A defendant in Minnesota’s largest Medicaid fraud case, involving a scheme that stole $11 million from taxpayers, has been given a no-jail plea agreement by the state’s Democratic Attorney General.
| PULSE POINTS |
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: A defendant in Minnesota’s largest Medicaid fraud case has pleaded guilty to charges involving millions in stolen taxpayer funds as part of a deal with the office of the state’s Attorney General. 📺 DETAIL: Said Awil Ibrahim, a co-defendant in Minnesota’s largest Medicaid fraud case, has taken a no-prison plea deal and confessed his involvement. Specifically, Ibrahim pleaded guilty to defrauding $2.2 million of taxpayer money and pocketing over $500,000 from fraudulent claims. Ibrahim’s co-defendant, Abdirashid Ismail Said, allegedly orchestrated a welfare fraud scheme that allowed them to extract $11 million in taxpayer dollars. As part of the plea deal with Democrat Attorney General Keith Ellison’s office, Ibrahim will serve five years of probation and supposedly repay the stolen funds, under a yet-to-be-determined payment plan. If he complies with the terms of the agreement, Ibrahim can avoid going to prison. The plea deal also requires Ibrahim to cooperate with authorities in locating Said, who authorities believe has fled to Kenya. Notably, Said was previously convicted of fraud in Minnesota in 2021, but avoided prison. In one text sent to Ibrahim, Said wrote: “We gonna party bro. Insha Allah.” 🎯 IMPACT: This is not the first case of its kind in Minnesota. Asha Farhan Hassan, a member of a prominent family in the state’s Somali community, pleaded guilty to profiting from a fraudulent child food scheme. Since late December last year, Minnesota has become a hotbed of welfare fraud allegations, particularly related to Minnesota’s Somali community. The situation has become so severe that Vice President J.D. Vance, in his capacity as fraud czar, has been leading an investigation into the state. The Vice President has confirmed that Tim Walz, the outgoing Democrat Governor of Minnesota, along with other state officials, could be implicated. |
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