of planning. Meanwhile federal grant records show at least 68 million dollars moved from Interior to the National Park Foundation, the parent of Freedom 250, and the watchdog group Public Citizen counted at least 79 million in federal funds reaching Freedom 250, including 10 million for Freedom Trucks, mobile exhibits critics say promote administration priorities and gloss over the hardest chapters of American history. The committee’s ranking member puts the total public money siphoned toward the Trump aligned operation north of 100 million dollars. The National Park Foundation itself acknowledged in a letter to Congress the majority of Freedom 250’s operating funds are your tax dollars.

Your money. Redirected from the transparent commission Congress built to an anonymous donor vehicle staffed by campaign operatives. On paper, in grant records, in black and white.

The Empty Lawn and the Numbers Game

Every scheme built on selling an audience needs an audience, and for most of two weeks the audience stayed home. The Great American State Fair opened with a June 24 kickoff rally and the images went viral for the wrong reason: acres of empty grass. Reporting from inside the White House says the President grew livid after seeing an aerial photo showing vast unpopulated fields behind the stage, and officials deleted their own posts of the image. Trump claimed 45,000 people packed the kickoff. Independent estimates put the number nowhere close. Triple digit heat forced a temporary closure. A power outage hit opening day. The scale model of the President’s proposed triumphal arch began buckling. At least eight states declined to participate, with exhibit costs running from 100,000 dollars to a million, leaving booths thin or empty. By the fair’s second week, organizers claimed more than 200,000 total visitors, a figure no one has independently verified.

The holiday weekend brought bigger crowds, and this deserves honest treatment. Entrance lines stretched for blocks in the final days, and nearby museum shops reported near record sales. Then July 4 itself turned into an ordeal. Washington hit a preliminary 102 degrees, the hottest Fourth of July in the city’s recorded history, and local authorities reported a dozen people taken to hospitals from the heat by early evening. Severe thunderstorms forced a full evacuation of the Mall. The President took the stage around 11 p.m. for a speech of under 40 minutes in which he promoted his election overhaul bill and warned about communists, followed by a fireworks display billed as the largest in history.

Then came the numbers game, and this is where you should slow down and pay attention. From the stage, Trump said 375,000 people had been present before the evacuation and 150,000 returned. On social media the next day, the 375,000 became 422,000. No independent confirmation exists for any of these figures, and the National Park Service stopped issuing official crowd estimates years ago, which means every attendance claim rests entirely on the President’s word. A man who spent a week raging over photographs of empty grass produced a crowd count bigger than the nation’s bicentennial, and asked you to take his word for the math.

Here is what this means for the companies who wrote seven and eight figure checks. They were sold the biggest patriotic audience in American history. For the first week, their logos hung over a heat advisory and empty lawn. The closing weekend delivered real crowds and zero verified numbers. And the donors who believed they were funding the bipartisan commission, then learned from a congressional report where their wires might have landed, are no longer sponsors in any meaningful sense. They are potential fraud victims, and every one of them should be on the phone with counsel this week.

What Remains Unclear, Because Honesty Matters

You deserve the full picture, so here is what has not been established. The report is an interim product of Democratic committee staff, built partly on unnamed sources and whistleblowers, and no charges have been filed. The rerouted donors have not been publicly identified. Nobody has answered, on the record, who gave the order to create Freedom 250. We do not know the total corporate haul, because the structure was designed to keep you from knowing. Freedom 250’s spokesperson calls the entire report a partisan smear, categorically false, and says the group rescued a birthday celebration from years of failed planning.

Note what the denial does not do. The denial does not explain the wire instructions. The denial does not explain the green light directive. The denial does not dispute the price list, the grant records, the anonymous donor policy, or the campaign registration portal. The structural facts sit in public documents regardless of what any spokesperson says, and structure is where corruption lives.

Your Move

Here is the bottom line from a lawyer who has watched fraud cases for forty years. When one entity impersonates the goodwill of another to intercept money, we prosecute regular people for this. When the entity doing the intercepting sits inside the White House, wrapped in a flag, on the nation’s front lawn, on the nation’s birthday, the only thing standing between the allegations and accountability is you.

So act. Call your representative and your senators and demand an Inspector General investigation into the Interior Department grants and a full accounting of every dollar, foreign and domestic, raised by Freedom 250. Demand the anonymous donor list. Support the reporters and watchdog groups doing the digging. Talk to your neighbors about the difference between a national celebration and a national shakedown, because confusion was the business model and clarity is the antidote. And remember all of this in November, because the man leading this investigation told you plainly: give Congress subpoena power again and you will see a great deal more.

They threw themselves a party with your money, kept the guest list secret, and asked you to believe their crowd count. Now comes the part where the country decides whether the invoice gets paid. Share this with someone who still believes the 250th belonged to all of us. It did. It does. Make them give it back.

Mitch Jackson, Esq.

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