he luxury lifestyle of Iraq vet and his TikTok star wife who ‘stole’ from We Build The Wall
The Purple Heart triple amputee Iraq veteran charged along with Steve Bannon and two others with stealing money from the We Build The Wall GoFundMe account spent $350,000 on boats, an SUV, plastic surgery, jewelry, home renovations and credit card debt, prosecutors claim.
Prosecutors allege that Brian Kolfage, a triple amputee and celebrated war veteran, was the main beneficiary of the scheme.
In 2018, Kolfage set up the GoFundMe account in support of President Trump and to prove the nation’s appetite for a border wall between the US and Mexico.
It was inundated with donations from Republicans and had collected more than $20million by December that year. GoFundMe became suspicious of where the money was going and warned Kolfage to donate it to a legitimate charity or refund everyone who’d given to it.
That is when, prosecutors say, Bannon, Timothy Shea and Andrew Badolato got involved. They used shell companies and a not-for-profit formed by Bannon to launder the money back to Kolfage and keep some for themselves, it’s claimed.
Brian Kolfage, 38 ,and his wife Ashley, 33, were the main beneficiaries of the scheme, according to prosecutors. The pair live in Miramar Beach on Florida’s panhandle. They are pictured on their boat
Kolfage launched the private wall effort in December 2018. He took it off GoFundMe recently because, he claimed, the company was not allowing him to fundraise for victims of assaults by BLM protesters
The fund would pay the shell companies, then they would deposit the money back into accounts held by Kolfage or his wife, marking the transactions down as for ‘media’, ‘consulting’ or ‘social media’, it is alleged.
Despite claiming on the GoFundMe that he’d ‘never take a penny’ from the donations, the indictment alleges that Kolfage took a $20,000-a-month salary from it in addition to a one-off, $100,000 payment. In total, he took $350,000, it’s claimed.
Bannon allegedly took $1million from it – some of which he used to pay Kolfage, but some he allegedly kept and spent on hotels, travel and credit card debt.
While Bannon is the most recognizable name in the indictment, Kolfage, 38, and his wife Ashley, 33, spent the money most enthusiastically.
The pair live with their two children in a $290,000 home in Miramar, on the Florida panhandle.
Ashley is active on Instagram and TikTok, where she shows off their weekends on boats and driving the golf cart prosecutors claim was paid for with the stolen donation money.
Once he’d been fitted with prosthetics, he moved to Arizona which is where he reconnected with Ashley -then a waitress at Chilli’s – having met her years earlier.
The pair married in 2011 and welcomed two children years later.
He lived quietly as a war hero until Trump entered the political world. Then, he became an activist.
In December 2018, he launched the GoFundMe, saying at the time he’d grown sick of ‘too many illegals . . . taking advantage of the United States taxpayers’ and the ‘political games from both parties’.
The couple and their children preparing to board a private flight they were gifted by a veterans charity
Kolfage with former President George Bush. He lost an arm and both his legs in 2004 in Iraq. After returning from the war, Kolfage married Ashley – a former Chilli’s waitress. They lived quietly until Trump’s political victory, when they then became vocal supporters. The pair are shown with Donald Trump Jr.
One of the things prosecutors claim the pair spent the stolen money on was this golf cart that Ashley is seen washing in a TikTok video
Ashley describes herself as a model and influencer. She has more than 300,000 TikTok followers and often posts from the couple’s home in Miramar Beach, Florida. She is shown, left, in a video posted yesterday and right, promoting Bang – an energy drink
It took off on an unprecedented scale, collecting $20million.
THE SCHEME
In 2018, Kolfage set up the GoFundMe account in support of President Trump and to prove the nation’s appetite for a border wall between the US and Mexico.
It was inundated with donations from Republicans and had collected more than $20million by December that year. GoFundMe became suspicious of where the money was going and warned Kolfage to donate it to a legitimate charity or refund everyone who’d given to it.
That is when, prosecutors say, Bannon, Timothy Shea and Andrew Badolato got involved. They used shell companies and We Build The Wall Inc, a not-for-profit formed by Bannon to launder the money back to Kolfage and keep some for themselves, it’s claimed.
