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Tag: Fraud

  • Records reveal Minnesota’s long history with day care fraud warnings

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    A viral video has put a national spotlight on Minnesota’s child care network as allegations of widespread fraud swirl. Records show Minnesota has been trying to improve oversight of the Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP) payment system for more than a decade. 

    The day after Christmas, Nick Shirley released a video accusing nearly a dozen child care centers of taking government assistance without actually providing a service in Minneapolis. The video primarily features him and a man only referred to as “David” going to various centers, demanding entry or information, then stating that the center was empty.

    Shirley’s central claim is that each day care is billing the CCAP for children who are not really there; WCCO found the video’s broad claims are not proven. 

    While federal and state investigators are now looking into each of the centers featured by Shirley, audits completed in the past 10 years show that Minnesota has lacked the teeth to properly vet attendance records and go after possible fraudsters proactively.

    In May of 2025, the federal Office of the Inspector General released an audit of 200 randomly selected child care assistance payments from 2023. The agency found that in 38 instances, “Minnesota did not comply with requirements related to attendance and payment for services.” The auditors extrapolated that to mean that the state was making at least one error in 11% of payments made to 1,155 centers in 2023. 

    “Minnesota’s limited oversight of attendance documentation at childcare centers resulted in overpayments to providers,” the audit states. “A lack of oversight to ensure accurate and complete attendance documentation could increase the risk of fraud, waste and abuse to the CCAP program.”

    The Office of the Inspector General made recommendations, including “strengthening its monitoring program to include routine reviews of CCAP attendance records for accuracy.” 

    In a response included in the audit, the Department of Health and Human Services agreed with this recommendation and others. DHS wrote that it is expanding what’s called the Early and Often Program, which “aims to ensure that new child care centers meet the requirements of CCAP by increased monitoring of their attendance record-keeping practices and compliance with state statutes.” 

    Months prior, in January 2025, Department of Children, Youth and Families Commissioner Tikki Brown acknowledged there are gaps in their fraud detection system when it comes to accurate attendance numbers. 

    “We certainly need to investigate that more thoroughly to ensure that agencies do have as broad authority as possible to investigate fraud and act on all aspects of fraud. I don’t know that that’s fully present,” Brown said. 

    In 2019, a report by the Office of the Legislative Auditor showed that the Minnesota Department of Human Services established an investigatory team to go after child care providers suspected of fraud in 2013. The office reviewed explosive claims of fraud from 2013 to 2018, ultimately finding that prosecutors were able to “prove” between $5 to $6 million worth of fraud in those years. 

    More than a dozen Minnesotans were charged in state and federal cases, but not everyone was convicted. The OLA could not provide an exact estimate, but the agency believed that the true extent of the fraud was greater than the $6 million figure. The OLA spoke to prosecutors who said that there were sometimes issues with the quality of evidence gathered by DHS.

    The OLA stated in this audit that the review had a “limited scope … We did not evaluate CCAP, nor did we fully assess the state’s efforts to prevent, detect, and investigate CCAP fraud.” 

    Consistent across both reports is the recommendation to install electronic attendance gathering tools to ensure that numbers are recorded in real time, reducing the ability for centers to report false numbers. 

    At a rally designed to push back on the Trump administration’s decision to freeze all federal CCAP payments this week, DFL Rep. Carlie Kotyza-Witthuhn said that those systems would be up and running this summer. 

    At that same rally, providers scoffed at the idea that the current system is simple to defraud. Maria Snyder, a St. Paul area provider, said that she is consistently getting surprise visits and audits from state inspectors who rigorously check her attendance records. She said that you can get citations on complete technicalities. 

    “Imagine my surprise at this narrative that it’s so easy to scam child care assistance,” Snyder said.

    At a February 2025 meeting of the House Fraud Prevention and State Agency Oversight Policy Committee, officials said that DHS has a team of four investigators who look into CCAP. 

    Since 2020, the team has recovered about $2.4 million, referring on average five cases annually for criminal investigations since 2021. During the same time frame, DHS has stopped payments to 79 CCAP providers, according to the committee.

    CBS News found that of the day cares that Shirley visited, all but two are licensed. State inspectors visited each of the licensed centers within the past six months, issuing citations related to violations like safety and staff training, but not fraud. 

    Inspectors with the federal Department of Homeland Security and the state visited each of the day cares in Shirley’s video

    One of the day cares, which showed WCCO security footage that which owners said proves children were present the day that Shirley was there, said that DHS asked for two months’ worth of attendance records. The results of these two investigations are not yet public. 

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    Conor Wight

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  • House Oversight Committee to hold hearing on alleged fraud in Minnesota public assistance programs

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    Washington — The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee will hold a hearing next week on alleged fraud in Minnesota public assistance programs, Chairman James Comer, announced Wednesday.

    The hearing is set to take place Jan. 7 and will include testimony from Minnesota GOP state lawmakers who have investigated public assistance fraud, Comer said. Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison, both Democrats, have also been asked to testify at a second hearing on Feb. 10, Comer, a Kentucky Republican, said.

    “The U.S. Department of Justice is actively investigating, prosecuting, and charging fraudsters who have stolen billions from taxpayers, and Congress has a duty to conduct rigorous oversight of this heist and enact stronger safeguards to prevent fraud in taxpayer-funded programs, as well as strong sanctions to hold offenders accountable,” Comer said in a statement.

    The House Oversight Committee is investigating allegations of money laundering and fraud in Minnesota’s public assistance programs. Comer earlier this month asked Walz and Ellison to turn over to House investigators documents and communications about the state’s programs and has sought transcribed interviews with state officials.

    “Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison have either been asleep at the wheel or complicit in a massive fraud involving taxpayer dollars in Minnesota’s social services programs,” Comer said. “American taxpayers demand and deserve accountability for the theft of their hard-earned money.”

    Republican state Rep. Walter Hudson, one of the three Minnesota lawmakers who is set to testify before Congress next week, told CBS News Minnesota he hopes the hearing will offer “nuance and perspective” on the fraud issue.

