First: It’s not happening. Minnesota would never let this happen. Somalis wouldn’t do this… they’re just trying to make better lives for themselves in Minnesota.
Second: Okay some fraud might be happening.. but it’s not that bad… and plenty of non-Somalis do it too!
Third: Damn… Somalis really engage in fraud at an insanely high rates. They’ve already defrauded the state of Minnesota for what’s likely billions in housing and autism schemes. That’s gotta be the worst of it though… right? … *crickets* … Right?!
Fourth: U.S. Attorney Joe Thompson thinks Minnesota may have been defrauded for over $9 billion across 14 Medicaid programs since 2018. WTF!
For years, fraudsters mollywhopped Minnesota’s Medicaid programs while state officials stood paralyzed — not because they couldn’t see the red flags, but because acting on them meant risking accusations of racism.
Minnesotan governance *thinking sounds*:
OMG I might be called a racist! I could never recover from being called a… word! It has letters! It has syllables! It would truly be the end of me. Therefore I should just let my state get pilfered to the tune of billions by descendants of real-life pirates who flew in from places many subconsciously classify as “shithole countries.”
When providers sued alleging discrimination, the state backed off. When protesters accused oversight agencies of bigotry, the state flinched. And when billing exploded 40x beyond projections, the state kept paying.
It took The U.S. Feds (the only people in this story who don’t flinch at local political pressure) to start bringing cases and forcing Minnesota to react.
On December 18, 2025, First Assistant U.S. Attorney Joe Thompson said 14 Minnesota‑run programs flagged as high-risk had been backed by roughly $18 billion in federal funds since 2018, and that “half or more” may have been stolen. (R)
Thompson’s own framing: “That’s the $18 billion question.”
And note what “since 2018” actually means: that’s the lookback window on the claims data — not the year fraud began. If you think sophisticated fraud rings popped into existence the moment the spreadsheet starts, you’re not a serious person.
Early Intensive Developmental and Behavioral Intervention (autism)
Integrated Community Supports
Nonemergency Medical Transportation
Peer Recovery Services
Adult Rehabilitative Mental Health Services
Adult Day Services
Personal Care Assistance/Community First Services and Supports
Recuperative Care
Individualized Home Supports
Adult Companion Services
Night Supervision
Assertive Community Treatment
Intensive Residential Treatment Services
Housing Stabilization Services
Thompson described “staggering, industrial-scale fraud” and said bluntly (R):
"I don't make these generalizations in a hasty way"
"When I say a significant amount, I'm talking on the order of half or more"
"But we'll see. When I look at the claims data and the providers, I see more red flags than I see legitimate providers."
He’s describing entities that appear to be created primarily to extract money — providers that, on the data, look like they’re delivering little or no legitimate service at all. That’s why he framed it as an “industrial-scale” problem, not a handful of bad actors.
Minnesota’s response?
Governor Tim Walz called the estimate “sensationalized” and Minnesota state officials allege they’ve only seen evidence of “tens of millions” in fraud. (R)
Think about that. Federal prosecutors say the fraud could exceed $9 billion. The state says they’ve only confirmed tens of millions.
That’s not a minor discrepancy. This is either: (A) a confession of staggering incompetence or (B) active denial.
Either the state of Minnesota genuinely has no idea what happened under its watch, or it’s downplaying a political catastrophe to avoid accountability.
The Feds Put Minnesota on a Leash: Timeline of DFL Incompetence (State → Feds)
Minnesota didn’t get ahead of this. It got forced into action… first by runaway spending, then by federal agencies threatening funding, subpoenas, and enforcement.
Oct 29, 2025: Walz orders a third-party audit and pauses payments up to 90 days for 14 “high-risk” Medicaid services. (R)
Dec 5, 2025: CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz warns CMS can cut off federal Medicaid funding in 60 days unless MN meets conditions: weekly updates, freeze enrollment of all high-risk providers for six months, confirm provider legitimacy, and submit a corrective action plan. (R)
Dec 12, 2025: Treasury (Bessent) says it will issue a Geographic Targeting Order for money services businesses, with FinCEN notices of investigation and IRS scrutiny; Treasury is also probing the allegation about funds potentially flowing to Al-Shabab. (R)
Dec 18, 2025: Thompson goes public with the “half or more” estimate + “industrial-scale fraud,” alongside new charges. (R)
Dec 22, 2025: House Oversight demands Treasury produce SARs tied to named MSBs, plus Riverside Plaza Apartments and Karmel Mall; deadline Jan 9, 2026. (R)
Dec 23–24, 2025: SBA Administrator Kelly Loeffler notifies Walz the SBA is halting >$5.5M in annual federal support to SBA resource partners operating in Minnesota. (R)
The Playbook: How Fraud Flourished Under the Woke Minnesota Regime
This isn’t speculation about “wokeness,” Minnesota acknowledges that it got lethally swindled in its official records.
