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The case, commonly referred to as Feeding Our Future, the name of the nonprofit at the center of the fraud, has resulted in charges against 72 people. That’s just a portion of the hundreds of ...
MINNEAPOLIS — Dozens of people, perhaps hundreds, linked to a sprawling child nutrition fraud case will never face criminal charges. Why? Federal prosecutors don’t have the resources to go ...
Aimee Bock — the founder and executive director of Feeding Our Future — was one of 70 people charged in the case.
Hadith Ahmed was the first Feeding Our Future employee to testify in the trial, revealing how a massive fraud scheme unfolded and admitting he got kickbacks from defendants.
At the height of Feeding our Future’s fraud, they claimed to serve 12 million meals in a month – enough to feed every child in the state more than eight meals.
Feeding Our Future founder among 47 charged in massive fraud scheme The charges amount to one of the largest federal fraud cases ever brought in Minnesota.
Federally indicted Feeding Our Future leader Aimee Bock is alleging that the Minnesota Department of Education purposely misspelled words, mislabeled and deleted documents to prevent computer ...
The 120-page report details the ways in which the department failed to act on prior warning signs about the nonprofit and was ill-prepared to hold Feeding Our Future accountable even before the ...
Five out of seven defendants accused of swindling more than $40 million in the Feeding our Future COVID relief fraud case have been found guilty on multiple counts. The trial hit a speed bump ...
Feeding Our Future fraud: $250M stolen from program providing meals to low-income kids, 47 charged Gov't billed for more than 125M fake meals, with some defendants making up kids with online ...
The biggest recipient among the Feeding Our Future sites where charges have not been filed was a low-income apartment building in St. Paul where more than $3.4 million worth of meals were reimbursed.