    “What we’ve seen in the past few days in the wake of the Nick Shirley video is a lot of sensationalism from a lot of different angles and attempts to turn this into a partisan boxing match, when a point of fact, just a few months ago, this was a very bipartisan issue,” Hudson said.

    More than 90 people face federal charges as a result of what a top prosecutor in Minnesota said was “industrial-scale fraud.” The prosecutor, Joe Thompson, said earlier this month that the total amount of fraud in Minnesota could reach $9 billion billed across 14 Medicaid programs that have been deemed “high risk” for fraud. Walz and other state officials, however, have questioned that amount.

    The scandal began when the nonprofit Feeding Our Future, which is based in Minnesota, was accused of stealing from the Federal Child Nutrition Program by falsely claiming to distribute meals during the COVID-19 pandemic. More than 75 people have been charged in the COVID-era fraud scheme, and at least 56 have pleaded guilty.

    Since then, federal prosecutors have uncovered alleged fraud schemes involving a now-defunct housing stabilization program in Minnesota and a Medicaid-backed state program that provides services to children with autism. Homeland Security agents are also conducting investigations into child care centers in the state after a conservative YouTuber named Nick Shirley posted a video online over the weekend alleging that nearly a dozen centers that receive public dollars are not providing any services.

    A CBS News analysis of the day care centers mentioned by Shirley found that all but two have active licenses, according to state records, and state regulators visited the active locations within the last six months. While the centers were cited for safety, cleanliness and other issues, there was no recorded evidence of fraud.

    Still, in response to the allegations, the Department of Health and Human Services announced Tuesday that it has frozen federal child care payments for Minnesota.

    President Trump has denounced Minnesota leaders for their handling of the programs and attacked Somali immigrants, claiming they have “ripped off” the state. Many, but not all, of the defendants charged in the fraud schemes are of Somali descent.

    In response to the Trump administration’s decision to withhold child-care funding to Minnesota, Walz accused the president of “politicizing the issue to defund programs that help Minnesotans.”

    “This is Trump’s long game,” he wrote on social media. “We’ve spent years cracking down on fraudsters. It’s a serious issue — but this has been his plan all along.”

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  • GOP Minnesota lawmaker hopes U.S. House committee hearing on fraud will provide

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    Republican Minnesota state Rep. Walter Hudson is one of the three local lawmakers planning to testify next week at a House Oversight Committee hearing on alleged fraud in the state. 

    He hopes the hearings raise awareness of the fraud problem on a national scale, but with a bit more focus than flair.

    “What we’ve seen in the past few days in the wake of the Nick Shirley video is a lot of sensationalism from a lot of different angles and attempts to turn this into a partisan boxing match, when a point of fact, just a few months ago, this was a very bipartisan issue,” Hudson said.

    He referenced how, back in May, the DFL-controlled state Senate passed a bill to establish the Office of Inspector General to prevent and find fraud in state spending. The bill had overwhelming bipartisan support, passing 60-7.

    “For some reason between then and now, it’s broken down into these partisan corners of the boxing ring. And my hope is that the outcome from next week’s meeting will be drive it back towards nuance and perspective and getting serious about tackling a problem,” Hudson said.

    Although Gov. Tim Walz and Attorney General Ellison aren’t required to attend, Hudson feels it’s in their best interest to testify and share their side of the story.

    “If the things that the governor has been claiming about his efforts to get ahead of this, as he puts it, are true and merited, then that’s something that the American people should know. And he should view this as a great opportunity to break through the noise of what’s been being said over the past few weeks in order to set the record straight as he sees it,” Hudson said.

    Walz testified before the House Oversight Committee last summer on Minnesota’s immigration policies. It led to some tense exchanges with lawmakers, including Minnesota Rep. Tom Emmer.

    With Walz’s run for a third term looming, political experts believe the scrutiny from his critics in Congress could hurt his campaign.

    “You’re going to have a lot of members of Congress, Republicans, who are going to use this as an opportunity to basically go after him,” said David Schultz, a professor of political science at Hamline University. “It’s probably not worth it for him. Also, I’m not sure he’s in a good position being able to provide credible explanations regarding the allegations of fraud.”

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    Jeff Wagner

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  • Fort Worth couple pleads guilty to defrauding dozens of homeowners

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    Christopher Judge and Raquelle Judge of Fort Worth took nearly $5 million from more than 40 clients for unfinished home design and construction projects.

    Christopher Judge and Raquelle Judge of Fort Worth took nearly $5 million from more than 40 clients for unfinished home design and construction projects.

    Getty Images/iStockphoto

    A Fort Worth couple who managed a custom home-building, remodeling and interior design firm pleaded guilty to charges they defrauded clients of millions of dollars.

    According to details released by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Texas on Dec. 31, Christopher Judge and Raquelle Judge, a husband and wife who were managing members of Judge DFW LLC, took nearly $5 million from more than 40 North Texas homeowners for construction and design projects they began but never completed between 2020 and 2023.

    Court records showed the defendants accepted installment payments from the victims for the unfinished projects and commingled victims’ funds instead of keeping project money separate. Additionally, Christopher Judge was accused of falsely representing himself as an architect.

    The scheme entailed Judge DFW offering below-market bids to the victims, according to court records.

    Christopher Judge pleaded guilty Dec. 30 to a charge of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. He faces up to 20 years in federal prison. Raquelle Judge pleaded guilty Dec 17 to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. She faces up to five years in prison. Both defendants also face monetary penalties.

    Raquelle Judge is scheduled to appear in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas in Fort Worth on April 14 for sentencing. A sentencing hearing for Christopher Judge is scheduled for May 12 in the same venue.

    Matt Adams

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Matt Adams is a news reporter covering Fort Worth, Tarrant County and surrounding areas. He previously wrote about aviation and travel and enjoys a good weekend road trip. Matt joined the Star-Telegram in January 2025.