1. The Feeding Our Future Template
A pattern was established early. When the Minnesota Department of Education (MDE) started scrutinizing Feeding Our Future’s suspicious applications, the nonprofit didn’t just push back — it filed lawsuits, alleging “RACISM!!!” (R)
In June 2021, over 100 protesters (mostly Somali) gathered outside MDE’s offices with signs reading “F.O.F. Feeds our kids, MDE won’t” and accused the department of discrimination.
At least two people who attended that rally were later charged in the fraud scheme. You can’t even make this shit up. (R) Inmates running the asylum levels of gall.
Did the MDE hold the line? No. Minnesota’s own Legislative Auditor found that MDE officials admitted:
“The threat of legal consequences and negative media attention affected MDE’s decisions about the regulatory action it did and did not take.” (R)
Hold up. Read that again. Minnesota state officials, in their own words, acknowledged that fear of lawsuits and bad press caused them to back off oversight of an organization that was stealing hundreds of millions of dollars.
Even worse, the Legislative Auditor explicitly says MDE already had the authority and obligation to take basic steps — and that “no additional authority” was needed regardless of litigation threats or negative press.
The result: Feeding Our Future’s reimbursements exploded 2,800% between fiscal years 2020 and 2021. MDE kept paying. Federal prosecutors now call it “the largest pandemic fraud in the United States” — approximately $250 million stolen.
A Somali-American Insider’s Verdict: “Feckless Fear”
This narrative isn’t only coming from right-wing critics. It’s also coming from Kayseh Magan, a Somali-American who worked as a fraud investigator in the Minnesota Attorney General’s Office.
In a 2024 column for the Minnesota Reformer, Magan wrote that fraudsters:
“Sought to exploit the burgeoning political power of the Somali community, and the feckless fear that establishment politicians and state agencies show when confronted with charges of racism or Islamophobia.” (R)
Feckless fear. That’s a Somali-American fraud investigator describing his own state government.
Magan explained the dynamic bluntly:
“Members of my community must cease the leveraging of race and religion to avoid accountability, and Minnesota’s (mostly DFL) politicians must muster the courage to address the systemic fraud in our publicly funded programs.”
He noted that legitimate Somali providers told him it was “challenging to keep recipients because some rival providers offer kickbacks to induce recipients to switch.”
The honest providers were being undercut by criminals, and the state was too woke and afraid to act.
Program Design: An Open Invitation to Steal
It wasn’t just political cowardice. Minnesota designed its programs as if the goal was to make fraud easy.
Housing Stabilization Services: A Case Study in Stupidity
The Department of Justice’s own press release is damning: Housing Stabilization Services had “low barriers to entry and minimal records requirements” that made it “susceptible to fraud.” (R)
Minnesota created a program where you could:
Enroll as a provider with minimal vetting
Submit paper claims with little documentation
Get paid within 30-90 days with no pre-payment verification
The state originally projected HSS would cost about $2.6 million per year.
(DOJ says the program paid out $21M (2021), $42M (2022), $74M (2023), $104M (2024), and $61M in the first half of 2025.) (R)
That’s 40x the projection by 2024. Did anyone ask questions? Did anyone stop the bleeding? No. They kept paying as though they were being extorted by some invisible woke mafia until federal prosecutors started making arrests.
Minnesota ultimately terminated Housing Stabilization Services statewide on Oct. 31, 2025, and DHS said it sought termination due to widespread fraud — with the termination receiving final approval from CMS. (R)
“Fraud Tourism” — Word Got Out
Thompson:
“Minnesota has become a magnet for fraud… we have developed a fraud tourism industry.” (R)
The Minnesota program was so easy to loot that people from other states flew in to get a piece of the action.
