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Prosecutors say Ahmed Ghed fraudulently claimed to be running a child nutrition site, feeding thousands of children a day in St. Paul and taking federal COVID-19 relief funds to do so.
A federal jury in March convicted Aimee Bock on numerous charges of conspiracy, wire fraud and bribery for leading the nation’s largest fraud involving pandemic relief.
State officials were right to disqualify Partners In Nutrition from federal food program participation last year as part of the $250 million Feeding Our Future fraud investigation, a Minnesota ...
The alleged theft of a quarter of a billion dollars was referred to as the “Feeding Our Future,” scandal—named after Ms. Bock ...
Here’s how to get started with as little as $10 How meal program fraud works In March, a jury found Aimee Bock, founder and executive director of Feeding Our Future, guilty on all counts of fraud.
The scam was executed by claiming to serve more meals to children in need than was the case. Like other organizations taking ...
While Bock is in jail awaiting sentencing, 47 suspects “have been indicted for defrauding a federally funded child nutrition program,” according to the FBI. The scam was executed by claiming to serve ...
Lead prosecutor Joe Thompson, now interim U.S. Attorney for Minnesota, speaks at a news conference in Minneapolis in March, after a jury convicted Feeding Our Future founder Aimee Bock and former ...
Seventy-two people have been charged in the Feeding Our Future fraud scheme, including the mastermind Aimee Bock, who was found guilty at trial in March.
A jury found Feeding Our Future’s founder, Aimee Bock, guilty of multiple charges back in March. Click here for KSTP’s full coverage of the Feeding Our Future scheme.
According to court documents filed Thursday, Ahmed Abdullahi Ghedi pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud and one count of money laundering.