Democrats are silent on thousands in donations from an indicted Florida lawmaker accused of stealing FEMA funds
Democratic candidates and party organizations that received thousands of dollars from Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick have refused to say whether they will return the money, even as the Florida congresswoman faces a 15-count federal indictment alleging she stole $5 million in FEMA disaster relief overpayments.
Not one recipient responded to requests for comment. Not one announced they would return the funds. Not one acknowledged the cloud hanging over every dollar.
Federal prosecutors allege that millions in stolen funds were rerouted from Trinity Health Care Services, Cherfilus-McCormick's company, into her campaign account, the Daily Caller reported. A House ethics subcommittee report found that a "substantial amount" of those funds was laundered to bankroll her January 2022 special election campaign and her subsequent November 2022 reelection bid. She has pleaded not guilty and denied any wrongdoing, but she faces up to 53 years in prison on charges that include participating in a straw donor scheme and conspiring to file a false federal tax return.
Where the money went
The donations touched multiple Democratic campaigns and party committees across several states. The trail, drawn from federal filings:
- $5,800 to former Rep. Val Demings in January 2022, for her Senate run against Marco Rubio. She lost.
- $5,000 to Rep. Shontel Brown of Ohio in April 2022, during Brown's competitive primary rematch against far-left former state Sen. Nina Turner. Brown won comfortably.
- $1,000 from Cherfilus-McCormick's campaign account to Oakland Mayor Barbara Lee's failed Senate campaign in March 2024.
- $5,000 to the Democratic Executive Committee of Florida in July 2022.
- $3,000 to the Palm Beach Democratic Party between December 2021 and February 2022, with an additional $5,000 from her affiliated leadership PAC, Protecting Democracy PAC, in October 2022.
- $550 to the Florida Democratic Party as recently as July 2025.
It is worth noting the obvious: some of these contributions may have drawn from the allegedly fraudulent stockpile. Federal prosecutors say the stolen FEMA money flowed through her company into her campaign infrastructure. That infrastructure then cut checks to fellow Democrats. The timeline overlaps neatly.
The silence is the story
Spokespeople for Brown, Lee, and Demings did not respond to requests for comment. Neither did the Florida Democratic Party nor the Palm Beach Democratic Party. Cherfilus-McCormick's own spokesperson also stayed quiet.
This is a party that has spent years lecturing the American public about institutional accountability and the sacred integrity of elections. When the subject is campaign finance, Democrats typically cannot stop talking. They have built entire organizations around the premise that money in politics is corrupting, that dark money poisons democracy, that every dollar must be scrutinized.
Now $5 million in disaster relief funds allegedly gets siphoned into a congresswoman's political war chest, and the beneficiaries of her generosity have nothing to say. The contradiction answers its own question.
House Democratic leadership has not demanded her resignation. There has been no public pressure campaign, no stern joint statement, no calls for the recipients to return potentially tainted money. Compare this to how swiftly Democrats mobilize when a Republican faces legal trouble. The machinery of outrage is remarkably selective.
FEMA money, luxury spending
The ethics subcommittee report paints a picture that goes beyond ordinary campaign finance violations. According to the House investigators, Cherfilus-McCormick used some of the allegedly stolen funds on luxury personal items: a Tesla, jewelry from Tiffany's, and designer clothing.
These are FEMA overpayments. Federal Emergency Management Agency dollars exist for one purpose: to help Americans recover from disasters. The allegation is that a sitting member of Congress took that money, ran it through her health care company, funneled it into her campaigns, and spent the rest on herself.
An ethics hearing is scheduled for March 5.
Still running, still touting Pelosi
Despite the indictment, Cherfilus-McCormick is running for a third full term in the November midterms. Her campaign website still touts the support of former Speaker Nancy Pelosi, though Pelosi herself has not endorsed the congresswoman in several years. That detail sits on the page like an artifact from a different political life, before the indictment, before the ethics investigation, before prosecutors laid out a 15-count case.
She will face a crowded August 2026 primary. The challengers include former Broward County Mayor Dale Holness, 27-year-old left-wing activist Elijah Manley, and rapper Luther Campbell, known as Uncle Luke. The field suggests that local Democrats sense vulnerability, even if national Democrats prefer to look away.
Accountability flows in one direction
The pattern here is familiar. When Democrats face a scandal, the party's instinct is not accountability but silence. Wait for the news cycle to move on. Hope the legal process plays out quietly. Above all, never volunteer a statement that could be used against a fellow traveler.
If a Republican member of Congress had been indicted for stealing $5 million in disaster relief funds and spreading donations to party allies, every recipient would have been asked about it on camera within 48 hours. Most would have returned the money before the question was even posed. Op-eds would have been written. Hashtags would have trended.
But Cherfilus-McCormick is a Democrat, and Democrats who took her money cannot seem to find their spokespeople. The voicemails go unreturned. The inboxes stay full.
Disaster victims lost money. A congresswoman allegedly took it. And the party that received the proceeds would rather say nothing at all.




