Justice Dept. Charges 47 in Brazen Pandemic Aid Fraud in Minnesota
The defendants were charged with stealing $240 million intended to feed children, in what appears to be the largest theft so far from a pandemic-era program.
MINNEAPOLIS — The Justice Department said on Tuesday that it had charged 47 people with running a brazen fraud against anti-hunger programs during the coronavirus pandemic, stealing $240 million by billing the government for meals they did not serve to children who did not exist.
The case, in Minnesota, is the largest fraud uncovered in any pandemic-relief program, prosecutors said, standing out even in a period when heavy federal spending and lax oversight allowed a spree of scams with few recent parallels.
The Minnesota operation, prosecutors said, involved faked receipts for 125 million meals. At times, it was especially bold: One accused conspirator told the government he had fed 5,000 children a day in a second-story apartment.
Other defendants in the case seemed to put minimal effort into disguising what they were doing, using the website listofrandomnames.com to create a fake list of children they could charge for feeding. Others used a number-generating program to produce ages for the children they were supposedly feeding, which led the ages to fluctuate wildly each time the group updated its list of those nonexistent children, court papers said.
But their scheme — details of which were reported in The New York Times in March — still pulled in millions of dollars per week, prosecutors said in court papers, because government officials had relaxed oversight of the feeding program during the pandemic and because the other defendants had help from a trusted insider.
That insider was Aimee Bock, the founder of a nonprofit group, Feeding Our Future, that the State of Minnesota relied on as a watchdog to stop fraud at feeding sites. But Ms. Bock did the opposite, the indictments said: When pandemic-relief programs flooded the programs with money, she exploited her position to bring in nearly 200 new feeding operations she knew were submitting fake or inflated invoices.
Even when the government of Gov. Tim Walz, a Democrat, raised questions, Ms. Bock rebuffed them by filing a lawsuit and accusing state officials of discriminating against her group’s largely East African clientele.
“In effect, Feeding Our Future operated a pay-to-play scheme in which individuals seeking to operate fraudulent sites under the sponsorship of Feeding Our Future had to kick back a portion of their fraudulent proceeds,” one indictment said, according to a copy obtained by The Times.
“The subjects in this case weren’t interested in feeding our future,” Michael Paul, a special agent for the F.B.I., said at a news conference on Tuesday, when the charges were announced. “They were interested in feeding their own gluttony.”
Ms. Bock was indicted on charges of wire fraud and bribery involving federal programs. Other defendants were also charged with money laundering, for allegedly routing the funds they stole through a web of shell companies.
The case is the largest brought by the Justice Department as it scrambles to address waves of fraud involving pandemic-era programs that sent billions of dollars of aid into the economy, often with few strings attached and little oversight.
The Labor Department’s inspector general’s office has opened 39,000 investigations. At the Small Business Administration, about 50 agents have been sorting through two million potentially fraudulent loan applications. And while the sheer volume of cases all but ensures that some cases will go unaddressed, the prosecutions in Minnesota signal that the Justice Department is moving aggressively on others.
The indictments said the defendants spent their money on real estate in the United States, Kenya and Turkey, as well as on cars and luxury goods. The Justice Department is seeking to seize many of those purchases, including more than 20 cars, more than 40 properties, guns, cryptocurrency and a Louis Vuitton duffel bag.
Prosecutors said on Tuesday that many defendants had been arrested or had turned themselves in. They said some had left the country, but declined to say how many.
The indictments are accusations, and many of those who were charged have said they did nothing wrong. After a series of F.B.I. searches in January revealed the existence of the investigation, Ms. Bock told The Times that she had put in place strong antifraud measures and did not believe anyone in her system had broken the rules.
If there was fraud, Ms. Bock said then, “every test we have in place and every protection we have in place didn’t catch it. Is it possible? Absolutely. And if they got one over on us, I will help hold them accountable.”
On Tuesday, Ms. Bock, accompanied by her lawyer, was seen walking into the Minneapolis federal courthouse. Her lawyer did not respond to a request for comment.
Prosecutors said that those indicted included Sharmarke Issa, the former chairman of the Minneapolis Public Housing Authority, and Abdi Nur Salah, a former aide to Mayor Jacob Frey of Minneapolis, a Democrat. Both men were publicly connected to this case earlier in the year, because of their ties to a property that prosecutors said was bought with stolen money.
