Jury selection to begin for alleged ringleader of $250M pandemic fraud
scheme in Minnesota
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[February 03, 2025]
By STEVE KARNOWSKI
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Jury selection begins Monday in the trial of the
alleged ringleader of a scheme to exploit the COVID-19 pandemic that
federal prosecutors say stole $250 million from a program meant to feed
children, the latest chapter in a broader case that has also included an
attempt to bribe a juror and political repercussions against Gov. Tim
Walz.
But the attorney for Aimee Bock, the founder of Feeding our Future — the
group that prosecutors say was at the heart of the plot — insists that
she’s innocent.
Bock and a co-defendant will be the second group to stand trial in what
prosecutors call one of the country’s largest COVID-19-related fraud
cases anywhere. The first trial resulted in the conviction of five
people last year and received widespread attention after some defendants
and people linked with them allegedly tried — unsuccessfully — to bribe
a juror with a bag of $120,000 in cash. The juror went straight to
police instead.
Bock is one of 70 defendants charged in the overall case. They're being
tried in batches. Thirty of them have already pleaded guilty to various
charges, including some who had been scheduled to go on trial with Bock
this week. One defendant from the first trial was sentenced this month
to 17 1/2 years, the longest prison term handed down in the case so far.
Here's a look at a trial that's expected to last around six weeks:
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The big picture
Federal prosecutors allege that the conspiracy revolved around two
groups — Feeding Our Future and Partners in Nutrition — that were both
small nonprofits that were approved as sponsors of the Federal Child
Nutrition Program before the pandemic. But the two groups dramatically
increased the number of meal sites that they claimed to be sponsoring
during the pandemic. Feeding Our Future went from receiving and
disbursing $3.4 million in federal funds in 2019 to nearly $200 million
in 2021. Sites sponsored by Feeding Our Future falsely claimed to be
serving thousands of children daily, prosecutors allege.
“In all, Feeding Our Future fraudulently obtained and disbursed more
than $240 million in Federal Child Nutrition Program funds during the
Covid-19 pandemic,” prosecutors wrote in a preview of their case this
month. The total included administrative fees to which Feeding Our
Future was not entitled, they said.
“Bock and other Feeding Our Future employees also solicited and received
bribes and kickbacks from individuals and companies sponsored by Feeding
Our Future,” prosecutors continued. “Feeding Our Future operated a
pay-to-play scheme, where individuals seeking to operate fraudulent
sites under the sponsorship of Feeding Our Future had to kick back a
portion of their fraudulent proceeds to Feeding Our Future employees.”
The defense
Bock's attorney, Kenneth Udoibok, said they'll argue at trial that she's
not guilty of the federal fraud, conspiracy and bribery charges against
her.
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Aimee Bock, the executive director of the nonprofit Feeding Our
Future, speaks Jan. 27, 2022, in St. Anthony, Minn. (Shari L.
Gross/Star Tribune via AP, File)
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“She's innocent and she's going to express that belief, that truth,
until the day she dies,” Udoibok said in an interview last week.
“This woman was hoodwinked, played by people she trusted. She
trusted that these people that have pled guilty, she trusted them to
have delivered food to needy children, needy people, deserving
folks. And they played her.”
Udoibok said the large number of guilty pleas, and the fact that
they're now down to just Bock and a co-defendant for this trial,
doesn't change the defense strategy. He said the jury will be able
to see the difference between her and the rest of the defendants
despite the complexities of the overall case.
“She accepted no bribes or kickbacks from anybody. She did not know
that the invoices were fraudulent. She was focused on providing as
much access to needy people as possible, that is, feeding adults and
children during COVID and during the George Floyd protests,” Udoibok
said.
An attorney for Bock's co-defendant, Salim Ahmed Said, did not
return a call seeking comment on the case.
The bribe
Five people were charged with bribery because of the attempt in the
first trial, including three who were on trial at the time. Two of
the five have already pleaded guilty, while one more is scheduled to
change his plea to guilty in the bribery case in March. U.S.
Attorney Andrew Luger described the elaborate scheme as “something
out of a mob movie.”
U.S. District Judge Nancy Brasel, who is overseeing Bock's trial,
has ordered extra steps to shield the jurors' identities and prevent
any further bribe attempts.
The political repercussions
The federal money flowed through the state Department of Education,
and the loss of 250 million taxpayer dollars became a major
political problem for Democratic Gov. Tim Walz. His administration
largely blamed federal authorities, saying the FBI asked them not to
cut off the flow of funds to protect its investigation. Walz's
critics insist he should have done more. While Walz comfortably won
reelection in 2022, the issue resurfaced after presidential
candidate Kamala Harris picked him as her running mate.
This year, Republicans in the closely divided Minnesota Legislature
have made fighting fraud in government programs one of their top
issues, and not just because of Feeding our Future. Walz himself has
proposed his own anti-fraud package. But the 2025 legislative
session is off to a contentious start and it's not clear yet if the
sides can reach the bipartisan consensus that will be needed to pass
anything.
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