Update, Thursday, December 11, 2025:
🚨 BREAKING: New COURT FILINGS show a SOMALI SCAMMER STOLE $50 MILLION of TAXPAYER MONEY 🚨
THE SCAMMER SPENT the CASH on:
A LAKEFRONT PROPERTY ✅
A PORSCHE MACAN ✅
FIRST CLASS TICKETS TO ISTANBUL AND AMSTERDAM ✅
HONEYMOON STAY IN AN OVERWATER VILLA WITH A PRIVATE POOL IN… pic.twitter.com/pLAlp3lTNz
— Jesse Watters (@JesseBWatters) December 12, 2025
An Investigative Analysis
The emergence of photographs showing Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and Representative Ilhan Omar alongside Abdul Dahir Ibrahim—a convicted fraudster recently arrested by ICE—has intensified scrutiny of what federal prosecutors describe as “the largest pandemic fraud in the United States.” With over $1 billion stolen across multiple schemes and 78 people now indicted, the question confronting Minnesota’s Democratic leadership is no longer whether fraud occurred, but how it proliferated so extensively under their watch.
The Scope of the Crisis
The numbers are staggering. Federal prosecutors have secured more than 50 convictions in the Feeding Our Future case alone, where $250 million meant to feed underprivileged children during the COVID-19 pandemic was instead funneled into luxury cars, real estate investments, and foreign bank accounts. Beyond Feeding Our Future, prosecutors are investigating a $104 million housing stabilization fraud and a $14 million scheme involving billing for autism services never provided. Some whistleblowers now estimate total fraud could reach $8 billion.
The Feeding Our Future operation centered on a nonprofit that partnered with Minnesota’s Department of Education to distribute federal child nutrition funds. Founded by Aimee Bock in 2016, the organization repeatedly faced rejection for grants due to allegations of mismanagement. That changed when Feeding Our Future threatened legal action, claiming discrimination—a threat that appears to have paralyzed state oversight.
According to court documents, one site claimed to serve 3,250 children twice daily from a small storefront grocery. Another location—Safari Restaurant in Minneapolis, seating approximately 35 people, allegedly reported serving over 18,000 meals daily. Despite these implausible figures, state officials continued approving reimbursement claims.
The Walz Administration’s Response
Governor Walz’s role in this crisis remains deeply contested. An X account claiming to represent 480 Minnesota Department of Human Services employees alleges Walz was informed of fraud “early on” but instead of addressing it, “systematically retaliated against whistleblowers using monitoring, threats, repression, and did his best to discredit fraud reports.”
These allegations gained traction when the Minnesota Office of the Legislative Auditor released findings that the Department of Education “created opportunities for fraud” by failing to act on warning signs. The audit documented that MDE officials became aware of irregularities with Feeding Our Future in 2021 but moved slowly, partially due to the nonprofit’s discrimination lawsuit against the state.
When pressed on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Walz deflected responsibility while emphasizing prosecutions. “Well, certainly, I take responsibility for putting people in jail,” he said, before pivoting to defend Minnesota’s generosity and attacking critics for “demonizing an entire community.”
His office issued an executive order encouraging fraud reporting only after the scandal became national news. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer has now launched a congressional investigation, writing that “the Committee has serious concerns about how you as the Governor, and the Democrat-controlled administration, allowed millions of dollars to be stolen.”
The Ibrahim Connection
The recent ICE arrest of Abdul Dahir Ibrahim crystallizes the political nightmare confronting Walz and Omar. Ibrahim entered the United States in 1995 after being deported from Canada, where he was convicted of asylum and welfare fraud. Despite receiving a 2004 removal order—with the immigration judge specifically citing “significant fraud”—Ibrahim remained in the country for 21 years under Temporary Protected Status.
Photographs released by the Department of Homeland Security show Ibrahim posing with both Walz and Omar at community events. Two Minnesota politicians, Minneapolis City Council Member Jamal Osman and state Senator Omar Fateh, wrote letters of recommendation for Ibrahim during his immigration proceedings.
While these photographs don’t establish criminal wrongdoing, they raise questions about vetting and due diligence. Ibrahim’s fraud convictions predate his arrival in America, yet he maintained access to Minnesota’s political establishment for decades while accumulating traffic violations and other infractions.
