All-nude Miami strip clubs, posh hotels and limo services...this father-of-four ... trends now

All-nude Miami strip clubs, posh hotels and limo services...this father-of-four ... trends now

A Minnesota GOP Senate candidate who has described himself as an 'antisemite' and 'sexist' has blown over $100,000 in campaign dollars on late nights at strip clubs, clothing and mysterious wire transfers. 

Six-foot-eight Royce White, 33, is a Catholic, former professional basketball player turned right-wing podcaster who has been propped up by Steve Bannon. He's running against Republican candidate Joe Frazier in a primary to take on Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar.

White has a history of referring to women as 'whores' and 'b****es' on social media and has a record of alleged abuse of his wife, who filed for a protection order and announced plans to divorce him before getting back with him, and side girlfriend.

He has fathered two children with wife Angelic Aguilar Suggs and two others with different women.  

White's campaign is a long shot: he's got $10,000 on hand compared to Klobuchar's $6 million and DailyMail.com has learned that national Republicans are staying far away from him. But he's got the backing of the state GOP.

DailyMail.com breaks down all the shocking and salacious details of White's campaign expenditures to prop up his high-roller lifestyle: 

DailyMail.com breaks down all the shocking and salacious details of White's campaign expenditures to prop up his high-roller lifestyle

DailyMail.com breaks down all the shocking and salacious details of White's campaign expenditures to prop up his high-roller lifestyle

Blowing thousands at all-nude strip club, limos 

After losing his House primary in 2022, ex-NBA player Royce White had a 5 a.m. outing at the Gold Rush Cabaret - some 1,800 miles from the House race he was running in.

He paid the Miami-based all-nude strip club $1,232 on the campaign tab that night, according to 2022 FEC filings. The filings were first flagged by the Daily Beast.

White told DailyMail.com that he couldn't recall the strip club night but believed his team had 'used the wrong card' and were in the process of reimbursing the campaign.  

White has often railed against the political system as 'corrupt,' but thousands of dollars went to limo services and posh hotels in Florida, far away from his race in Minnesota. 

White had brief stints Canada’s National Basketball League and Ice Cube’s Big3 basketball league.

Eye-popping $100,000 on suspicious unmarked transfers and purchases at Crocs, clothing and gyms

White also spent around $100,000 on regular wire transfers and checks that had no stated recipient or purpose. 

White told DailyMail.com the transfers and checks largely went to videographers who were filming content for the campaign. He said he is amending FEC filings to reflect that. 

'To my knowledge, the only thing that I'm aware of that we wire transfer were our videographers that were filming content for us, and, you know, doing video editing, and maybe their hotels and licenses, things like that,' he said. 'We had them working for us on an eight-week basis.'

His campaign expenditures show questionable cash withdrawals in cities far from Minnesota, hundreds of dollars spent at clothing stores, sporting goods stores and electronics stores and payments to basketball training app Dribbleup.com. 

Purchases include $216 at LuluLemon, $115 at Crocs.com, $156 at Asos.com, $323 at Express.com, $369 at Sally Beauty Supply and and $136 at Lifetime Fitness. 

Campaign dollars are not supposed to go to personal clothing purchases. 

The FEC says: 'The campaign cannot pay for attire for political functions (for example, a new tuxedo or dress), but it can pay for clothing of de minimis value that is used in the campaign, such as T-shirts or caps imprinted with a campaign slogan.' 

One clothing purchase - $366 at New Balance - listed its campaign purpose: 'shoe purchase for door knocking.' 

Domestic abuse allegations by wife

White, who notoriously missed his first season with the Houston Rockets due to mental health issues, has a history of domestic abuse allegations.

His ex-wife and mother of his two children Angelic Aguilar Suggs was granted a protection order after she said that over the first five months of their marriage he 'has been physically and verbally violent, and he has inflicted and threatened physical harm upon me.'

Royce was 22 at the time and his wife was 25. She said they had been together 'on and off' for eight years. Royce's mother was living with them at the time of their marriage. 

Angelic asked for Royce to only have 'supervised' time with their children due to fear for their safety. She said she had not disclosed where she was living to Royce out of fear for safety. 

While they lived in Pennsylvania when Royce was playing for the Philadelphia 76ers, Elizabeth said Royce 'forbid me to leave the house for any reason unless | was given his permission.'

'I was

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