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    Matthew Adams

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  • Advocates, providers warn if daycare funding is withheld, legitimate day cares won’t survive

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    Advocates and providers are warning that if federal funding is withheld, legitimate day cares in Minnesota won’t be able to survive. 

    At risk is $185 million issued under the Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP). The annual funding is used to subsidize services for about 23,000 children from low-income families; the Trump Administration is pledging to freeze this funding after YouTuber Nick Shirley alleged that about ten day cares in Minneapolis are committing fraud by taking millions in government assistance without actually providing a day care service in return. 

    “We have turned off the money spigot, and we are finding the fraud,” Deputy Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Jim O’Neill said. 

    While some of the day cares included in the now viral video are pushing back against accusations of fraud, other providers are worried that their businesses will go under as a result of the blanket freeze on funding. Dozens rallied at the Minnesota State Capitol in St. Paul on Wednesday, including Monique Stumon, the director of School Readiness in Minneapolis. Her day care has been open since 2009; no one is accusing her of fraud, she said. But she explained that without CCAP funding, she wouldn’t be able to keep the doors open for more than a month. 

    “When you get people that are being devastated that had nothing to do with it, how is that right?” Stumon asked, “it is affecting my staff, it is affecting my families. They have to go to work. If we’re not open, what are they gonna do?” 

    Providers said it’s not clear when exactly the money would stop flowing in, explaining that the money is approved on a 21-day cyclical basis. 

    DFL Minnesota State House Representative and Children and Families Committee Co-Chair Carlie Kotyza-Wittuhn was involved with the rally, condemning the Trump Administration for responding to alleged fraud with a blanket policy that would hurt clean operations. 

    “Fraud prevention is about policy. It’s about solutions and not spectacle. But everything we’ve seen from the federal government this week is about politics,” Kotyza-Wittuhn said. 

    Carin Mrotz, a member of the Minnesota Attorney General’s Office appearing on behalf of AG Keith Ellison, took questions and read a statement attributed to Ellison himself, who said that the funding freeze “may well be illegal.” 

    “The Trump administration is threatening funding for the essential childcare services that countless families across Minnesota rely on — apparently all on the basis of one video on social media. To say I am outraged is an understatement,” the statement reads in part, “Fraud is unacceptable and individuals responsible for it should be prosecuted. I’ve been holding fraudsters and scammers accountable for years and I will continue to do so.” 

    Republican Rep. Nolan West, who co-chairs the Children and Families Committee with Rep. Kotyza-Wittuhn, is placing the blame for the potential fallout with Gov. Tim Walz and state Democrats. 

    “Minnesotans are rightfully angry and fed up with the massive fraud in our public assistance programs. Billions of tax dollars meant to help people have been lost to fraudsters. Despite repeated warnings from nonpartisan auditors, Governor Walz and the Democrats did not adequately address these concerns. Now we face the consequences of their inaction,” West said in a statement to WCCO, “We want those who truly need assistance to get it. I hope the Walz administration finally cooperates with the federal government—rather than fighting it—to process payments quickly for legitimate providers.” 

    Shirley’s video reached top members of the Trump Administration, with people like Vice President J.D. Vance and FBI Director Kash Patel responding to his work on social media. O’Neill referenced the video in the announcement on the CPAP funding freeze, stating that the agency has identified the centers mentioned in the video and demanded that the state carry out a “comprehensive audit” of them, including “attendance records, licenses, complaints, investigations and inspections.”

    CBS News conducted its own analysis of the day care centers mentioned by Shirley. All but two have active licenses, according to state records, and all active locations were visited by state regulators within the last six months. The analysis found dozens of citations for safety, cleanliness and other issues, but no recorded evidence of fraud. Some of the day care centers featured in Shirley’s video have pushed back against the fraud allegations. One of the facilities, ABC Learning Center, shared surveillance videos with WCCO that showed parents dropping children off on the same day as Shirley’s visit. 

    According to providers at Wednesday’s rally, license inspectors with the state will show up randomly. Those visits will include questions about attendance records as inspectors look to see if rules revolving around safety and individual child care plans are being followed. What’s still unclear is how often the state is asking fraud-specific questions of day cares who receive funding. 
    The Department of Homeland Security made visits to each of the day cares in Shirley’s video on Monday. The state said that it did the same; the results of both of those sweeps are not yet public.   

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    Conor Wight

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  • Fallout grows from Trump administration’s freezing of Minnesota child care funds

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    After the Trump administration paused federal assistance to child care centers in Minnesota, parents are now wondering if their kids’ day care is in jeopardy, as the government investigates fraud claims. Jonah Kaplan has been following this developing story.

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  • Everything we know about Minnesota’s massive fraud schemes

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    As 2025 draws to a close there is one story that has captured the nation’s attention. It’s not the striking of boats off the coast of Venezuela allegedly transporting drugs, or China’s announcement of military maneuvers around Taiwan. It is the story of fraud in Minnesota, which federal prosecutors estimate could top $9 billion.

    A viral social media video by YouTuber Nick Shirley, which was amplified by Elon Musk, Vice President J.D. Vance and Attorney General Pam Bondi, has put the issue into the center of the national conversation, stoking a scandal that has been brewing in state politics for years. 

    In the wake of the video, the Trump administration announced it is pausing federal funding to child care in Minnesota, with President Trump calling Minnesota a “hub of fraudulent money laundering activity.” The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services also announced sweeping changes to how all states must submit claims for Medicaid-supported daycares, including requiring “a justification and a receipt or photo evidence before we send money to a state.”

    Even before the video spread far across the internet, however, scandal plagued Minnesota. In 2021, federal law enforcement first probed a series of multimillion dollar fraud schemes. Those fraud schemes have led to federal charges against 92 people with 62 convicted — and counting.

    President Trump and other Republican lawmakers have focused attention on the state’s large Somali community, as most of the fraud defendants are of Somali descent, drawing stiff criticism from local officials, including the state’s Democratic Governor Tim Walz, who denounced Mr. Trump’s criticism as “vile, racist lies and slander towards our fellow Minnesotans.”

