The woman convicted in connection with Minnesota’s massive COVID-era meal fraud scandal claims Rep. Ilhan Omar was aware of key elements of the operation that allegedly siphoned away hundreds of millions of dollars in federal funds intended to feed needy children during the pandemic, according to a report by The New York Post.
Aimee Bock, who founded the nonprofit Feeding Our Future, was found guilty in March 2025 on charges including conspiracy, bribery and wire fraud. Prosecutors accused her of helping restaurant operators submit fraudulent or exaggerated reimbursement requests tied to child nutrition programs during the COVID crisis.
Bock spoke to The Post this week by video from Sherburne County Jail, where she remains incarcerated awaiting sentencing.
“I struggle to believe that she wouldn’t have known,” Bock said of Omar.
Authorities say dozens of individuals tied to Minnesota’s Somali community falsely claimed to have served millions of meals to underprivileged children during the pandemic while allegedly diverting large portions of the government money for personal gain.
Throughout the case, Bock has maintained that she did not knowingly participate in any criminal scheme and said she repeatedly warned state authorities about suspicious activity. Feeding Our Future was responsible for reviewing reimbursement submissions from participating meal providers before forwarding the paperwork and distributing federal funds.
“The notion that I’m personally responsible for all of it . . . is so frustrating. I’m the only white person out of 80 or 90 individuals [charged in the fraud]. I’m the only one that doesn’t speak the language,” she added.
Bock alleged that Omar helped create the conditions that enabled the fraud by supporting federal legislation at the beginning of the pandemic that relaxed oversight requirements for school meal programs.
In March 2020, Omar introduced the MEALS Act in Congress, legislation that permitted the U.S. Department of Agriculture to grant emergency waivers to school meal regulations during the pandemic.
Those waivers significantly reduced oversight by allowing restaurants and nontraditional food sites to participate in the federal meal programs without undergoing the standard inspection process.
According to Bock, Omar’s office also became involved whenever those waivers approached expiration dates, helping ensure the programs continued uninterrupted.
“There had been a couple times early on that there were some gaps – a waiver would be set to expire on maybe the 15th of a month, and then the renewal didn’t kick in until the 1st,” Bock claimed. “Because of course this was supposed to be a short-term thing . . . we were supposed to be home for two weeks.”
Omar has also faced scrutiny in recent years after financial disclosures reportedly showed her wealth rising dramatically, which she later attributed to an accounting mistake.
During Bock’s federal trial in 2025, Omar’s name reportedly surfaced multiple times in emails and text exchanges introduced as evidence.
Bock said six separate email chains involving Omar related to assistance with federal waivers after Feeding Our Future contacted the congresswoman’s office.
The relaxed regulations allowed numerous Somali-owned restaurants to participate in the food program, including Safari Restaurant, where Omar filmed a promotional video in May 2020 stating that “every day Safari provides 2,300 meals to children and their families.” Omar also held her 2018 election night celebration at the establishment.
By July of that year, Safari reportedly claimed it was serving 5,000 children daily. One of its co-owners, Salim Said, was later convicted of defrauding the government out of $16 million, the largest amount tied to the broader scheme, and is currently awaiting sentencing.
“A lot of the sites were working directly with her, being that a lot of the operators were from the same Somali community,” Bock said of Somalia-born Omar.
“There were a lot of people that had been reaching out to her office and staff — and I presume her personally — to work through some of those gaps with the waivers.”
Minnesota is home to the nation’s largest Somali population, with more than 108,000 residents, many of whom live in Omar’s Minneapolis-based congressional district.
Bock also claimed she repeatedly alerted Minnesota officials about suspected fraud but said state authorities showed little appetite for aggressively pursuing cases involving the Somali community, which had become politically important after some Muslim leaders began drifting toward the Republican Party over disagreements with progressive positions on transgender issues and abortion.
“I have the emails that show that I told you, so you knew,” she said of the 2021 missives, reviewed by The Post, where she reported fraudulent businesses to the state’s Department of Education
“I struggle to believe that we notified them and they didn’t alert the governor – or our state or federal officials,” Bock added.
One email exchange from August 2021 reviewed by The New York Post showed a Minnesota Department of Education nutrition official telling Bock the agency “takes no position if fraud has taken place” after she reported that House of Refuge in St. Paul was claiming to distribute 21,000 meals per day.
The owner of House of Refuge was later sentenced to three-and-a-half years in prison for fraudulently obtaining $2.4 million in federal money.
“That’s my biggest regret,” Bock said. “Accepting the answer that the government doesn’t take a position on fraud. . . . I don’t think I comprehended just the magnitude of how important that statement would be.”
Last week, Minnesota’s Fraud Prevention and State Agency Oversight Committee urged the House Oversight Committee to subpoena Omar after she reportedly declined to provide communications connected to individuals convicted in the fraud case.
A report issued this week by the state oversight panel concluded that Omar, along with Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison, “played critical roles in creating and enabling” the fraud.
Federal prosecutors are reportedly seeking a 100-year prison sentence for Bock. She continues to insist that authorities unfairly singled her out and used her as a scapegoat in the sprawling case.
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