Kentucky Whistleblower Allegedly Fired Over Drivers License Controversy
What’s unfolding in Kentucky should send a chill down the spine of every law-abiding driver in America. A state Transportation Cabinet employee reportedly tried to blow the whistle on an illegal scheme — one in which driver’s licenses were quietly sold “under the table” to illegal immigrants.
HOLY SHLIT: Melissa Moorman, an employee of the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet (@KYTC), was FIRED after she blew the whistle on a scheme to give driver's licenses to illegal aliens at $200 each "under the table."
Moorman says that the scheme would happen 4-5 times PER DAY at… pic.twitter.com/CnMgVKwmlM
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) August 11, 2025
Instead of celebrating the employee’s integrity, state officials appear to have circled the wagons. The official explanation? The licenses were given “in error.” That might fly if we were talking about one or two isolated mistakes. But instead of opening the books to prove it, Kentucky’s government has stonewalled public records requests that could reveal how many fraudulent licenses were issued — and who signed off on them. The refusal to hand over the documents is as telling as it is suspicious.
Hey Rep. @realTJRoberts: we’re going to need you to vigorously investigate this.
Gov. Andy Beshear is covering up his corruption again.
— Nick Sortor (@nicksortor) August 11, 2025
The state’s Democratic governor seems to have no appetite for a real investigation. And without a thorough, transparent accounting, there’s no way to know whether this was a rogue operation or a quietly tolerated practice. Either way, it raises immediate questions about highway safety, voter rolls, and the integrity of state ID systems.
You know what else you can get with a driver’s license in Kentucky? A voter registration card. Illegals aren’t allowed to have a dl in KY. So by selling licenses they also gave access to the vote, opening the door to voter fraud, and potentially disenfranchising legal voters. pic.twitter.com/zCR7cs0Ijn
— Rochelle Wentz (@rochellewentz) August 11, 2025
For years, opponents of open-border policies have warned that lax enforcement doesn’t just impact immigration — it bleeds into every corner of public policy, from welfare rolls to law enforcement databases. Here, we have a case that may prove them right in vivid detail: illegal immigrants allegedly walking away with legal identification that could be used to pass background checks, board domestic flights, or even register to vote.
https://t.co/WHmAYTMLIK https://t.co/WYEpTYu5p2
— Susan Peak (@SuzyP39) August 11, 2025
This is not the kind of scandal that can be trusted to the same state officials who may be implicated in it. If Kentucky’s leadership won’t dig for the truth, then the Justice Department needs to. Because if a system designed to verify identity has been compromised, it’s not just Kentucky at risk — it’s every state that relies on shared databases and interstate cooperation to keep dangerous drivers and fraudulent identities off the roads.