    Walz, meanwhile, has faced intense scrutiny from both inside and outside Minnesota over his administration’s handling of the crisis. The governor has acknowledged in recent weeks that the fraud problem could stretch into the billions, but disputed the $9 billion figure cited by prosecutors.

    While Shirley’s video focused on allegations of fraud in daycares in Minneapolis, federal investigators told CBS News child care is only “vaguely” a priority for prosecutors, and attention and resources are instead focused on more than a dozen other social services programs in Minnesota, including nutrition, housing and behavioral health.

    Here’s what you need to know:

    Feeding Our Future: The case that started it all

    • This COVID-era $250 million scheme — which now includes upwards of 75 defendants — revolved around a nonprofit group called Feeding Our Future. The group claimed to work with restaurants and caterers to distribute meals to schools and extracurricular programs but instead submitted fake meal count sheets and invoices, raking in millions in administrative fees and getting kickbacks from people who ran their meal distribution sites, prosecutors said. 
    • Feeding Our Future founder Aimee Bock was convicted earlier this year, and several others involved in the scheme have pleaded guilty or been convicted.
    • Early on, Minnesota officials questioned some of the group’s filings and slowed approvals of reimbursements, prompting Feeding Our Future to file a lawsuit accusing the state of racial discrimination. The state auditor’s office found that “the threat of legal consequences and negative media attention” affected the state’s decision-making process about regulatory action against Feeding Our Future.
    • What federal prosecutors called “the largest pandemic era fraud in the United States” is “just the tip of a very large iceberg,” according to FBI Director Kash Patel.

    Fraud in a housing program with “low barriers to entry”

    • This summer, state officials shut down a fairly new program designed to help seniors and people with disabilities find housing after discovering “large-scale fraud.” 
    • A month later, federal prosecutors charged eight people with defrauding the program, which was run through the state’s Medicaid service, by enrolling as providers and submitting millions in “fake and inflated bills.”
    • Another five people were charged with bilking the housing program in mid-December — including two Pennsylvanians with no clear connections to Minnesota who allegedly traveled there in what prosecutors described as “fraud tourism.”
    • Prosecutors said the housing stabilization program was susceptible to fraud because it intentionally had “low barriers to entry” and few record-keeping requirements. They also noted that spending on the program had ballooned to more than $100 million last year, despite initial estimates that it would cost around $2.6 million a year.

    Autism program fraud

    • In recent months, two people were charged with defrauding a third state program — in this case, one that provides services to children with autism. Both defendants were accused of hiring unqualified “behavioral technicians” and submitting false claims to the state that indicated the staff had worked with children enrolled in the program. They also allegedly paid kickbacks to parents who agreed to enroll their children in the program, in some cases sending them as much as $1,500, prosecutors said.
    • One of the autism services defendants, Asha Farhan Hassan, was also charged with running a fraudulent food distribution site as part of the Feeding Our Future scheme. She pleaded guilty to wire fraud in December.
    • First Assistant U.S. Attorney for the District of Minnesota Joseph H. Thompson said the autism services case “is not an isolated scheme.” In total, 14 Medicaid services are under audit and deemed “high risk” for fraud.

    Fraud claims against day care centers

    • YouTuber Nick Shirley drew tens of millions of views in late December when he posted a video that showed him visiting federally supported child care centers around Minneapolis and finding no children present. He alleged nearly a dozen day care centers were not actually providing any service and suggested owners were pocketing the taxpayer funds. 
    • CBS News conducted its own analysis and visited several of the day care centers mentioned by Shirley: all but two have active licenses, according to state records, and all active locations were visited by state regulators within the last six months. One was subjected to an unannounced inspection as recently as Dec. 4, and our review found dozens of citations related to safety, cleanliness, equipment and staff training. Another day care shared security footage of people dropping off young children the same day that Shirley arrived and claimed the day care was empty.

    Fallout and response

    • Shirley’s viral video prompted the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to freeze federal child care funding for the state of Minnesota, which receives roughly $185 million in federal support for child care.
    • President Trump has largely blamed the Somali community, calling Somali immigrants “garbage” who “contribute nothing,” which has incensed Minnesota lawmakers, who have accused him of demonizing the community at large. Mr. Trump ended temporary deportation protections for Somali immigrants who live in Minnesota, claiming without evidence that “Somali gangs are terrorizing the people of that great State.”
    • Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, who is up for reelection, has drawn widespread scrutiny for his handling of fraud in the state. But Walz has defended his administration’s response, saying “we’ve spent years cracking down on fraudsters” and accusing Mr. Trump of “politicizing the issue to defund programs that help Minnesotans.”
    • Republican Rep. James Comer of Kentucky, the chair of the House Oversight Committee, opened an investigation into fraud in Minnesota’s public assistance programs and announced plans for hearings with testimony from Walz and other officials.
    • As the scandal took on new life in December, Walz unveiled a new statewide fraud prevention program, naming Tim O’Malley as the new director of program integrity. 

    Greed or national security risk?

    • The Treasury Department is investigating whether tax dollars from Minnesota’s public assistance programs made their way to al Qaeda affiliate al Shabaab, a U.S.-designated foreign terrorist organization based in Somalia.
    • Multiple federal investigators told CBS News Minnesota there is no evidence taxpayer dollars were directly funneled to al Shabaab. “The vast majority of the money that these folks made went to spending on luxury items for themselves,” said Andy Luger, the former U.S. Attorney who led the office which prosecuted the Feeding Our Future case from 2022 until January. “There was never any evidence that this money went to fund terrorism nor was there any evidence that was the intent of the 70 people we indicted.”
    • A CBS News review of the files shows that defendants spent taxpayer cash on cars, property and luxury travel. They also wired millions in stolen funds overseas, including to banks and companies in China, where finding the recipients of that cash can become an investigative black hole. The defendants also transferred nearly $3 million to accounts in Kenya.