Also among the 44 people indicted was a Feeding Our Future employee, Abdikerm Abdelahi Eidleh, who was accused of taking kickbacks from people involved in the scheme. Three other defendants — including another of the nonprofit’s employees, Hadith Yusuf Ahmed — were charged via “criminal information” rather than a grand jury indictment.
The state blocked Feeding Our Future from receiving more aid money after the F.B.I. served search warrants in the case in January. The nonprofit group sought to dissolve at the time, but Attorney General Keith Ellison of Minnesota, a Democrat, blocked the move. Mr. Ellison asked a judge to supervise the group while he investigated whether it broke state charity laws. That investigation appears to be continuing.
As described by prosecutors, the participants targeted two federal food-aid programs, which were administered through state governments. They were intended to feed children in after-school programs and summer camps. But when the pandemic hit, Congress rejiggered the programs to reach millions of children stuck at home, pouring in billions of dollars more and changing the rules to let families pick up meals to go.
As funding went up, however, oversight went down: State officials, for instance, no longer had to check on feeding sites in person.
That left one last line of defense: the so-called watchdog sponsors, like Feeding Our Future. Those nonprofit groups served as conduits for money, from the states to individual feeding sites, and they were supposed to be on guard against fraud.
But the system also gave those watchdogs a reason not to bark: They could keep 10 to 15 percent of the money that flowed through them.
In this case, the indictments said, Ms. Bock’s group kept the money flowing to increase its own cut.
“The defendants exploited the Covid-19 pandemic — and the resulting program changes — to enrich themselves,” the indictments say.
Feeding Our Future had started before the pandemic as a small sponsor overseeing $3.5 million in funding. It never had an accountant on staff and sometimes struggled with basic governance, even allowing its nonprofit status to expire for a time.
But by 2021, Feeding Our Future was handling $197 million in annual funding.
Under its umbrella, the indictments said, six different groups began to operate similar frauds. The conspirators would often register new companies or nonprofits, then quickly sign them up as feeding operations under the supervision of Feeding Our Future.
Then, the indictments said, the new groups would soon report that they were feeding thousands of children per day — numbers that put them among the biggest feeding operations in the state — and began reaping thousands or millions of dollars in federal payments. In Minneapolis, for instance, a man named Guhaad Hashi Said told the state that he was serving 5,000 meals, twice a day, at a new facility called Advance Youth Athletic Development.
The site he listed was an unlikely place for anyone to feed children en masse: The address was a second-story apartment.
Mr. Said was one of those indicted; the indictment said he was paid $2.9 million out of federal money routed through the state and Feeding Our Future. But the indictment said that Mr. Said provided “only a fraction” of the meals he claimed. In an interview this year, Mr. Said said that he had never claimed to serve 5,000 meals a day in the first place.
In other cases, prosecutors said, feeding sites submitted invoices that were suspiciously consistent, with thousands of children listed as attending, day after day with no variation.
“No one got sick. No one missed a meal. No one was away,” said Andrew M. Luger, the U.S. attorney for Minnesota. “Same children. Every single day. Every single week.”
In 2020, Minnesota officials grew concerned by the speed at which Feeding Our Future was creating new distribution sites and began giving them more scrutiny.
In November of that year, the nonprofit responded defiantly, filing a lawsuit that accused state officials of discrimination. The suit said the state was harming children by delaying the start of Feeding Our Future’s new operations. “Every day that goes by, hundreds of the state’s most vulnerable children are going without much needed meals,” it said.
Several of the sites where the state had sought to delay operations later became centers of fraud, according to the indictments.
In response to Feeding Our Future’s lawsuit, a state court judge ruled that Minnesota had not taken the steps necessary to block the payments. After that, in April 2021, frustrated state officials turned to the F.B.I. — and continued paying Feeding Our Future and its partners while federal agents investigated.
The state “moved quickly and repeatedly raised the issue to federal authorities until we were able to find someone who would take the troubling spending as seriously as we were,” said Kevin Burns, a spokesman for the Minnesota Department of Education, which handled the food-aid money.
