Homeland Security to review allegation that Swalwell employed undocumented nanny 17%
By Noah Haggerty20%
4/13/2026, 1:29:54 AM
BS Summary: This article contains 3 faulty reasoning types, including Post Hoc (False Cause) and Self-Serving Bias, with Bandwagon as the most egregious example at 14.7% saturation with 51 hits. Analysis detected 119 faulty-reasoning hits from 346 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 32.9% and a BS Rank of 17% (13,959 of 16,813 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 83.00% of the article peer group.
The U.S.
Department of Homeland Security is investigating whether Democratic Rep.
Eric Swalwell hired an undocumented immigrant as a nanny, the department announced on X.
The announcement came just hours before Swalwell said he was suspending his campaign for California governor Sunday.
He has not commented on the pending investigation.
On Saturday, the New York Post reported two complaints about the nanny's employment had been filed to federal authorities.
One claimed Swalwell employed a Brazilian national as a babysitter and lied to federal authorities as her temporary work authorization was about to expire in 2022.
The other accuses Swalwell of using campaign funds to pay her for two years when she didn't have authorization to work.
"No one is above the law, including a member of Congress," the department wrote on X.
The developments came as Swalwell's campaign for governor unraveled, days after the representative, once a frontrunner in the race, was accused of sexual assault and misconduct.
A woman who worked for the congressman said he sexually assaulted her twice when she was too inebriated to consent, according to a report by the San Francisco Chronicle.
Three other women accused him of sexual misconduct, including sending unsolicited nude photos and nonconsensual touching, according to CNN.
The Manhattan district attorney's office said it's investigating allegations of one 2024 encounter that the victim said happened in a New York City hotel, and the Alameda County district attorney's office said it was in the process of evaluating "whether any alleged criminal conduct occurred" in its jurisdiction.
Swalwell continues to deny the allegations.
"I will fight the serious, false allegations that have been made — but that's my fight, not a campaign's," he wrote on social media Sunday.
In a letter published Sunday by CNN, more than 50 of Swalwell's former staffers called on him to resign and drop out of the governor's race, describing the misconduct allegations as "credible."
Prior to that, several of his political advisers quit, and many prominent political figures and organizations pulled their endorsements.
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