North Carolina reported an extraordinary surge in Medicaid billings for autism therapy, raising immediate questions about oversight, billing practices, and taxpayer exposure while state officials move to investigate the spike.
Reports show a staggering jump in claims tied to autism therapy, and experienced investigators who helped expose past Medicaid abuses are watching closely. The numbers released have scrambled expectations and forced a quick response from the state auditor’s office.
David Hoch, who assisted Nick Shirley in uncovering widespread abuse in Minnesota’s Medicaid system, flagged the North Carolina figures as alarming and worth scrutiny. His involvement signals that this is not just a clerical oddity but the kind of pattern that attracts fraud investigators.
Medicaid autism therapy billings reportedly jumped from $1.4M to $660M in five years, state auditor Dave Boliek said. That scale of growth strains credibility and demands a clearer accounting of how providers, patients, and billing practices changed in such a short window.
“Those are vital services to folks and individuals that need that therapy,” Boliek told Fox. “But when you have, like in North Carolina, a system that went from $1.4 million or so in total billings for autism therapy to more than $660 million a year in billings on autism therapy within a five-year range, that begs an audit from the state auditor, who in North Carolina, we are the top watchdog agency for taxpayer waste, fraud, and abuse prevention. So we’ve dug down into that or in the middle of that.”
Boliek said that he’s working with Vice President J.D. Vance to press the massive spike in billings.
HUGE: North Carolina @NCAuditorBoliek is doing the work to protect taxpayers. After uncovering a massive spike in Medicaid autism therapy billings, from $1.4M to $660M in just 5 years. Boliek is pushing for audits, accountability, and fraud crackdowns across NC. #ncpol pic.twitter.com/U87qmJXar2
— Nick Craig (@nicholasmcraig) May 9, 2026
To be blunt, a jump like this is a red flag for any conservative who worries about government waste and the erosion of trust in public programs. Rapid expansion of payments can mean legitimate increased need, but it can also mask billing inflation, phantom services, or an unregulated boom in for-profit providers chasing Medicaid dollars.
Past scandals in other states have shown how quickly a lack of oversight becomes a feeding frenzy for bad actors once big money flows unchecked, and the same mechanics could be at work here. Conservatives pushing for accountability say an audit must examine provider licensing, billing codes, session lengths, and whether services claimed were actually delivered to patients in need.
At stake is more than bookkeeping; it’s public confidence and the future of services for children who genuinely need therapy. Lawmakers and auditors on the right will stress that protecting essential care requires rooting out waste, then shoring up rules so taxpayer funds reach patients instead of lining fraudulent pockets.
State officials have tools to demand records, cross-check claims, and look for anomalies such as sudden provider proliferation in particular counties or identical billing patterns across unrelated entities. Those forensic steps are straightforward in concept but often reveal complex schemes that take time to unwind, which is why veteran investigators are already involved.
Families who depend on autism services deserve stable, transparent programs that deliver real care, and taxpayers deserve assurance those programs are run honestly and efficiently. Expect conservative oversight to press hard for public answers, tighter controls, and prosecutions where fraud is proven, while simultaneously arguing that legitimate therapy must remain available for those who need it most.




