U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins revealed Tuesday that more than 14,000 luxury vehicles are linked to Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program recipients in a single state.

Rollins shared the findings, citing a 2023 data analysis by the Foundation for Government Accountability, a conservative think tank. The review, based on de-identified SNAP enrollment data provided to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, identified luxury cars such as Bentleys, Ferraris, Lamborghinis, Maseratis, Porsches, Teslas, BMWs, Lexuses, and Cadillacs registered to benefit recipients.

Among the vehicles were three Bentleys, three Ferraris, 11 Lamborghinis, 59 Maseratis, 141 Porsches, 244 Alfa Romeos, 306 Land Rovers, 2,098 Teslas, 3,636 Lexuses, 1,914 BMWs, and 1,131 Cadillacs. Many were recent models with high price tags, including Lamborghinis exceeding $680,000 and Ferraris over $600,000.

Specific cases highlighted a university professor owning a 2020 Rolls-Royce valued at $346,000, a celebrity barber driving a 2018 Lamborghini Huracán valued at $220,000, and a professional football player with a 2022 BMW M760i worth $158,000. All three individuals received SNAP benefits while maintaining lavish lifestyles.

"And this is just in one state," Rollins said. "We need to defend our nutrition programs for those most in need, not for scammers gaming the system." She emphasized the Trump administration's efforts alongside Vice President JD Vance's Task Force to Eliminate Fraud.

The disclosures come amid broader SNAP reforms. SNAP participation dropped from 42.8 million in January 2025 to 38.5 million in January 2026, with 4.3 million Americans removed from the program. President Trump signed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act in July 2025, expanding work requirements for able-bodied adults without dependents.

The USDA has requested detailed recipient data from states, including birth dates, Social Security numbers, and immigration status. Twenty-nine states, mostly Republican-led, complied, while others cited privacy concerns. A preliminary review uncovered over 300,000 potentially deceased individuals still enrolled.

The USDA estimates improper SNAP payments at $10.4 billion annually, or more than one in 10 dollars spent. The administration aims to close these gaps through rule changes and penalties for high error rates under the 2025 bill.

Rollins did not name the state, which provided the data anonymously to protect program integrity. The findings underscore ongoing efforts to ensure SNAP serves those truly in need.