Walz, Omar and the billion‑dollar Minnesota fraud
- Armstrong Williams
- 5 days ago
- 4 min read
PUBLISHED: December 9, 2025 | www.baltimoresun.com

Minnesota is now facing one of the largest documented government service fraud scandals in American history. Under Gov. Tim Walz’s evidently unwatchful eye, federal prosecutors have estimated that approximately $1 billion in taxpayer funds have been siphoned from multiple state- and federally funded social service programs over the last five years.
As of this writing, 87 individuals have been charged in connection with the scheme, with 61 convictions already secured, and more charges continue to be filed against these fraudsters. The bulk of the fraud scheme centers around two government programs.
The first target was Feeding Our Future, which administered federal child nutrition program sites during the COVID-19 pandemic. Beginning in April 2020, the organization’s founder and executive director oversaw an elaborate fraud operation that involved over 250 fake meal sites throughout Minnesota, siphoning over $250 million in taxpayer funds through their fraudulent conduct.
And the second is related to Minnesota’s Early Intensive Developmental and Behavioral Intervention (EIDBI) program, meant for people with autism. There, the defendants fraudulently billed Medicaid for autism therapy services that were never provided. They recruited children from Minneapolis’ Somali community who did not have autism diagnoses. Their parents were then paid between $300 and $1,500 per month as kickbacks to keep their children enrolled. To put this into perspective, one company billed Medicaid over $850,000 in one year for one child and was paid out $438,000.
Fraud committed by certain members of the Somali community under the EIDBI autism treatment program has reached a scale that federal prosecutors are still working to determine. But they know at this point that fraud conducted within these two programs and others has likely reached over a billion dollars in fraudulent claims.
None of this should have happened. It could have been stopped far earlier.
There were early warning signs as far back as July 2019, when Minnesota state officials discovered that there was potential fraud occurring within the Feeding Our Future program. However, according to former employees of the Minnesota Department of Education, after the state caught wind of the potential fraud, they temporarily stopped payments to Feeding Our Future, who sued, and then state officials, under pressure from Feeding Our Future leadership, decided to continue providing the payments.
When everything came to light, Walz blamed the judge in the Feeding Our Future case for forcing the state to continue making the payments. This, however, was evidently a blatant misrepresentation of the facts, because the judge himself came out and said, “The Department of Education voluntarily resumed payments and informed the court that [Feeding Our Future] resolved the ‘serious deficiencies’ that prompted it to suspend payments temporarily. All of the Minnesota Department of Education food reimbursements payments to [Feeding Our Future] were made voluntarily, without any court order.”
Any meaningful due diligence seemingly would have tipped off investigators to the blatant fraud that was occurring. Reports note that nearly $700 million in EIDBI claims have been paid out, with notable spikes around the same period that dozens of new clinics popped up within the state, which even state officials themselves were concerned about at the time, wondering how many were doing actual work.
So how did Minnesota’s darling Somali-American congressional representative, Ilhan Omar, respond to the massive allegations against members of her community?
In typical “Squad” fashion, she redirected her answers toward President Donald Trump’s response.
A question has also been raised of whether Omar knew that this fraud was occurring, or at least should have been tipped off to the fact that something was amiss. One of her own former campaign officials, for example, was convicted of stealing millions of dollars and has on multiple occasions been seen with another member of the fraud scheme who similarly stole millions of dollars.
Now, predictably, Trump did not mince his words when discussing the issue. He called Somali immigrants “garbage.” Of course, not every single Somali immigrant was a part of this massive fraud scheme; only a fraction of them were. And President Trump’s response, while not appropriate, shows that he evidently harbors a deep resentment for those entering our country from abroad and siphoning billions in taxpayer money. This is an issue that Americans had to contend with for four years during Joe Biden’s presidency, as millions of migrants entered the United States unlawfully and were met with three square meals a day and cozy hotel beds to sleep on.
If there are two things that we should take away from the situation, it is that, first, Tim Walz would have made an awful vice president if he allowed this level of fraud to occur right under his nose. And second, that we need competent leaders who are unwilling to look the other way in the face of obvious fraud.
Tim Walz is not one of those leaders.
Armstrong Williams (www.armstrongwilliams.com; @arightside) is a political analyst, syndicated columnist and owner of the broadcasting company, Howard Stirk Holdings. He is also part owner of The Baltimore Sun.