Omar’s Entanglement
Representative Omar’s connection to the fraud extends beyond the Ibrahim photographs. In 2020, she introduced the MEALS Act, which expanded the very federal child nutrition programs later exploited by Feeding Our Future. Video footage shows Omar praising the Safari Restaurant—the same establishment whose owner faces federal custody for allegedly falsifying meal counts.
When CNN’s Jake Tapper asked Omar how fraud became “so out of control,” her response was halting: “I think what happened, um, is that, you know, when you have these, kind of, new programs that are, um, designed to help people, you’re oftentimes relying on third parties to be able to facilitate.”
Omar has consistently denied knowledge of fraud before its public exposure, but whistleblower Bill Glahn notes Omar “knew who these people were. People she personally knew were making tens of millions of dollars in this program.” After the scandal broke, Omar returned $7,400 in campaign donations from convicted fraudsters—contributions that raise questions about whether financial considerations influenced oversight.
The Systemic Failure Question
The most troubling aspect of this scandal may not be individual photographs but rather the systemic breakdown they represent. According to the whistleblower account, when DHS employees reported fraud firsthand, they were reassigned and “told to keep quiet.” Leadership allegedly prioritized avoiding accusations of discrimination over investigating suspicious activity.
The New York Times reported that some fraudulently obtained funds were sent overseas, potentially reaching terrorist organizations, including Al-Shabaab. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has launched an investigation into whether “hardworking Minnesotans’ tax dollars may have been diverted to the terrorist organization Al-Shabaab.”
This raises a critical distinction: Was this merely bureaucratic incompetence, or did political considerations—specifically, fear of being labeled discriminatory—create an environment where fraud could flourish unchecked?
The Political Context
The timing of this scandal is particularly significant. Walz, who served as Kamala Harris’s running mate in 2024, faces reelection in 2026. The fraud allegations have become the Republican Party’s primary line of attack, with Trump administration officials characterizing Minnesota as a “hub of money laundering activity.”
President Trump’s response—terminating Temporary Protected Status for Somali refugees and launching aggressive ICE operations in Minneapolis—has been criticized as collective punishment. Yet even critics acknowledge that the scale of fraud demands accountability, not deflection.
The fundamental question remains unresolved: How did fraud on this scale occur despite multiple warning signs, whistleblower complaints, and obvious red flags like restaurants claiming to serve tens of thousands of meals daily?
What the Evidence Shows
Neither Walz nor Omar faces criminal charges. The photographs with Ibrahim, while politically damaging, don’t prove criminal conspiracy. Politicians regularly appear with constituents at community events without knowledge of their criminal backgrounds.
However, the totality of evidence suggests profound oversight failures:
• Minnesota’s Department of Education ignored irregularities after Feeding Our Future threatened discrimination claims • Whistleblowers report retaliation rather than support when raising concerns • Political figures maintained relationships with individuals who had documented fraud histories • State agencies delayed investigations for months despite mounting evidence • Only $75 million of the stolen $250 million has been recovered
Moving Forward
The investigations by House Oversight, the Treasury Department, and multiple federal agencies will determine whether criminal liability extends to government officials. For now, the scandal has exposed how political correctness, bureaucratic inertia, and inadequate oversight created conditions for massive fraud.
As Walz seeks a third term and Omar continues her congressional career, voters deserve answers to fundamental questions: When did they know? What did they do? And why did a system with multiple safeguards fail so catastrophically?
The photographs with Ibrahim may not prove guilt, but they symbolize a deeper failure—the failure to prioritize protection of public funds over political considerations, to investigate suspicious activity regardless of who it might implicate, and to hold officials accountable when systems designed to prevent fraud instead enable it.
Minnesota’s billion-dollar lesson is clear: Good intentions without rigorous oversight invite exploitation, and fear of accusations—whether racism or discrimination—cannot justify abandoning fiduciary responsibility.
Update December 6, 2025, New York Post: Stephen Miller calls billion-dollar Minnesota welfare scam ‘single greatest theft of taxpayer dollars’ with dozens of Somali migrants convicted.