Federal prosecutors used the term “fraud tourism” to describe defendants (including two Philadelphia men charged in December 2025) who allegedly created Minnesota LLCs specifically to bill HSS despite having no ties to the state. (R)
Prosecutors said they submitted up to $3.5M in “fake and inflated” Medicaid reimbursement bills.
One defendant allegedly heard Minnesota’s programs presented “a good opportunity to make money” and came to exploit them.
Minnesota was an easy mark.
Integrated Community Supports: Bill 24 Hours a Day
ICS allows providers to bill up to 24 hours per day for qualifying clients. WHAT THE FUCK!? Think about that incentive structure.
The program grew from $4.6 million in 2021 to over $170 million in 2024 — more than $400 million total since it launched. (R)
In one case described in a federal search warrant, a client was found dead while billing records showed ongoing services.
A family member told investigators the actual care was “nowhere near” what was claimed. The provider was billing for a corpse.
Autism Services: Kickbacks to Parents
The EIDBI autism program was designed to provide intensive 1-on-1 therapy for children. Instead, providers allegedly:
Recruited families with cash kickbacks (up to $1,500/month based on the child’s authorized service level)
Used unqualified 18- and 19-year-old relatives as “behavioral technicians”
One clinic allegedly obtained over $6 million this way.
Children who needed real therapy got fake diagnoses and absent care while their parents pocketed kickbacks.
The State’s Pathetic Woke Response
“We Only See Tens of Millions”
State Medicaid Director John Connolly said they’ve only seen evidence of “tens of millions of dollars in fraud to this point.” (R)
DHS Inspector General James Clark pleaded ignorance: “What I’m saying is I haven’t seen any evidence or information to suggest that there’s $9 billion worth of Medicaid fraud.” (R)
This is supposed to be a defense?
The state’s position is basically: “We have no idea if $9 billion was stolen because we haven’t looked.”
CMS basically told Minnesota: fix it or we stop paying.
A letter signed by CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz required DHS to provide weekly updates on audit activity, institute an immediate pause/moratorium on new provider enrollments for the 14 programs until oversight improves (or CMS will impose one), submit a corrective action plan, and warned that CMS may withhold federal Medicaid funding for expenditures tied to the 14 programs if requirements aren’t met by end of January 2026. (R)
The fraud could be far bigger than expected
Every rock they flip reveals more.
The investigation started with: Feeding Our Future → expanded to autism services → then housing stabilization → then Integrated Community Supports.
Thompson:
“Every day, we look under a rock and find a new $50 million fraud scheme.” (R)
And it isn’t small: Minnesota officials said it’s on track to hit about $180 million in spending this year.
DHS admits its pre-payment review is fee-for-service only (managed care not included).
Anyone claiming “we’ve contained it” is full of shit. The honest answer is: we don’t know what other pipes are still running.
Even AP’s reporting says the full scale remains unknown. Thompson said suspects created entities that billed multiple programs at once.
And GAO’s Rebecca Shea said fraud is inherently a ‘hidden crime’ — estimates are imprecise, and plenty goes undetected entirely.
Translation: The $18B framework is the part investigators can currently see — not proof that the rest of Minnesota’s program universe is clean.”
Managed care blind spot: DHS’s Optum pre-payment review is fee-for-service only. If similar behavior exists in managed care, that’s a separate battlefield.
Medicaid angle: Medicaid isn’t the only game in town. Fraud that touches Medicaid (billing, DME, home health, behavioral health) is its own river — and “Minnesota Medicaid fraud culture” doesn’t magically stop at one payer.
Non-Medicaid state programs: Feeding Our Future wasn’t Medicaid. That’s the point. Once a state develops a reputation as an easy mark, the same networks can pivot to childcare subsidies, housing programs, workforce grants, and whatever else is paperwork-heavy and lightly verified.
Time-window problem: The $18B framing starts at 2018. If you want the full picture, ask what happened before 2018 — and what’s happening in programs that weren’t on the initial “high-risk” list. If Minnesota ran “pay-and-chase” in 2020-2025, it’s naive to assume 2017 and earlier were a fraud-free utopia — it’s just a darker part of the tunnel.
And here’s the part people don’t understand: this isn’t a spreadsheet error you “reconcile later.” Once the money is cashed out, spent, wired, or moved through informal transfer networks, recovery is a rounding error.
Late enforcement isn’t “better than nothing.” Late enforcement is confirmation that most of the money is gone.
