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Texas Journalist Exposes Shocking Immigration Fraud in H-1B System

BlazeTV’s Sara Gonzales did what too few journalists in this country bother to do: she followed the paper trail and knocked on the doors listed on official H‑1B filings, and what she found was shocking by any standard. When Gonzales went to the Frisco, Texas address tied to Qubitz Tech Systems, a man answered and immediately called 911 — an interaction that prompted Gonzales to request the police bodycam footage to clear the record. The footage, now released and examined by Gonzales, paints a very different picture than the one the caller told officers.

The bodycam makes it plain that the caller’s account to dispatch — that Gonzales had tried to force her way inside, that she had banged violently and threatened him — does not match the footage of the peaceful exchange. Gonzales left the property calmly and only questioned where over a dozen supposed employees of the company were working, yet the man spun a dramatized tale to the police. Intentionally filing a false 911 report is a serious matter, and any attempt to weaponize emergency services to shield potential fraud deserves scrutiny.

What makes this sting worse for taxpayers is the evidence that these are not one‑off clerical errors but part of a larger pattern; Gonzales found company addresses that lead to tiny, empty rooms with a folding table and a single chair rather than bustling software shops. Public filings show firms like Qubitz and 3BEES with dozens of H‑1B approvals listed at residential or plainly insufficient addresses, raising obvious questions about how these visas were justified. If companies can list ghost offices and import foreign labor on that basis, hardworking Americans and legitimate businesses are getting squeezed.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has not sat on his hands — his office has launched civil investigative demands into multiple companies flagged by the reporting, which is exactly the kind of law‑enforcement response this scandal needs. These are not partisan talking points but concrete subpoenas seeking employment records, communications, and financials to determine whether fraud or consumer deception has occurred. If the federal agencies responsible for vetting these visas won’t do the job, state prosecutors must step in to protect local workers and taxpayers.

Gonzales has also pointed out that after her exposé these businesses scrambled to update websites and change addresses — a classic sign of being caught trying to tidy up a cover story when the spotlight hits. That reaction alone should send chills through anyone who believes in rule of law: when the evidence forces a rewrite of the public record, the burden should shift to regulators to investigate immediately and transparently. Conservatives who care about secure borders and a fair labor market should applaud watchdog reporting and demand swift enforcement.

This story is about more than one viral clip; it’s about whether our immigration and labor systems will continue to be gamed while officials look the other way. Patriotic Americans should stand behind journalists who expose fraud and behind prosecutors who follow the evidence — and they should demand that Congress and federal agencies close the loopholes that let sham companies drain jobs and resources. If we care about our communities, we must insist on enforcement, accountability, and a restoration of common‑sense immigration policy that puts Americans first.

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