Miller, who also serves as a homeland security advisor to President Trump, said the fraud operation apparently carried out by numerous Somali migrants in the state will “rock the core of Minnesota politics and American politics.”
“We believe that we have only scratched the very top of the surface of how deep this goes,” he said in an appearance with Sean Hannity on Fox.
Prosecutors have already charged dozens of state residents with ripping off a program designed to provide food for children during the pandemic.
So far, 59 people have already been convicted in wide-ranging frauds totaling $1 billion.
Overall, federal authorities have charged nearly 80 people.
Update: December 7, 2025
Tim Walz is 100% responsible for massive fraud in Minnesota. We let Tim Walz know of fraud early on, hoping for a partnership in stopping fraud but no, we got the opposite response. Tim Walz systematically retaliated against whistleblowers using monitoring, threats, repression,… https://t.co/cEtbnuKmgn
— Minnesota Staff Fraud Reporting Commentary (@Minnesota_DHS) November 30, 2025
Sources:
- CBS News: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/what-to-know-about-minnesota-fraud-allegations-as-trump-levels-attacks-on-walz/
- Fox News: https://www.foxnews.com/politics/photos-emerge-somali-illegals-ties-top-minnesota-dems-after-ice-arrest
- PBS NewsHour: https://www.pbs.org/newshour/show/fraud-scandals-and-trumps-rhetoric-escalate-fears-in-minnesotas-somali-community
- House Oversight Committee: https://oversight.house.gov/release/chairman-comer-launches-investigation-into-massive-fraud-in-minnesotas-social-services-system-on-governor-walzs-watch/
- Department of Justice: https://www.justice.gov/usao-mn/pr/federal-jury-finds-feeding-our-future-mastermind-and-co-defendant-guilty-250-million
- The New York Times (as cited in multiple sources)
Update: December 11, 2025
Townhall.com: The Somali Experiment Failed, It’s Time to Change Course
Summary:
The article argues that large-scale welfare fraud tied to some Somali-run organizations in Minnesota shows that what it calls the “Somali experiment” in America has failed, and that policy must change direction. It claims fraud in Minnesota could reach into the billions during Governor Tim Walz’s tenure, citing daycare and food-program scams such as the Minnesota Child Care Assistance Program and the “Feeding Our Future” COVID meal program as blueprints allegedly used by Somali fraudsters to siphon taxpayer funds, some of which are said to be sent overseas and possibly linked to terrorism.
The author contends that these schemes were enabled or facilitated by Somali-American politicians and community leaders, and describes Minnesota’s Somali community as heavily dependent on public assistance and remittances, arguing that a significant share of economic activity is publicly funded and ultimately supports Somalia rather than Minnesota. Demographic figures on poverty, unemployment, education, and tax contributions are presented to support the view that the community has not assimilated successfully.
As policy prescriptions, the piece calls for ending new immigration from Somalia, aggressively prosecuting fraud with strong federal support, taxing remittances to Somalia, and denaturalizing and deporting Somalis who defraud the government. While the author notes that there are “incredible people” in the Somali community, the conclusion is that the overall project has failed and that the U.S. must “reverse course” to protect taxpayers and ensure assimilation.
News updates:
As Minneapolis continues to deal with the fallout of a massive fraud scandal likely amounting to over $1 billion, Fox News Digital spoke to three Republican lawmakers in the state who explained their belief that Gov. Tim Walz deserves much of the blame.
“I would say the number one culprit in the fraud going on here in Minnesota is our executive,” state Sen. Julia Coleman, who represents Carver County in southwest Minneapolis, told Fox News Digital.
Alpha News: EXCLUSIVE: ‘If taxpayers knew how bad it was, they would be outraged’: County worker offers inside look at fraud
“If taxpayers knew how bad it was, they would be outraged,” the state worker said. “The system is built in a way that people learn how to stay on it forever.”
Washington Examiner: Walz says he would ‘welcome more’ Somalis as fraud investigation intensifies
Gov. Tim Walz (D-MN) said this week that he would “welcome more” Somali immigrants into Minnesota, as federal investigators continue to uncover the extent of widespread welfare fraud believed to have originated primarily from the state’s Somali population.
