again. >> drew joins us. basically everything in our reporting, not trying to defend anything. why the change? >> reporter: well, i think there is no defense. they began looking into it and found what we found and maybe even worse, anderson. look. the state knew fraud was going on. they ignored the warning signs. they looked the other way, even when they found convicted felons running some of their own clinics. anderson? >> it's incredible to see the kind of results you're able to get on this and see that today. nobody's getting fired. no big changes at the state health department. and the same people who allowed the fraud, they're now in charge of cleaning it up, right? >> reporter: yeah, the same people i might add that you and i interviewed and were trying to defend the program just a month or so ago are now saying that, you know, they are going to clean it up, they're going do something. lawmakers say they're on it now. they're going to give this department exactly one year to permanently solve the fraud problems or as one lawmaker told