The Cash‑Out: Where the Money Went (Real Estate, Wires, Crypto)
Nairobi real estate (general): Thompson said a “significant amount” of proceeds were sent abroad and that much was used to purchase real estate in Nairobi, which has a large Somali diaspora.
Nairobi (specific property): In the Feeding Our Future money‑laundering case, federal prosecutors alleged stolen funds were used to buy an apartment building in Nairobi’s South C neighborhood, adjacent to Nairobi National Park.
Mandera (border land): The same case alleges funds were used to buy land in Mandera Town near the Somalia/Ethiopia border.
Turkey (Alanya): One defendant bought Mediterranean coastal property in Alanya, Turkey.
Aircraft: One Feeding Our Future defendant spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on an aircraft in Nairobi.
Big wires: Prosecutors described one defendant wiring $1.5 million to China and Kenya, plus a text claiming he invested $6 million in Kenya.
Reality of “recovery”: Thompson said authorities seized $60–70M tied to Feeding Our Future — about $30M liquid — and the rest is assets that take months/years to sell. Some money is permanently lost (spent on travel/entertainment/services).
Foreign assets are a nightmare: In one plea agreement, a defendant forfeited an apartment in Nairobi and an oceanfront resort in Kenya, and notes the obstacles retrieving money tied up overseas.
Once the money leaves the U.S. — bank wires, foreign property, informal transfer systems — ‘recovery’ becomes a punchline.
Why ‘follow the money’ is harder than people think
Somalia is an economy that runs on remittances.
The World Bank’s own data shows Somalia’s GDP was ~$11.97B in 2024 and remittances totaled ~$2.12B — which is ~17.7% of Somalia’s GDP. (R)
And multiple mainstream institutions note that remittance totals can be materially larger when you include informal channels.
So when prosecutors say “significant amounts went overseas,” you should assume the outbound pipe is not just real — it’s structurally hard to fully measure in real time, especially if the system mixes banks, money services businesses, informal transfer networks, and crypto. (R)
The Al-Shabab terrorism angle: not proven, not excludable
Ryan Thorpe and Christopher F. Rufo reported in conservative news outlet “City Journal” that stolen Minnesota funds likely flowed to Al‑Shabab. (R)
Thompson said there’s “no evidence” the charged defendants were intentionally funding Al-Shabab, but he also acknowledged money sent to Somalia could eventually end up in the wrong hands.
And Treasury is now investigating the allegation that Minnesota fraud money flowed to Al-Shabab — which means even the feds aren’t treating this as a closed question.
No terrorism-financing charges doesn’t mean “no terror funding.” It means the government hasn’t proven intent yet — and they’re still tracing the money.
Demanding Evidence They Should Have Collected
Clark said he’s asked the U.S. Attorney’s Office to share information so DHS can “slam the door on these people and businesses that are engaging in fraud.” (R)
Think about the absurdity. The state agency responsible for overseeing these programs is asking federal prosecutors to tell them who the fraudsters are.
They’re admitting they have no idea what’s happening in their own programs.
The Legislative Auditor’s Verdict
Minnesota’s own nonpartisan Legislative Auditor reviewed MDE’s handling of Feeding Our Future and concluded (R):
MDE’s “inadequate oversight... created opportunities for fraud”
MDE “failed to act on warning signs known to the department prior to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic”
MDE “did not effectively exercise its authority to hold Feeding Our Future accountable”
MDE “was ill-prepared to respond to the issues it encountered”
The auditor received more than 30 complaints about Feeding Our Future between 2018 and 2021. Some weren’t investigated at all “despite their frequency and seriousness.”
At one point, MDE asked Feeding Our Future to investigate complaints about itself. (R)
Legislative Auditor Judy Randall said she’s noticed: “increasing rejection of our findings and recommendations. Or denial or dismissiveness or excuses” from state agencies. “There’s definitely a shoot-the-messenger feeling.” (R)
The Federal Intervention: U.S. Attorney Joe Thompson
Federal prosecutors don’t answer to Minnesota voters. They don’t worry about protests outside their offices. They don’t face discrimination lawsuits from the people they’re investigating. They follow the evidence.
First Assistant U.S. Attorney Joe Thompson has been blunt in ways state officials never were:
“What we see in Minnesota is not a handful of bad actors committing crimes. It’s a staggering, industrial-scale fraud.”(R)
Thompson noted that when he looks at the claims data and providers in the 14 high-risk programs: [there are] “more red flags than I see legitimate providers.” (R)
More red flags than legitimate providers. That’s not a few bad apples. That’s systemic capture.
