Midwest
Minnesota’s massive fraud exposes how Democrats built a system designed to be robbed
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For years, Democrats assured us that expanding government programs was an act of moral heroism — that the only thing standing between America and utopia was more taxpayer money flowing through more “community-based” nonprofits embracing “equity-centered” missions.
Then Minnesota happened, exposing a truth the radical left will never admit: The system isn’t broken. This is exactly how it’s designed to work.
Over 70 people connected to the Minnesota nonprofit Feeding Our Future face federal charges in the country’s largest COVID pandemic fraud scandal. It was primarily Somali American defendants who allegedly stole funds meant for low-income children by submitting falsified invoices, fake meal counts and fabricated rosters. The organizations billed the government for tens of millions of unserved meals, using the stolen money for luxury cars, beachfront property and homes.
It’s jaw-dropping — but it’s not surprising. And it happened because Democrats built a system practically engineered for abuse by the nonprofit industrial complex. Here are the five reasons this fraud was so easy to commit — and why the same conditions exist in states across the country.
WALZ BEARS ‘FULL RESPONSIBILITY’ FOR $1B FRAUD SCANDAL, GOP CHALLENGER DEMUTH DECLARES
1. Democrats built programs with almost no guardrails — by design
It’s easy to blame “COVID chaos” for what unfolded in Minnesota, but the fraud wasn’t subtle. COVID-19 simply provided the political cover to dump hundreds of millions of dollars onto a broken, low-oversight system.
According to DOJ indictments, the perpetrators’ lies were ludicrous. One defendant, Abdirashid Dool, claimed his site in Pelican Rapids was serving 6,000 meals a day, seven days a week. The entire population, children and adults, of Pelican Rapids is less than 2,500. Another network of sites, Empire Cuisine, fraudulently obtained more than $47 million.
WHAT TO KNOW ABOUT MINNESOTA’S ‘FEEDING OUR FUTURE’ FRAUD AT THE CENTER OF TRUMP’S LATEST CRACKDOWN
This level of cartoonish fraud was only possible because state agencies rubber-stamped the reimbursements. The priority wasn’t accuracy — it was speed and political optics. The minute a program is tied to a specific “vulnerable” community, Democrats in power lose the nerve for a genuine audit, fearing a PC backlash more than losing taxpayer dollars. They prioritized the appearance of service over the actual delivery of food, creating an oversight-free slush fund.
2. Ideology blinded Democratic leadership to obvious fraud
This scandal metastasized because the perpetrators claimed to serve a marginalized refugee community. In the modern Democratic Party, that instantly grants immunity from scrutiny.
DR. OZ WARNS WALZ TO ADDRESS ALLEGED SOMALI MEDICAID FRAUD OR LOSE FEDERAL FUNDING: ‘WE’LL STOP PAYING’
Minnesota officials were accused of racism if they questioned the obviously fake claims. Feeding Our Future advocates figured that out early and used it as a shield, accusing officials of discrimination the moment anyone asked why the numbers didn’t add up.
MINNESOTA GOVERNMENT WORKERS BLAME WALZ FOR ‘MASSIVE FRAUD’ AMID ALLEGATIONS AGAINST SOMALI COMMUNITY
This ideological paralysis isn’t unique to Minnesota. Around the country, anything labeled “equity,” “community-centered” or “culturally specific” gets waved through without a second look. The result? Truly vulnerable communities get nothing, while politically connected insiders walk away with millions.
3. The “Nonprofit Industrial Complex” and the crony network
This scandal metastasized because the perpetrators claimed to serve the state’s massive Somali refugee community. In the modern Democratic Party, that instantly grants immunity from scrutiny.
Feeding Our Future was a classic middleman operation, receiving huge administrative fees — over $18 million — for sponsoring the fraudulent meal sites. They used this position to solicit direct bribes, often disguised as “consulting fees,” from the groups they were supposed to be supervising. The criminals then established dozens of shell companies and fake non-profits purely to enroll, receive federal money and quickly launder the proceeds.
MINNESOTA TAXPAYER DOLLARS FUNNELED TO AL-SHABAAB TERROR GROUP, REPORT ALLEGES
This complex, cozy network is the lifeblood of modern Democratic politics: you rely on politically friendly non-profit groups to provide services and eventually campaign support, creating a self-sustaining system that actively resists external auditing.
We see the same pattern everywhere: Oregon was forced into ending Measure 110 drug treatment grants over misuse of funds and Washington state was slammed for 86 problems against nearly a dozen state agencies for either not complying with federal grant rules or not fully accounting for spending. New York’s migrant shelter contracts were criticized for being ripe for abuse.
