
Top Trump administration officials including Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. are set to be in Minneapolis on Thursday for a news conference announcing “major law enforcement action involving fraud in Minnesota.”
That news conference is scheduled for 11 a.m.
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz and Minnesota U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen are also among the officials slated to appear.
That news conference comes a day after federal prosecutors filed a fresh batch of social service program fraud charges. And it will happen soon after the sentencing of Feeding Our Future founder Aimee Bock, 45, who was convicted last year of leading a scheme to steal hundreds of millions of dollars from taxpayer-funded child nutrition programs. Prosecutors are seeking a 50-year prison term for Bock.
In the latest fraud cases, investigators allege that Fahima E. Mahamud, who owned Future Leaders Early Learning Center on Chicago Avenue, defrauded Minnesota's Child Care Assistance Program out of $4.6 million. Prosecutors initially charged Mahamud, 50, in February with falsely claiming reimbursement for $854,000 in children’s meals via Feeding Our Future. Those charges still stand.
In a separate case, Jillaine Mertens, 43, is charged with defrauding Minnesota's Great Start Compensation Support Payment Program out of $425,000 by falsely claiming to have employed 23 people at child care centers in Rochester, Kasson, and Ramsey.
In a third case unsealed on Wednesday, federal prosecutors allege that Mustafa Dayib and Abdulbasit Ibrahim, who are in their twenties, defrauded the state’s Housing Stabilization Services program out of $975,000.
According to the charging document, the men started a company called Vitality Health Services in 2022 and billed Medicaid for “false claims that significantly overrepresented the hours of services they provided” to Medicaid recipients in need of help finding and keeping stable housing.
Mahamud, Mertens, Dayib, and Ibrahim are all charged by criminal information, which means they are expected to plead guilty after waiving their right to have a grand jury determine probable cause.
Gov. Tim Walz shut down the Housing Stabilization Services program last year amid allegations of fraud. In September, prosecutors announced an initial set of charges against eight people in connection with HSS fraud.
Also Wednesday, grand jury indictments were unsealed that charge three others with fraud in Minnesota Medicaid programs.
Ahmed O. Kadar, 23, is accused of bilking taxpayers out of $1.4 million by overbilling the Integrated Community Supports program in 2024 and 2025 through his company Ultimate Home Health.
According to the indictment, Ultimate rented an 11-unit apartment building that Kadar used to house Medicaid recipients for whom he allegedly filed fraudulent claims. Prosecutors say that Kadar failed to respond to repeated complaints from tenants “that power had been shut off to their units, resulting in Medicaid recipients being forced to live in units without heat during winter.” Kadar is charged with health care fraud and money laundering.
In December, former Assistant U.S. Attorney Joe Thompson announced the investigation into ICS at a news conference where he also estimated that fraud in 14 vulnerable Medicaid programs, including ICS and HSS, cost taxpayers $9 billion.
In a second indictment unsealed Wednesday, Shamso A. Hassan and Hanaan M. Yusuf are accused of defrauding Minnesota’s Early Intensive Development and Behavioral Intervention, or EIDBI, program, which is meant to help children with autism.
Hassan and Yusuf were part owners of Smart Therapy Center in Minneapolis and Star Autism Center in St. Cloud. They and other owners of the businesses allegedly paid kickbacks to parents in exchange for enrolling their children, regardless of any autism symptoms.
Prosecutors allege that the businesses submitted $46.6 million in fraudulent claims, for which they were reimbursed $21.1 million.
The autism center fraud investigation became public when the FBI searched Smart Therapy and Star Autism in late 2024.
Asha Hassan, who was the CEO of Smart Therapy, pleaded guilty in December 2025 to fraud charges. Abdinajib Yussuf, the CEO of Star Autism Center, pleaded guilty in March.