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  • Day care in Minneapolis vandalized, and children’s information stolen, after viral video purporting fraud

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    A Minneapolis day care says that vandals damaged the facility early this week and took information about employees and children from their records, after a YouTube video purporting to expose fraud among day cares in the Twin Cities metro area went viral.

    Officials with the Nokomis Daycare Center in Minneapolis claim that vandals broke in early Tuesday morning, between 3 and 6 a.m. Nokomis was not among the day cares featured in the viral video, posted by rightwing influencer Nick Shirley. 

    Vandals got into the day care through cinder blocks, according to the day care. It appears the vandals first tried to saw into the door of a Family Dollar store next door in the shopping center, but that didn’t work, officials said.

    The manager claims those who broke in went straight to the office, stealing information about the many children who were taken care of there, as well as employees’ information. Minneapolis police said, “No loss was (initially) reported to officers, but late this morning the original reporting party reached out to MPD with additional information about the case, including the loss.”

    WCCO checked with the Minnesota Department of Human Services, which does not show any record of the facility having committed any fraud. The records, which are in the public record, show other minor violations.

    “We are not a part of any harmful things that are being said,” day care manager Nasrulah Mohamed said. “Our licensing has been good, even the inspections. I want to say no intimidation is going to stop us.”

    The video, posted to Shirley’s YouTube account, showed the influencer visiting various day cares and claiming them to be empty. According to X, the video has been seen in excess of 120 million times.

    The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services on Tuesday said it’s freezing child care funds for Minnesota, explicitly citing Shirley’s fraud allegations. Deputy HHS Secretary Jim O’Neill demanded that Minnesota officials carry out a “comprehensive audit” of the day care facilities featured in the video.

    CBS News and WCCO conducted their own analyses of the day care centers. Contrary to Shirley’s claims, all but two have active licenses, according to state records, and all have been visited by state regulators within the last six months.

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    Frankie McLister

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  • Feeding Our Future founder Aimee Bock ordered to forfeit $5.2 million

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    The ringleader of what authorities called the largest pandemic fraud case in the United States has been ordered to forfeit more than $5 million.

    Feeding Our Future founder Aimee Bock was found guilty in March on multiple criminal counts, including conspiracy to commit wire fraud and conspiracy to commit federal programs bribery. She has not yet been sentenced.

    A court order issued Tuesday demands Bock forfeit about $5.2 million. She was also ordered to forfeit clothes, electronics and a Porsche, the value of which will earn her credit toward the money forfeiture. The order states more than $185,000 was previously seized from Bock’s accounts, as well as $13,462 in cash.

    Dozens of people have been convicted in connection with Feeding Our Future. Authorities said Bock and others stole nearly $250 million intended to feed hungry children.

    The forfeiture order comes amid increased scrutiny on Minnesota following widespread fraud accusations.

    In a viral video earlier this week, right-wing YouTuber Nick Shirley alleged that multiple Minnesota day care centers receiving state funds aren’t actually providing services. CBS News conducted its own analysis of the day care centers mentioned by Shirley. All but two have active licenses, according to state records, and all active locations were visited by state regulators within the last six months. The analysis found dozens of citations for safety, cleanliness and other issues, but no recorded evidence of fraud.

    Following Shirley’s video, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said it has frozen federal child care funding for the state. In response, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz on social media said the state has “spent years cracking down on fraudsters” and accused President Trump of “politicizing the issue to defund programs that help Minnesotans.”

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  • Conspiracy theorist-podcaster joins crowded GOP race for Colorado governor, but will candidacy ‘go nowhere’?

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    A conservative podcaster who’s trumpeted false election conspiracies and called for the execution of political rivals, including Gov. Jared Polis, has formally joined the Republican race to become Colorado’s next governor.

    Joe Oltmann, who filed his candidacy paperwork Monday night, now seeks to participate in an electoral system that he has repeatedly tried to undermine.

    He is the 22nd Republican actively seeking to earn the party’s nomination in June. It’s the largest gubernatorial primary field for a major party in Colorado this century, surpassing the GOP’s previous records set first in 2018, and then again in 2022 — and it comes as the party hopes to break Democrats’ electoral dominance in the state.

    That field will almost certainly narrow in the coming months; four Republicans who’d filed have already dropped out. No more than four are likely to make it onto the ballot — either through the state assembly or by gathering signatures — for the summer primary, said Dick Wadhams, the Colorado GOP’s former chairman.

    The size of the primary field doesn’t really matter, he said, because few candidates will actually end up in front of voters. Eighteen candidates filed ahead of the 2022 race, for instance, but just two were on the primary ballot.

    On the Democratic side, a smaller field of seven active candidates is headlined by Attorney General Phil Weiser and U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet. Polis is term-limited from running again.

    For 2026, Wadhams counted only a half-dozen or so Republican candidates whom he considered “credible,” a qualifier that Wadhams said he used “very, very loosely”: Oltmann, state Sens. Barbara Kirkmeyer and Mark Baisley, state Rep. Scott Bottoms, ministry leader Victor Marx, Teller County Sheriff Jason Mikesell and former Congressman Greg Lopez.

    Wadhams said that other than Kirkmeyer, all of those candidates had either supported election conspiracies or a pardon for Tina Peters, the former Mesa County clerk now serving a nine-year sentence for convictions related to providing unauthorized access to voting equipment.

    Oltmann, of Castle Rock, has repeatedly — and falsely — claimed that the 2020 presidential election was not won by Democrat Joe Biden, while calling for the hanging of political opponents. He previously said he wanted to dismember some opponents to send a message, according to the Washington Post, before adding that he was joking.

    In his Dec. 26 announcement video, Oltmann baselessly claimed that Democrats, who have won control of the state amid demographic shifts and anti-Trump sentiment, were in power in Colorado only because of election fraud.

    He said Polis and Secretary of State Jena Griswold, along with 9News anchor Kyle Clark, were part of a “synagogue of Satan.” Polis and Griswold are both Jewish.