4. No one in government pays a price for failure, so the failures never stop
Despite hundreds of millions in stolen money, not a single high-ranking Minnesota official has resigned. In fact, Minnesota Democrats have spent more time downplaying or deflecting the scandal than acknowledging their role in enabling it.
Gov. Tim Walz, D-Minn., walks near the Minnesota state capitol in St. Paul on Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2025. (Abbie Parr/AP Photo)
FEDERAL PROBE TARGETS ALLEGED MINNESOTA SOMALI FRAUD ‘NETWORK’ AS COVID-AID CRIME RINGS PERSIST
Gov. Tim Walz, whose administration failed to detect or stop the massive fraud, now talks tough about holding scammers accountable then immediately pivots to attacking President Donald Trump for calling Somali fraudsters “garbage,” casting himself as a defender of the Somali community. Walz and his allies act outraged so they can claim the moral high ground, yet these are the same people who spent the past six years branding White Americans as racists and blaming them for a supposed “White supremacy culture” that conveniently justified the racially selective social-justice programs now exposed as vehicles for fraud.
EMMER SLAMS WALZ, DEMANDS ACCOUNTABILITY OVER ALLEGED RETALIATION TIED TO MINNESOTA FRAUD
This lack of accountability is standard practice. California lost over $20 billion in fraudulent unemployment claims, including to death row inmates. Not a single major political figure suffered consequences. When the government rewards incompetence and punishes no one, incompetence becomes standard operating procedure.
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5. Democrats refuse to admit big government fails, so fraud gets denied, minimized, or politically reframed
Democrats treat big government as infallible. If the system fails, it must be because critics are racist, or Republicans are “politicizing it,” or journalists are overhyping it. It can never be that the programs themselves are ripe for corruption. So the cycle repeats — with bigger budgets and even less accountability.
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The Feeding Our Future scandal is being sold as a Minnesota embarrassment. It’s much bigger than that. It’s a warning about what happens when you combine ideological blinders, political patronage, oversized government programs, and zero accountability.
Minnesota just got caught. Other states are simply waiting their turn.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM JASON RANTZ
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Milwaukee, WI
LSU baseball vs Milwaukee live updates, start time for Opening Day
BATON ROUGE — LSU baseball’s path to a repeat College World Series championship officially begins Friday, Feb. 13.
Opening Day for the 2026 season has arrived and coach Jay Johnson and his preseason No. 1-ranked Tigers will kick things off against Milwaukee at Alex Bos Stadium. First pitch is schedule for 2 p.m.
LSU opens up the season with a barrage of games, playing nine over the first 12 days of the campaign.
The Daily Advertiser is providing live updates during LSU baseball’s season opener against Milwaukee. Follow along.
LSU baseball vs Milwaukee probable pitchers
- LSU – RHP Casan Evans (5-1, 2.05 ERA)
- Milwaukee – LHP Matthew Mueller (1-2, 5.23 ERA)
Evans will start Opening Day for LSU. The righthanded sophomore has just three starts under his belt coming into 2026 but is expected to be among the top pitchers on the Tigers’ staff. For Milwaukee, Mueller will get the ball. He is one of the most experienced starters on the Panthers’ club with six starts a season ago.
What time does LSU baseball vs Milwaukee start?
- Date: Friday, Feb. 13
- Time: 2 p.m. CT
- Where: Alex Box Stadium in Baton Rouge
What TV channel is LSU baseball vs Milwaukee on today?
- TV: N/A
- Streaming: SEC Network+
- How to watch online: ESPN app
LSU baseball 2026 schedule
| Date | Opponent |
| Feb. 13 | Milwaukee |
| Feb. 14 | Milwaukee |
| Feb. 15 | Milwaukee |
| Feb. 16 | Kent State |
| Feb. 18 | Nicholls State |
| Feb. 20 | Indiana (Jacksonville, Florida) |
| Feb. 21 | Notre Dame (Jacksonville, Florida) |
| Feb. 22 | UCF (Jacksonville, Florida) |
| Feb. 24 | McNeese State |
| Feb. 27 | Dartmouth |
| Feb. 28 | Northeastern |
| March 1 | Dartmouth |
| March 2 | Northeastern |
| March 4 | at Louisiana |
| March 6 | Sacramento State |
| March 7 | Sacramento State |
| March 8 | Sacramento State |
| March 10 | Creighton |
| March 13 | Vanderbilt* |
| March 14 | at Vanderbilt* |
| March 15 | at Vanderbilt* |
| March 17 | at Grambling State |
| March 19 | Oklahoma* |
| March 20 | Oklahoma* |
| March 21 | Oklahoma* |
| March 24 | Louisiana Tech |
| March 27 | Kentucky* |
| March 28 | Kentucky* |
| March 29 | Kentucky* |
| March 31 | Southern |
| April 3 | at Tennessee* |
| April 4 | at Tennessee* |
| April 5 | at Tennessee* |
| April 7 | Bethune-Cookman |
| April 10 | at Ole Miss* |
| April 11 | at Ole Miss* |
| April 12 | at Ole Miss* |
| April 14 | Northwestern State |
| April 17 | Texas A&M* |
| April 18 | Texas A&M* |
| April 19 | Texas A&M* |
| April 21 | New Orleans |
| April 24 | at Mississippi State* |
| April 25 | at Mississippi State* |
| April 26 | at Mississippi State* |
| April 28 | Southeastern Louisiana |
| May 1 | South Carolina* |
| May 2 | South Carolina* |
| May 3 | South Carolina* |
| May 5 | Tulane |
| May 8 | at Georgia* |
| May 9 | at Georgia* |
| May 10 | at Georgia* |
| May 14 | Florida* |
| May 15 | Florida* |
| May 16 | Florida* |
Cory Diaz covers the LSU Tigers for The Daily Advertiser as part of the USA TODAY Network. Follow his Tigers coverage on Twitter: @ByCoryDiaz. Got questions regarding LSU athletics? Send them to Cory Diaz at bdiaz@gannett.com.