In a parallel universe where Trump loses presidency in 2024, we likely wouldn’t even know any of this was happening. Why? You can infer why (non-White, refugees, etc.).
The Democrats, Progressives, Liberals, et al. crank the money printer to infinity and max handouts no matter if fraud… then downplay any speculation as “unsubstantiated” and/or “racist” (their go-to attack).
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent Gets Involved
Scott Bessent announced that the U.S. Treasury Department will issue a Geographic Targeting Order requiring enhanced reporting from money services businesses — the informal wire transfer operations that move cash outside the regulated banking system.
The goal: Track funds going to “areas of concern, such as Somalia.” (R)
Bessent described “egregious fraud in Minnesota” that “has cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars, including funds sent to Somalia through money services businesses.”
Treasury personnel are now on the ground in Minnesota. The IRS is examining money services businesses. FinCEN is issuing notices of investigation.
And Congress moved to pry the money trail loose.
On Dec. 22, 2025, House Oversight demanded Treasury produce Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) tied to specific money service businesses (Appendix A), plus SARs tied to Riverside Plaza Apartments and Karmel Mall, and SARs tied to funds known or suspected to have been sent abroad including for known or suspected terrorist activity — deadline Jan. 9, 2026.
And it wasn’t just Treasury/CMS: on Dec. 24, 2025, reporting says the SBA notified Walz it was halting more than $5.5M in annual federal support to Minnesota SBA partners (SBDCs, WBCs, SCORE, Microloan, FAST, Growth Accelerator). (R)
None of this is being done by Minnesota.
All of it is being done to Minnesota by federal agencies that had to step in because the state wouldn’t police itself.
The Demographics: Yeah It’s Mostly Somalis
According to the Associated Press, citing the U.S. Attorney’s Office, 82 of 92defendants charged in Minnesota fraud investigations are Somali American. (R)
That’s 89%. It’s not a “handful” of people from one community. It’s the overwhelming majority of defendants.
Also we don’t know the identities of the other 10… so it’s possible that some or most or all are Somalis too.
Does that mean “Somalis stole $18 billion”?
The $18 billion is total program spending, not confirmed theft
The fraud rate is still being determined
Defendants allegedly include non-Somali actors (like the Philadelphia “fraud tourists”)
The investigation is ongoing
But here’s what it does mean:
When 89% of defendants are from one community, and that community’s political organizations sued the state for discrimination when oversight increased, and the state backed off oversight because it feared being called racist — that’s a pattern that deserves honest discussion, not reflexive denial.
Kayseh Magan, the Somali-American former fraud investigator, put it directly:
“Members of my community must cease the leveraging of race and religion to avoid accountability.”
The fraudsters weaponized woke identity politics, and Minnesota’s brainwashed political class remained too chickenshit to call their bluff.
I estimate that the U.S. (Minnesota + Fed gov) pays an average of $550-$600k per Somali lifetime on the conservative end. Sadly I don’t see this improving much with second or third generations.
What the Numbers Might Be: Fraud Inside the $18B / 14-service Medicaid Bucket since 2018
This section is ONLY about Thompson’s $18B pool — the 14 high-risk Medicaid services Minnesota itself flagged since 2018. If “half or more” is even close, $9B+ is on the table inside this one bucket alone.
And here’s the part Minnesota wants you to forget: 2018 is the accounting window, not a magic start date. Anything before 2018 is just unmeasured — not “clean.”
Here’s an honest assessment of what’s plausible:
Under $1 billion (25% probability): Would require the visible cases to be outliers. Unlikely given the breadth of the investigation and Thompson’s “more red flags than legitimate providers” statement.
$1-3 billion (40% probability): Multiple large schemes, long “pay and chase” window, but fraud isn’t literally the majority of claims. Most likely scenario given current evidence.
$3-6 billion (25% probability): Widespread fraud in multiple major programs. Plausible if the pattern in HSS/EIDBI/ICS extends to larger programs like Personal Care Assistance.
$6-9+ billion (10% probability): Systemic capture of major service lines. What Thompson seems to be suggesting. Would be catastrophic but can’t be ruled out.
The key point: Even the low end of this range (under $1 billion) is yet another disaster.
