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Minnesota hunger non-profit leader gets 41 years in prison for $250 million fraud scheme

By Thomson Reuters May 21, 2026 | 11:56 AM

May 19 (Reuters) – The leader of a Minnesota non-profit group was sentenced to 41 years in prison on Thursday after she was convicted ​last year of being the ringleader of ‌a $250 million scheme to defraud a federally funded child nutrition program.

Aimee Bock, 45, was charged in 2022 with using her non-profit group Feeding Our Future to enact what the Justice ‌Department ​said was the largest known ⁠fraud against the U.S. ⁠government’s relief programs during the COVID-19 pandemic.

More than 70 other people have been charged alongside Bock. The fraud has been often invoked by U.S. President ​Donald Trump, a Republican, as part of his rationale for targeting Minnesota, led by Democrats, for ⁠an aggressive surge in arresting ⁠and deporting immigrants earlier this year. ​On the same day as Bock’s sentencing, the U.S. Department ​of Justice announced new charges against 15 ‌people accused of defrauding Medicaid and other welfare programs in Minnesota of $90 million.

Bock cried as she addressed U.S. District Judge Nancy Brasel at the federal courthouse ⁠in Minneapolis, the Minnesota Star Tribune reported: “I don’t have the words to express just how horrible I feel. I ⁠know I’m responsible.”

Federal ‌prosecutors had sought 50 years in ⁠prison. In sentencing Bock to 500 ​months, or ‌41 years and eight months, Brasel ​said a ⁠lengthy sentence was necessary because of Bock’s central role.

“This is a vortex of fraud, and you were at the epicenter,” the judge said, according to the Star Tribune.

(Reporting by Jonathan Allen in New York; Editing ​by Daniel Wallis)