Republicans in the State Senate released a report this month, before the indictments were made public, accusing the state’s Education Department of “dereliction of duty” for failing to stop Feeding Our Future sooner.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/20/us/politics/pandemic-aid-fraud-minnesota.html
17 comments:
No Jews seem to be involved in this one, but lots of Muslim-sounding names in the DOJ press release:
https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/us-attorney-announces-federal-charges-against-47-defendants-250-million-feeding-our-future
What Iin the world does this have to do with Jews?
What In the world does this have to do with Jews?
*
Nothing :-)
Except for the mastermind Bock, they are ALL Arabs & Smelly Somali Muslims. But almost no media outlet published the names because it's politically incorrect to draw bad attention to them.
UOJ, shkoyach!
https://nypost.com/2022/09/15/twitter-could-face-billions-in-fines-over-not-protecting-minors-from-porn-ex-ftc-officials/
I assume you had something to do with this & it really helps my case!
https://www.heritagefl.com/story/2022/09/16/opinions/abu-akleh-and-bidens-pro-iran-realignment/17156.html
I have to huddle with my tayera chaver Jerrold Nadler to see how we can help Biden stick the knife further into Israel's back.
I don't care what Archie Bunker says, I was not involved in this scam :-)
Friedlander, is there any room for 1 more guy to huddle?
https://nypost.com/2022/09/20/orthodox-jews-say-they-were-excluded-from-white-house-hate-crimes-summit/
I have a special "in" because Obama was my hoop shooting buddy at Harvard Law. And because I'm a radical feminist. Normally I wouldn't have the stomach for despicable Charedim but it was terrific when Philly yeshiva endorsed my terror campaign against Aharon Friedman! I signed the letter while throwing my heavyweight OU credentials around that Friedman should not be allowed in any shul. The next thing you know, a rag tag mob of screaming banshee women & male feminist counterparts with matching feminine voices showed up on Shabbos to attack Friedman at the Kemp Mill shul. The sissy rabbi then banned Friedman so that the rabble doesn't vandalize the shul and assault him too.
Shmarya, suck an egg!
Free lunch for your favorite people is now both figurative AND literal!
How are you doing by the way? I heard you had a huge temper tantrum when Woke DA Alvin Bragg was forced to drop charges against the bodega worker who killed that monkey in self-defense
https://nypost.com/2022/07/23/how-nyers-freed-jose-alba-and-spoiled-de-blasios-latest-run/
Manhattan’s limp-on-crime DA Alvin Bragg dropped his absurd murder case against bodega hero Jose Alba. The hardworking 61-year-old bodega clerk was violently attacked by a macho thug who was angry that his girlfriend hadn’t gotten a free bag of chips. While getting beaten up, Alba grabbed a knife and stabbed his assailant in an obvious case of self-defense, killing him.
Chevra, if you want to huddle under a bed by my hiding spot, there's plenty of sweaty room down here. It's a king size bed.
Elon has always been nice to Yidden. When he was growing up in South Africa the not so frum Jewish day school was the best educational option period so his parents sent him there.
"The sissy rabbi then banned Friedman"
That would be uber shyster & Leib Pinter mechuton "rabbi" Herzl Kranz who it's reported that his "semicha" from Telz is a matter of dispute in metzius.
Kranz has no backbone to take a stand for a victim like Friedman but he has plenty of time for gonivs sharing their booty with him like Jack Abramoff, the nuclear scientist arrested for helping America's enemies, the head galach of The Moonies cult, and others.
Sorry, my bad, didn't follow your hate for long enough
YU is complicit in the perverse saga currently unfolding at the Flatbush-Bensonhurst SY yeshiva Magen David. A menuvoldik man, who claims to be a woman, was hired to teach the kids social studies. When the parents figured it out they went wild & cornered Magen into sending the menuvol packing. The menuvol is now suing Magen and terrified Lipschutz into taking down the article from the website that he loves to deny he is owner of - Matzav.
The Magen official responsible for the hiring of the very strange looking & obvious "Tranny" menuvol is Dr. Vitow who is a macher at Beth Sholom in Lawrence, under the 5 Towns Vaad flag despite having one foot inside Open Orthodoxy.