Minneapolis, MN
ICE drawdown in Minneapolis: No deals made with federal government, sheriff says
MINNEAPOLIS (FOX 9) – The Hennepin County sheriff says her office has not entered into any new deals with the federal government, “despite what some influential leaders have conveyed.”
This comes after White House Border Czar Tom Homan announced a major drawdown of federal immigration agents.
Hennepin Co. Sheriff on ICE surge ending
What they’re saying:
Hennepin County Sheriff Dawanna Witt said in a news conference Friday that even though Operation Metro Surge is winding down, trust in law enforcement has been “eroded.”
Witt defended how her deputies handled Operation Metro Surge, calling the immigration operation “unprecedented” and said her deputies didn’t have a “template.”
She continued to thank her deputies for doing their job, but said her office will be addressing “all issues” and seeing what can be improved.
The sheriff did reiterate her office has not “entered into any new agreements with the federal government, despite what some influential leaders conveyed.”
“Communication and relationships will be critical as we move forward. I’ve always said that leaders at the local, state and federal level must come to the table together,” Witt said. “A real leader, a real leader prioritizes understanding, communication, reflection, and conveying truthful information responsibly, not just based off of your limited views.”
Witt went on to say that if anyone is “confused” about policies her office has adopted, they should “ask.”
Hennepin Co. board told sheriff to not alter ICE policy
The backstory:
The Hennepin County Board of Commissioners passed a resolution urging the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office not to change its policy on Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operations.
READ MORE: Hennepin Co. board tells sheriff not to alter ICE policy
The board passed the resolution Thursday afternoon, stating they support the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office’s current policy regarding cooperating with ICE, which is not honoring detainer requests from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
According to the resolution, the board is telling the sheriff to not make “substantive changes to the policy to voluntarily increase cooperation with federal immigration enforcement.”
The board goes on to ask the sheriff to notify the public and the board if there are any changes to the policy that would increase cooperation with federal immigration enforcement.
Operation Metro Surge ending: Minnesotans react
After more than two months of an increased immigration enforcement presence in Minnesota, Border Czar Tom Homan announced on Thursday that Operation Metro Surge would be drawing to a close, with most federal agents leaving by next week. FOX 9’s Soyoung Kim is live at the Alex Pretti shooting memorial site with reactions from Minnesotans.
Indianapolis, IN
Man sentenced in 1993 cold case murder of Indianapolis woman
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — A man convicted in the 1993 cold case murder of an Indianapolis woman has been sentenced to 45 years in prison.
Dana Shepherd, 53, was convicted of one count of murder Friday morning. Other charges of rape and an additional count of murder were dismissed.
News 8 previously reported on Shepherd following his arrest in September 2024.
Carmen Van Huss was found dead in her apartment on March 24, 1993. She’d been found by her father, who came to check on her after she’d missed several phone calls.
Following some time of investigation, her case ran cold. Through genetic testing and advanced analytics, IMPD announced they’d identified Shepherd as a suspect 31 years later.
Marion County Prosecutor Ryan Mears on Friday said his hope is Shepherd’s sentence will provide justice to Van Huss’s family.
“While no passage of time can ever heal the unimaginable loss Carmen’s family has endured, we are grateful to secure a Murder conviction more than 30 years after this heinous crime,” he said. “Our hope is that this resolution brings a measure of justice and peace to her loved ones, after three decades of waiting for answers.”
Shepherd will serve his sentence in the Indiana Department of Correction. Court records did not indicate if or when he’d be eligible for parole.
Help is available for victims of domestic violence, child abuse, and sexual assault. Below is a list of suggested resources, both national and local:
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