    In his announcement, Oltmann painted an apocalyptic picture of the state and said he hoped that three of its elected leaders — Polis, Griswold and Weiser — would all be imprisoned. He pledged to eliminate property taxes, to focus on the “have-nots” and to pardon Peters, whom President Donald Trump has also sought to release by issuing a federal pardon that legal experts say can’t clear Peters of state convictions.

    Oltmann’s decision to join the field is an example of “extreme candidates” from either major party “who file to run but will go nowhere,” predicted Kristi Burton Brown, another former state GOP chair. She now sits on the Colorado State Board of Education.

    She said the size of the Republican primary field was a consequence of Republicans’ difficulties winning statewide races in Colorado. Democrats have won all four constitutional elected offices for two straight election cycles.

    Burton Brown said it “might be a good idea moving forward” to require candidates to do more than just submit paperwork to run for office. That might include a monetary requirement: She said she didn’t support charging candidates significant sums but thought that “requiring some skin in the game” could prevent “unreasonable primaries.”

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  • HHS freezes all child care payments to Minnesota after viral fraud allegations

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    The Department of Health and Human Services said Tuesday it has frozen federal child care funding for the state of Minnesota, citing viral fraud allegations.

    Deputy HHS Secretary Jim O’Neill announced the move in a post on X, writing that “blatant fraud … appears to be rampant in Minnesota and across the country.” 

    “We have turned off the money spigot and we are finding the fraud,” he wrote.

    O’Neill cited a video in which conservative YouTuber Nick Shirley alleged nearly a dozen Minnesota day care centers that receive state funds aren’t actually providing services. O’Neill said the agency has identified the centers mentioned in a video and demanded that the state carry out a “comprehensive audit” of them, including “attendance records, licenses, complaints, investigations and inspections.”

    CBS News conducted its own analysis of day care centers mentioned by Shirley. All but two have active licenses, according to state records, and all active locations were visited by state regulators within the last six months. The analysis found dozens of citations for safety, cleanliness and other issues, but no recorded evidence of fraud.

    Some of the day care centers featured in Shirley’s video have pushed back against the fraud allegations. One of the facilities, ABC Learning Center, shared surveillance videos with CBS News that showed parents dropping children off on the same day as Shirley’s visit.

    A spokesperson for Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said in a statement: “The governor has been combating fraud for years while the President has been letting fraudsters out of jail.  Fraud is a serious issue. But this is a transparent attempt to politicize the issue to hurt Minnesotans and defund government programs that help people.”

    Starting immediately, O’Neill said, all payments from HHS’s Administration for Children and Families nationwide “will require a justification and a receipt or photo evidence before we send money to a state.”

    The Administration for Children and Families sends some $185 million in child care funds to Minnesota annually, the agency’s head, Alex Adams, said in a video shared by HHS.

    Minnesota receives hundreds of millions of federal dollars per year to support its Child Care Assistance Program, which subsidizes day care services for roughly 23,000 children from low-income families. In the current fiscal year ending in September 2026, the federal government’s share of the program was expected to total $218 million, with the state kicking in $155 million, according to state projections.

    The moves by O’Neill came one day after agents from the Department of Homeland Security visited dozens of sites in Minneapolis, part of what DHS Secretary Kristi Noem described as a “massive investigation on child care and other rampant fraud.”

    In recent years, Minnesota has grappled with a litany of alleged fraud schemes targeting the state’s public assistance programs. Dozens of people have been convicted as part of a scheme to bilk nearly $250 million from a federally backed child nutrition program during the pandemic, and federal prosecutors have charged people with defrauding Medicaid-supported autism services and housing stabilization programs.

    Federal prosecutors have estimated that fraudulent payments made by Minnesota’s Medicaid service in recent years could total $9 billion or more, a figure that Walz has disputed.

    The fraud issues have drawn the attention of President Trump, who has focused on the fact that many — though not all — of the defendants are of Somali descent.

    Walz has defended the state’s handling of the situation but vowed to crack down on fraud.

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  • HHS freezes all federal child care funding to Minnesota in wake of fraud claims

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    The Department of Health and Human Services said it has frozen federal child care funding for the state of Minnesota, citing viral fraud allegations. Jonah Kaplan has the latest.

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  • Trump administration says it’s freezing child care funds to Minnesota after series of fraud probes

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    President Donald Trump’s administration announced on Tuesday that it’s freezing child care funds to Minnesota amid ongoing investigations into fraud allegations. Related video above: Group of Minnesota House and Senate Republicans calling on Gov. Tim Walz to resign over fraud investigationsActing director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Jim O’Neill announced on the social platform X that the step is in response to “blatant fraud that appears to be rampant in Minnesota and across the country.”“We have turned off the money spigot and we are finding the fraud,” he said.O’Neill said all payments through the Administration for Children and Families, an agency within the U.S. Health and Human Services Department, will require “justification and a receipt or photo evidence” before money is sent. They have also launched a fraud-reporting hotline and email address, he said.The announcement comes after years of investigation that began with the $300 million scheme at the nonprofit Feeding Our Future, for which 57 defendants in Minnesota have been convicted. Prosecutors said the organization was at the center of the country’s largest COVID-19-related fraud scam, when defendants exploited a state-run, federally funded program intended to provide food for children.A federal prosecutor alleged earlier in December that half or more of the roughly $18 billion in federal funds that supported 14 programs in Minnesota since 2018 may have been stolen. Most of the defendants are Somali Americans, they said.O’Neill also called out a conservative influencer who had posted a video Friday claiming he found that day care centers operated by Somali residents in Minneapolis had committed up to $100 million in fraud. O’Neill said he has demanded Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz submit an audit of these centers that includes attendance records, licenses, complaints, investigations and inspections.Walz, the 2024 Democratic vice presidential nominee, has said fraud will not be tolerated and his administration “will continue to work with federal partners to ensure fraud is stopped and fraudsters are caught.”Walz has said an audit due by late January should give a better picture of the extent of the fraud. He said his administration is taking aggressive action to prevent additional fraud. He has long defended how his administration responded.Minnesota’s most prominent Somali American, Democratic U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar, has urged people not to blame an entire community for the actions of a relative few.