Even “tens of millions” (the state’s own likely bullshit lowball) represents massive theft that happened because Minnesota was too afraid to stop it.
These ranges are a floor, not a ceiling. They ignore: (1) whatever happened before 2018, (2) any fraud in other Medicaid service lines, (3) whatever is hiding in managed care, and (4) non-Medicaid Minnesota programs (Feeding Our Future already proved the “easy-mark” culture wasn’t limited to Medicaid).
Minnesota — Woke High Trust, Exploited by Low Trust Refugee Pirates
Many reflexively picture California when they think of “wokeness.” And that’s fair… California is extremely woke. But when adjusting for size (land and population) and actual policy, one could easily argue that Minnesota takes the cake (I think Minnesota is now the wokest state.)
Woke is extremely damaging in a plethora of ways (DEI/AA, “bridging gaps” spending, defunding police, identity/grievance politics (Black, Women, LGBTQ+, etc.), devaluing education/tests, devaluing degrees/careers, increasing bloat (gov/corporations), and making society far less efficient (GDP, innovation, injuries, deaths, crimes, etc.).
Wokeness isn’t quite as damaging if you have all high-trust people… but now that they’ve imported and attracted low trust scammers from Somalia, they are being taken for everything their worth.
Let’s be clear about the causal chain:
Minnesota designed vulnerable programs. Low barriers to entry, minimal documentation, fast payment, weak verification. This was by design, not accident.
Fraudsters (mostly Somalis) exploited the design. They recruited beneficiaries, fabricated documentation, submitted impossible claims, and pocketed the money.
When oversight increased, Somali fraudsters cried racism. Lawsuits, protests, media campaigns alleging discrimination.
State officials backed off. They admitted — in their own words — that “the threat of legal consequences and negative media attention” affected their decisions.
Fraud exploded. Programs that were supposed to cost $2.6 million hit $100+ million. Billing exploded 2,800%. Providers from other states flew in because word got out Minnesota was easy money.
The state still didn’t act. They kept paying, kept approving, kept looking the other way.
Federal prosecutors finally intervened. Only when DOJ, FBI, and HHS-OIG started making arrests did the scope become clear.
The state claimed ignorance. “We only see tens of millions.” As if that’s a defense.
This isn’t about one bad policy or one negligent official.
It’s about a political culture that prioritized avoiding accusations of racism over protecting taxpayer money and serving vulnerable populations.
Minnesota Keeps the Data Hidden
One of the most infuriating aspects: Minnesota won’t release the data that would let anyone verify the scope of the problem.
What’s public:
The list of 14 “high-risk” programs under review (R)
Press releases announcing audits and payment pauses (R)
What’s not public:
Total paid dollars by service line by year
Claim counts and provider counts by service
Optum’s pre-payment review denial rates
Any claim-level data that would let outsiders assess fraud patterns
The state is essentially saying: “Trust us, it’s only tens of millions.”
But they won’t show their work. They won’t release the data. They want credit for transparency while maintaining opacity.
If it’s really “just tens of millions,” prove it. Release the numbers.
Conclusion: Woke Lunacy Has Consequences
Minnesota’s fraud scandal isn’t primarily about Somali pirates flying in on Biden refugee jets and bilking the woke patsies in Minnesota for every red cent they’re worth.
It’s about a state with blind trust and institutional cowardice that enables criminals to operate with impunity.
The fraudsters read the incentive structure perfectly:
Design programs with weak controls ✓
Exploit those controls ✓
When challenged, accuse Minnesota of racism ✓
Watch the state back down ✓
Repeat until federal prosecutors finally step in ✓
(And by the time they step in, billions have already been transferred to Somalia, Africa, and the Middle East via wire transfers and crypto to family, friends, cousins, etc.)
Every dollar stolen from these programs was a dollar that someone paid in via taxes… actually working hard only for a percentage of the money to be rerouted to Somalia.
The victims of this fraud aren’t just taxpayers — they’re legitimately vulnerable Minnesotans these programs were supposed to help.
The state had the authority to stop this. It had the warning signs. It had the complaints. It had the data showing impossible billing patterns. And it had plenty of time to act… but continued doing nothing.
All because governance in Minnesota didn’t want to be called “racist”… the third-worlders stay undefeated against suicidally empathetic Whites. Minnesota alone is Exhibit A, B, C, and D.