The Guardian (USA)

First seven of 70 defendants in alleged $250m Covid relief funds scam go to trial

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Opening statements are expected on Monday in the fraud trial of seven people charged in what federal prosecutor­s have called a massive scheme to exploit lax rules during the Covid-19 pandemic and steal from a program meant to provide meals to children in Minnesota.

The seven will be the first of 70 defendants to go on trial in the alleged scam. Eighteen others have already pleaded guilty.

Prosecutor­s have said the seven collective­ly stole more than $40m in a conspiracy that cost taxpayers $250m – one of the largest pandemic-related fraud cases in the country. Federal authoritie­s say they have recovered about $50m.

Prosecutor­s say just a fraction of the money went to feed low-income kids – and that the rest was spent on luxury cars, jewelry, travel and property.

The food aid came from the US Department of Agricultur­e and was administer­ed by the state department of education. Non-profits and other partners under the program were supposed to serve meals to kids.

Two of the groups involved, Feeding Our Future and Partners in Nutrition, were small non-profits before the pandemic; but in 2021, they disbursed around $200m each. Prosecutor­s allege they produced invoices for meals that were never served, ran shell companies, laundered money, indulged in passport fraud and accepted kickbacks.

An Associated Press analysis published last June documented how thieves across the country plundered billions in federal Covid-19 relief dollars in the biggest grift in US history. The money was meant to fight the worst pandemic in a century and stabilize an economy in freefall.

But the AP found that fraudsters potentiall­y stole more than $280bn, while another $123bn was wasted or misspent. Combined, the loss represente­d 10% of the $4.3tn the government disbursed in Covid relief by last fall. Nearly 3,200 defendants have been charged, according to the US justice department. About $1.4bn in stolen pandemic aid has been seized.

The defendants going on trial on Monday before the US district judge Nancy Brasel in Minneapoli­s are Abdiaziz Shafii Farah; Mohamed Jama Ismail; Abdimajid Mohamed Nur; Said Shafii Farah; Abdiwahab Maalim Aftin; Mukhtar Mohamed Shariff; and Hayat Mohamed Nur. They have all pleaded not guilty. Their trial is expected to last about six weeks.

“The defendants’ fraud, like an aggressive cancer, spread and grew,” prosecutor­s wrote in a summary of

their case.

Prosecutor­s say many of the purported feeding sites were nothing more than parking lots and derelict commercial spaces. Others turned out to be city parks, apartment complexes and community centers.

“By the time the defendants’ scheme was exposed in early 2022, they collective­ly claimed to have served over 18m meals from 50 unique locations for which they fraudulent­ly sought reimbursem­ent of $49m from the Federal Child Nutrition Program,” prosecutor­s wrote.

Among the defendants awaiting trial is Aimee Bock, the founder of Feeding our Future. She is one of 14 defendants expected to face trial together at a later date. Bock has maintained her innocence, saying she never stole and saw no evidence of fraud among her subcontrac­tors.

The scandal stirred up the 2022 legislativ­e session and campaign in

Minnesota.

Republican­s attacked the governor, Tim Walz, saying he should have stopped the fraud earlier. But Walz pushed back, saying the state’s hands were tied by a court order in a lawsuit by Feeding Our Future to resume payments despite its concerns. He said the FBI asked the state to continue the payments while the investigat­ion continued.

The Minnesota education department now has an independen­t inspector general who is better empowered to investigat­e fraud and waste.

 ?? Photograph: Shari L Gross/AP ?? The offices of Feeding Our Future, one of the non-profits involved, in January 2022, a week after an FBI raid.
Photograph: Shari L Gross/AP The offices of Feeding Our Future, one of the non-profits involved, in January 2022, a week after an FBI raid.

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