    President Donald Trump’s administration announced on Tuesday that it’s freezing child care funds to Minnesota amid ongoing investigations into fraud allegations.

    Related video above: Group of Minnesota House and Senate Republicans calling on Gov. Tim Walz to resign over fraud investigations

    Acting director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Jim O’Neill announced on the social platform X that the step is in response to “blatant fraud that appears to be rampant in Minnesota and across the country.”

    “We have turned off the money spigot and we are finding the fraud,” he said.

    O’Neill said all payments through the Administration for Children and Families, an agency within the U.S. Health and Human Services Department, will require “justification and a receipt or photo evidence” before money is sent. They have also launched a fraud-reporting hotline and email address, he said.

    The announcement comes after years of investigation that began with the $300 million scheme at the nonprofit Feeding Our Future, for which 57 defendants in Minnesota have been convicted. Prosecutors said the organization was at the center of the country’s largest COVID-19-related fraud scam, when defendants exploited a state-run, federally funded program intended to provide food for children.

    A federal prosecutor alleged earlier in December that half or more of the roughly $18 billion in federal funds that supported 14 programs in Minnesota since 2018 may have been stolen. Most of the defendants are Somali Americans, they said.

    O’Neill also called out a conservative influencer who had posted a video Friday claiming he found that day care centers operated by Somali residents in Minneapolis had committed up to $100 million in fraud. O’Neill said he has demanded Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz submit an audit of these centers that includes attendance records, licenses, complaints, investigations and inspections.

    Walz, the 2024 Democratic vice presidential nominee, has said fraud will not be tolerated and his administration “will continue to work with federal partners to ensure fraud is stopped and fraudsters are caught.”

    Walz has said an audit due by late January should give a better picture of the extent of the fraud. He said his administration is taking aggressive action to prevent additional fraud. He has long defended how his administration responded.

    Minnesota’s most prominent Somali American, Democratic U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar, has urged people not to blame an entire community for the actions of a relative few.

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  • Homeland Security says a fraud investigation is underway in Minneapolis

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    MINNEAPOLIS — Federal Homeland Security officials were conducting a fraud investigation on Monday in Minneapolis, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said.

    The action comes after years of investigation that began with the $300 million scheme at the nonprofit Feeding Our Future, for which 57 defendants in Minnesota have been convicted. Prosecutors said the organization was at the center of the country’s largest COVID-19-related fraud scam, when defendants exploited a state-run, federally funded program intended to provide food for children.

    A federal prosecutor alleged earlier in December that half or more of the roughly $18 billion in federal funds that supported 14 programs in Minnesota since 2018 may have been stolen. Most of the defendants are Somali Americans, they said.

    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said then that fraud will not be tolerated and that his administration “will continue to work with federal partners to ensure fraud is stopped and fraudsters are caught.”

    Noem on Monday posted a video on the social platform X showing DHS officers going into an unidentified business and questioning the person working behind the counter. Noem said that officers were “conducting a massive investigation on childcare and other rampant fraud.”

    “The American people deserve answers on how their taxpayer money is being used and ARRESTS when abuse is found,” U.S. Immigration and Custom Enforcement posted.

    The action comes a day after FBI Director Kash Patel said on X that the agency had “surged personnel and investigative resources to Minnesota to dismantle large-scale fraud schemes exploiting federal programs.”

    Patel said that previous fraud arrests in Minnesota were “just the tip of a very large iceberg.”

    President Donald Trump has criticized Walz’s administration over the fraud cases to date.

    In recent weeks, tensions have been high between state and federal enforcement in the area as the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown focused on the Somali community in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area, which is the largest in the country.

    Among those running schemes to get funds for child nutrition, housing services and autism programs, 82 of the 92 defendants are Somali Americans, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for Minnesota.

    Walz spokesperson Claire Lancaster said that the governor has worked for years to “crack down on fraud” and was seeking more authority from the Legislature to take aggressive action. Walz has supported criminal prosecutions and taken a number of other steps, including strengthening oversight and hiring an outside firm to audit payments to high-risk programs, Lancaster said.

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  • 12/29: CBS Evening News

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    12/29: CBS Evening News – CBS News









































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    Massive winter storm generates life-threatening conditions across U.S.; Trump warns “hell to pay” if Hamas doesn’t disarm.

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  • How a viral video prompted investigations into alleged fraud at day care centers in Minnesota

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    As Homeland Security agents were in Minnesota conducting what DHS Secretary Kristi Noem called a “massive investigation on childcare and other rampant fraud” on Monday, many of their targets came not from tips from the FBI, but from a video posted on social media over the weekend.

    The video, posted by conservative YouTuber Nick Shirley, alleged nearly a dozen day care centers in Minnesota that are receiving public funds are not actually providing any service. As of Monday, the video had been viewed more than 1 million times, according to YouTube’s metrics, and was seen by tens of millions more on X.

    “While we have questions about some of the methods used in the video, we do take the concerns that the video raises about fraud very seriously,” said Minnesota Department of Children, Youth, and Families commissioner Tikki Brown.

    In addition to the DHS investigations, state officials also visited some of the sites on Monday. They told CBS News two of the centers featured in the video already shut down earlier this year, although one of those centers informed the state late Monday that it plans to remain open.

    CBS News conducted its own analysis of nearly a dozen day care centers mentioned by Shirley: all but two have active licenses, according to state records, and all active locations were visited by state regulators within the last six months. One, Sweet Angel Child Care, Inc., was subject to an unannounced inspection as recently as Dec. 4. 

    CBS News’ review also found dozens of citations related to safety, cleanliness, equipment, and staff training, among other violations, but there was no recorded evidence of fraud.