The fund would pay the shell companies, then they would deposit the money back into accounts held by Kolfage or his wife, marking the transactions down as for ‘media’, ‘consulting’ or ‘social media’, it is alleged.
Despite claiming on the GoFundMe that he’d ‘never take a penny’ from the donations, the indictment alleges that Kolfage took a $20,000-a-month salary from it in addition to a one-off, $100,000 payment. In total, he took $350,000, it’s claimed.
Bannon allegedly took $1million from it – some of which he used to pay Kolfage, but some he allegedly kept and spent on hotels, travel and credit card debt.
It propelled Kolfage into the sphere of media and politics. He frequently tweets in support of the president and against the liberal left, trashes COVID-19 as the ‘biggest scam the world has ever seen’ and fires back at anyone who questions the progress of his wall.
The wall that his fund was paying for is not the same one the government is building and the president has distanced himself from Kolfage’s efforts.
It hasn’t stopped him from pushing ahead with it, even as people questioned where the money was going last May, when there had been seemingly little progress.
Kolfage came under fire for buying a $600,000 boat that he insisted he purchased before he ever launched the fundraising account.
It’s unclear if it’s the same boat prosecutors referred to in their indictment, that he was making payments on.
When they aren’t enjoying that boat, the pair are visiting the wall with their children, often flying privately.
They are also flown around by Carrington, a charity that builds homes for veterans.
On TikTok, Ashley posts frequently from their home in a bikini, for her more than 300,000 followers.
In recent videos, she is seen dancing on a table for her husband while he sits quietly.
He rarely appears in the videos. She did not immediately return DailyMail.com’s inquiries on Thursday morning.
According to prosecutors, Kolfage enlisted Bannon and Andrew Badolato after GoFundMe threatened to void his online campaign.
Bannon formed We Build The Wall Inc which he used to take money from the GoFundMe account then repay to Kolfage, according to prosecutors.
He gave him a $100,000 one-off payment then $20,000-a-month as a salary despite claiming in the GoFundMe account that he wouldn’t take a penny.
At times, they tried to make it look less suspicious by making some of the payments to Ashley, labeling them as ‘media’ fees.
In text messages, they defendants discussed the fact that the payments between the charity and Bannon’s company would show up in tax returns. Badolato told Kolfage in one text: ”Better than you or me lol’.
Ashley posing next to the couple’s white Range Rover. An SUVis listed in the indictment as one of the things the couple allegedly bought with stolen money
She sometimes shares photos of Brian on her account. Right, she is seen dancing on their dining table for him
The pair often take their boat to Trump flotillas. Above, an image Brian shared recently on social media
They then started paying Kolfage through Shea’s shell companies and marked them as hiring him for a service like ‘consulting’ or ‘social media’.
The indictment alleges that in April 2019, Shea formed a company. On April 22, it received a $50,000 payment from We Build The Wall. He gave half to Kolfage.
Steve Bannon was also indicted
On May 21, another payment of $30,000 came to Shea’s shell company from the charity. He then gave $20,000 to Kolfage and included memos labeling the payments as ‘social media’.
He then kept the remaining balances – $35,000. Badolato allegedly took $50,000 from the charity account and put it in a check. He gave the check to an associate who kept $30,000 of it and gave $20,000 to Kolfage.
In August 2019, Badolato facilitated a $150,000 payment from the charity to a construction contractor. That contractor gave $70,000 to Kolfage, $50,000 to Badolato and $20,000 to an attorney.
Kolfage then used the money he received on home renovations, boat payments, an SUV, a golf cart, jewelry, cosmetic surgery, personal tax payments and credit card debt.
Bannon, Shea and Badolato spent the hundreds of thousands they funnelled on travel, hotels, consumer goods and credit card debt.
Bannon, in particular, received over $1million from the fund. While some of that money was used to pay Kolfage, he used a ‘substantial portion’ for personal uses and expenses unrelated to We Build the Wall, the prosecutors claim.