The menuvol lives in Washington Heights with his "husband" who changed his name to that of his pretend female "spouse". The couple are members of Mount Sinai cong. that has both feet inside Open Orthodoxy despite insisting they are still "mainstream" YU shnit. YU does lend some credibility to that. They know that the "husband", despite his yeshivishe clown act with black hat & big peyos is constantly oiver in toievah, yet he is recruiter of MECHANCHIM at YU's Azrieli Graduate School! The "husband" is incidentally also promoted on a website as the best man for the upcoming wedding of a secular Jewish friend who is intermarrying with a non-Jewish Hispanic woman!
https://www.jta.org/2022/09/21/united-states/jewish-day-school-asks-teacher-to-leave-after-she-was-outed-as-trans
The menuvol claims backing from a psak in Tzitz Eliezer. This psak is not poshut that it applies to him, all other poskim disagree with the psak in any case, and even if the psak is viable there are other issurim in the way.
Is there a precedent for all this from YU itself? Yes! One of the roshei yeshiva of YU's beis medrash has spent years cheering his militantly open homosexual son. The son, who was lead singer in YU crowd (& 'Modern Charedi' crowd) sensations 'the Maccabeats', eventually "married" an open homosexual Conservative clergyman who misquotes early Mekubolim that toievah is actually "kedusha", chalila!
"Yes! One of the roshei yeshiva of YU's beis medrash has spent years cheering his militantly open homosexual son. The son, who was lead singer in YU crowd (& 'Modern Charedi' crowd) sensations 'the Maccabeats', eventually "married" an open homosexual Conservative clergyman who misquotes early Mekubolim that toievah is actually "kedusha", chalila!"
(Not just Maccabeats, also with Y-Studs who re-enact niggunim going back to the tekufas Geonim. A 2nd member of Maccabeats is also "married" to a man & they are active at their Open Poisondox temple)
The rosh yeshiva is a long time Queens Vaad rabbi at a Young Israel where kimat no women wear a shaytel. That crowd has an axe to grind against bnei Torah which they are vocal about. Many of them moved there to get away from Kew Gardens & KGH because even the watered down "yeshivishe" in Queens are too much for them.
https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRQw1CZrVvxbTR5lmH8j1RF3efDSeGe61toasXwLvJaAg&s
The YU rosh yeshiva's son with ponytail under the "chuppa" with the gay weirdo "husband" in black hat, beard, payos & kittel.
The Rishon that this mechutzef distorts to be matzdik his maysei Sdoimim is Rabbeinu Yosef Baal Hanissim Gikatilla, talmid of Rabbeinu Avraham Abulafia, who was talmid of the Italian Baal HaTosfos Rabbeinu Eliezer Verona's grandson
https://d3wo5wojvuv7l.cloudfront.net/t_square_limited_720/images.spreaker.com/original/73ab8d0f38d7e2f26b2a9856a8236658.jpg
The YU rosh yeshiva posing with his toayveh militant activist son.
This photo op is in honor of a live public interview conducted with them where this YU (and as reported Queens Vaad) 'leader' justifies elements of abomination & his acceptance of it. I'm not linking the actual interview because groups engaging in gay shmad on yeshiva kids are promoting it all over, using it as a maysis umaydiach tool. The shmadniks are wowed by the YU-Queens Vaad 'leader' because they couldn't have done a better job themselves destroying vulnerable neshomos.
The message from YU-Queens Vaad 'leadership' broken down into multiple whoppers:
- Because a homo feels turmoil, he has kadima to be doicheh not just the parents feelings but also any considerations that it's a bad hashpaah on younger children at home
- From the horse's 'rosh yeshivish' mouth: "I think one of the things we had to learn the hard way is to stop thinking about ourselves & just listen to Gedalia. What is a person who’s gay looking for in a relationship? And just to listen to him, you don’t have to from a halachic perspective" (!!!)
- Veiter: "He came home, he said he's gay, she said she’s lesbian, and now they want to bring their partner home. As a parent, it’s not about winning or losing: it’s about maintaining your relationship with your child. We’re parents & children regardless of any rules or anything else. Gedalia seemed to be pushing the limits, but it’s not about winning & losing.
Do I detect any inherent bias?
When the Modern Orthodox world is discussed on UOJ you hear from the mouths of ferds.
Why is it only when the conversation turns to the Agudah that the references are to tuchesses of ferds?
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