Judge limits Aimee Bock's document access after leak



woman in white cardigan enters courthouse

The judge presiding over the Feeding Our Future case is limiting convicted ringleader Aimee Bock's access to confidential case documents from jail after she allegedly directed her adult sons to send the files to reporters and elected officials.

In March 2024, a jury found Bock, the former executive director of Feeding Our Future, guilty of wire fraud and bribery. Prosecutors said she led dozens of people in a scheme to swindle taxpayers out of $250 million during the COVID-19 pandemic by falsely claiming to have served millions of meals through two government child nutrition programs.

Federal prosecutors on Tuesday asked U.S. District Judge Nancy Brasel to prohibit Bock from speaking with her sons prior to her May 21 sentencing hearing, but Brasel said at a Thursday hearing that would be a step too far.

“I’m not going to preclude Ms. Bock from talking with her sons,” Brasel said. “We can come up with a remedy that doesn’t go that far.”

Bock appeared at the hearing wearing ankle chains and a neon green jail uniform. She spoke privately with her attorney but did not address the court directly.

Citing recorded calls from the Sherburne County Jail, prosecutors Matthew Murphy and Rebecca Kline said that since at least February, Bock directed Camden Bock, 20, to download case files from a Dropbox account and send them to public officials and the news media. MPR News received several batches of files from a sender who used the pseudonym “Daisy Hill.”

The prosecutors said that this was a clear violation of Brasel’s 2022 protective order that requires parties to the case to hold non-public evidence “in strict confidentiality.”

Of particular concern, Murphy told the judge, are FBI FD-302 forms sent to a reporter at the Minnesota Star Tribune that summarize law enforcement witness interviews.

Murphy conceded that he does not have a “direct line” that proves Bock sent the documents to the newspaper, but in a recorded call, Bock “references that she’s doing an interview with the same reporter who has the leaked documents. She also mentions that the reporter has hundreds of 302 reports.”

Defense attorney Kenneth Udoibok said that he also listened to the jail calls and heard Bock make an inartful attempt to clear her name.

“What I heard was my client crying out for help in the wrong ways, and concerned about her children, and wanting to reach out to any and all people,” Udoibok said.

Prosecutors noted that Bock directed her son to remove exhibit stickers and other markings to indicate that the documents came from her case files.

“The request to remove information from documents that indicates they’re part of a federal case is clear evidence of consciousness of guilt,” Brasel said. “That’s really clear from the calls and it’s really disturbing.”

Citing past incidents of witness intimidation, Brasel said that any leaks of confidential information could have a chilling effect on people who may testify in related cases.

“Ms. Bock’s case is not the end of the Feeding Our Future litigation and trials,” Brasel said. “I have upcoming trials about the same scheme.

“I’m concerned by the information that I have, because what I heard goes beyond a person who’s obviously understandably distressed and wants to convince the public of her innocence.”

Brasel ordered Bock not to access case files without her attorney present. The judge also ordered Udoibok to change Bock’s Dropbox password, ensure that all confidential documents are deleted from her sons' computers, and draft a list of all the files sent.

The judge did not postpone Bock’s sentencing hearing, but she gave prosecutors and the defense extra time to draft their arguments about how much prison time Bock should receive. Because of the fraud’s massive scale, federal sentencing guidelines allow for a life sentence.



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Red Lake Nation College announced Thursday that it received a $7 million unrestricted donation. It says the gift from philanthropist MacKenzie Scott’s foundation, Yield Giving, is the largest in the college’s history.

The tribal college has two campus locations — one in northern Minnesota and another in Minneapolis.

The school’s board and president say the school will invest the money into a permanent endowment fund, which they say will guarantee the school's financial stability well into the future — following Ojibwe teachings to visualize how today's decisions will impact the next seven generations.

“This is historic and this fund will end the poverty cycle for our college. The key is to put it all in a new fund, and let it grow and build, so we can get it to a point where we can use it to support us for anything we need,” said RLNC board chairman Delwyn Holthusen Jr.

Holthusen says the money in the endowment will only be used in “extreme emergencies.” If money were to be taken out, school leaders say it will be paid back with interest, to allow the fund to continuously grow over the next several decades.

Tight internal restrictions have also been placed on withdrawals. According to a press release, college board members must all agree to taking out funds from the endowment.

Chief Dan King is RLNC’s president. He says the endowment is the start to “ending poverty” for the college, which receives a quarter of its funding from private donations annually.

“I am so proud of our RLNC Board for having the courage and vision to look out for the long-term financial sustainability of our current and all future RLNC students,” King said.

After 35 years, the school estimates the endowment will reach $224 million.

Chandra Colvin covers Native American communities in Minnesota for MPR News via Report for America, a national service program that places journalists into local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues and communities.



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