    CBS News visited and called several of the day care centers on Monday but received no responses.

    Monday’s DHS visits come amid what prosecutors allege is a $9 billion COVID-era fraud scandal in Minnesota. Gov. Tim Walz and other state officials have disputed that figure and defended their handling of the crisis.

    There are 14 specific Medicaid-funded programs in Minnesota currently under federal investigation, although child care isn’t one of them.  

    Earlier this month, CBS News detailed how a group of convicted fraudsters allegedly spent some of the millions of taxpayer dollars stolen by people associated with a nonprofit called Feeding Our Future, which was meant to help feed vulnerable children during the pandemic.

    Investigators say fraudulent payouts to the Feeding Our Future program alone were estimated at $250 million, making it the nation’s costliest COVID-era aid scam. 

    Walz, a Democrat, previously agreed with an estimate from First Assistant U.S. Attorney Joe Thompson that fraud across all programs, including the Feeding Our Future scheme, which is not a DHS-administered program, could total $1 billion. 

    “The fraud is not small. It isn’t isolated. The magnitude cannot be overstated,” Thompson said last week.  

    So far, 78 people have been arrested in the Feeding Our Future scheme. A majority of them are Somali Americans, although the program’s leader, Aimee Bock, who was convicted earlier this year, is not. Minnesota has the nation’s largest Somali population.

    President Trump has called Minnesota a “hub of fraudulent money laundering activity” and has lashed out against the state’s Somali community, announcing last month that he would end protected status against deportation for Somalis in the state. Earlier this month, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement launched Operation Metro Surge in the Twin Cities, leading to more than 400 arrests.

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  • How a viral video prompted investigations into alleged fraud at Minnesota day cares

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    As Homeland Security agents were in Minnesota conducting what DHS Secretary Kristi Noem called a “massive investigation on childcare and other rampant fraud,” many of their targets came not from tips from the FBI, but from a video posted on social media over the weekend. CBS Minnesota’s Jonah Kaplan reports.

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  • Homeland Security to investigate over 30 sites in Minneapolis on Monday for what it calls

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    Homeland Security agents are in Minneapolis on Monday “conducting a massive investigation on childcare and other rampant fraud,” DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said. 

    Two DHS officials told CBS News that agents from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations branch are expected to inspect over 30 sites in the city on Monday alone. 

    Noem and DHS posted videos of HSI agents inspecting several sites, including one that appears to be a smoke shop. 

    HSI has historically investigated criminal activity with an international or immigration nexus, such as child exploitation, drug smuggling, identity theft and fraud. Under the second Trump administration, many HSI agents have been assigned to work alongside ICE’s immigration enforcement branch to find and arrest immigrants suspected of being in the U.S. illegally.

    Asked whether the effort in Minneapolis is focused on the suspected fraud there or immigration enforcement, a senior DHS official said, a “little of everything.”

    The HSI investigation comes a day after FBI Director Kash Patel called previous fraud arrests in Minnesota “just the tip of a very large iceberg.” He said that the agency has “surged personnel and investigative resources” to the state to investigate fraud. 

    Earlier this month, federal prosecutors said the total fraud in Minnesota’s Medicaid programs could be as much as $9 billion, a figure that Gov. Tim Walz and other state officials have disputed

    This summer, Walz agreed with a previous estimate from First Assistant U.S. Attorney Joe Thompson that fraud across all programs, including the Feeding Our Future scheme, which is not a DHS-administered program, could total $1 billion. 

    Thompson told reporters that there are federal investigations into all 14 of the Medicaid programs deemed “high risk” for fraud, which are also subject to a third-party payment audit.

    More than 90 people have been accused, and in many cases convicted, of bilking hundreds of millions of dollars from the state, putting Walz’s administration in the hot seat and drawing attacks from President Trump.

    This is a developing story. 

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  • Homeland Security to inspect 30+ sites in Minneapolis on Monday in what agency calls

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    Homeland Security agents are in Minneapolis on Monday “conducting a massive investigation on childcare and other rampant fraud,” DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said. 

    Two DHS officials tell CBS News that agents from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations branch are expected to inspect over 30 sites in the city on Monday alone. 

    HSI has historically investigated criminal activity with an international or immigration nexus, such as child exploitation, drug smuggling, identity theft and fraud. Under the second Trump administration, many HSI agents have been assigned to work alongside ICE’s immigration enforcement branch to find and arrest immigrants suspected of being in the U.S. illegally.

    Asked whether this effort in Minneapolis is focused on the suspected fraud there or immigration enforcement, a senior DHS official said, a “little bit of everything.”

    The HSI investigation comes a day after FBI Director Kash Patel called previous fraud arrests in Minnesota “just the tip of a very large iceberg.” He said that the agency has “surged personnel and investigative resources” to the state to investigate fraud. 

    Earlier this month, federal prosecutors said the total fraud in Minnesota’s Medicaid programs could be as much as $9 billion, a figure that Gov. Tim Walz and other state officials have disputed

    This summer, Walz agreed with a previous estimate from Thompson that fraud across all programs, including the Feeding Our Future scheme, which is not a DHS-administered program, could total $1 billion. 

    Thompson told reporters that there are federal investigations into all 14 of the Medicaid programs deemed “high risk” for fraud, which are also subject to a third-party payment audit.

    More than 90 people have been accused, and in many cases convicted, of bilking hundreds of millions of dollars from the state, putting Walz’s administration in the hot seat and drawing attacks from President Trump.

    This is a developing story. 

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    Cole Premo

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  • Fighting AI-driven fraud in the new year

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    Financial institutions are on high alert going into 2026 as fraudsters continue to tap AI for their schemes.  In fact, 67% of financial institution leaders agree that fraud events are increasing, driven by bad actors’ use of tools like generative AI, according to Alloy’s 2026 State of Fraud report, released Dec. 9. The report surveyed more than 500 industry leaders at enterprise banks, regional […]

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    Whitney McDonald

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