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Minnesota fraud mastermind sentenced to 41.5 years in prison
Aimee Bock, the architect of the notorious ‘Feeding Our Future’ fraud, has been sentenced to 41.5 years in prison by a Minnesota judge. This scheme misappropriated close to $250 million from COVID relief funds, which were intended to provide meals for underprivileged children. While Bock’s defense team claimed that many aspects of the operation were beyond her control, prosecutors stressed the severe impact and the breach of public trust resulting from her actions.
The former executive of a Minnesota nonprofit found herself facing nearly 42 years behind bars on Thursday, after masterminding a $250 million fraud scheme involving pandemic relief funds.
Leading the nonprofit ‘Feeding Our Future,’ Aimee Bock was convicted last year on counts of conspiracy, fraud, and bribery.
Although the organization claimed to feed millions of children in need throughout the pandemic, the Justice Department labeled it as the “single largest COVID-19 fraud scheme in the country,” according to a report by The Associated Press.

In court, evidence included a luxury car tied to the defendant in the Feeding Our Future fraud case. Federal prosecutors argued that the nonprofit was a front for an extensive child-nutrition fraud operation. (Sherburne County Sheriff’s Office/Department of Justice)
A TIMELINE OF THE ‘LARGEST COVID-19 FRAUD SCHEME’ IN THE UNITED STATES
Prosecutors told the court the nonprofit functioned as a “cash pipeline,” relying on a web of fake distribution sites, fabricated lists of children and kickbacks.
Bock and her co-conspirators funneled the stolen taxpayer funds into lavish personal purchases, including real estate, luxury cars and international travel, the outlet reported.
During sentencing, Bock told the federal court, “I understand I failed. I failed the public, my family, everyone.”

Aimee Bock, executive director of nonprofit Feeding Our Future, was among 60 people charged in a $250 million scheme to defraud the federal government. (Shari L. Gross/Star Tribune)
MINNESOTA RESIDENTS SLAM WALZ, STATE OVERSIGHT AFTER $250M FEEDING OUR FUTURE FRAUD
Her attorney, Kenneth Udoibok, argued she should serve no more than three years, insisting she provided critical information to investigators and was unfairly scapegoated, the AP reported.
Former lead prosecutor Joe Thompson countered that Bock “did everything she could to earn this long sentence” and that the case “changed our state forever.”
The sprawling investigation has led to the convictions of dozens of people, many hailing from the state’s large Somali community.

Government exhibits BB-50 and BB-1 display designer bags, jewelry, cash piles, a Lamborghini photo, and a white Mercedes labeled as “Handy Helpers Spending” to illustrate the lavish lifestyle linked to the network surrounding Aimee Bock. Prosecutors did not claim Bock personally purchased these items. (Department of Justice)
MASSIVE MEDICAID FRAUD SCHEME PUTS MINNESOTA’S FEDERAL FUNDING AT RISK — AND FALLOUT COULD WIDEN
Authorities are continuing to uncover broader social service fraud in Minnesota, with new charges filed this week against suspects accused of stealing millions through fraudulent Medicaid housing subsidies, illicit childcare center reimbursements, and more than $21 million billed for unnecessary or unprovided autism therapy.
The Feeding Our Future scheme spurred the Trump administration’s surge of federal officers to the Minneapolis-St. Paul area last winter, which led to violent protests and multiple fatal federal officer-involved shootings.

A Department of Justice conspiracy diagram presented at trial shows Aimee Bock at the top of a fraud network involving Salim Said and Safari Group operators. Prosecutors said Bock approved claims that funneled millions to men in her network. (Department of Justice)
President Donald Trump previously labeled the state a “hub of fraudulent money laundering activity” and claimed “Somali gangs are terrorizing the people of that great State, and BILLIONS of Dollars are missing.”
The majority of the Somali-descendant defendants are U.S. citizens, according to the AP.