Level 1 — Absolute Beginner
A woman in the United States is going to court soon. Her name is Aimee Bock. She lives in the state of Minnesota.
She ran a group that was supposed to give free meals to poor children. But she did not give the food. She took the money instead. The money came from the government.
Bock and her helpers took about 250 million dollars. That is a lot of money. The police say it is the biggest food fraud in the United States.
Now the government wants her to go to prison for 50 years. Her lawyers say that is too much. A judge will decide on May 21.
- court
- a place where a judge decides if a person has done something wrong
- judge
- the person in a court who makes decisions about the law
- fraud
- the crime of lying to take money from someone
- prison
- a building where people are kept after they break the law
- government
- the group of people who run a country or a state
- lawyer
- a person who knows the law and helps people in court
- meals
- food that you eat at one time, such as breakfast, lunch, or dinner
- money
- the coins and paper notes that people use to buy things
Level 2 — Elementary
Federal prosecutors in Minneapolis are asking a judge to send Aimee Bock to prison for fifty years. Bock was the founder and director of a nonprofit organisation called Feeding Our Future. The group's job was to share federal money with smaller centres that fed poor children during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Instead of feeding children, prosecutors say Bock and her partners signed up more than 200 fake meal sites. The sites claimed to serve millions of children, but the children did not exist. The fake records helped the group take about 250 million dollars from the United States Department of Agriculture.
A jury in the District of Minnesota found Bock guilty on March 19, 2026 on all seven counts she faced, including wire fraud and bribery. Many other people connected to the case have also pleaded guilty or been convicted.
Bock's lawyers say their client should receive only time already served, or about 37 months in prison. They say she has mental-health needs and a young child. Prosecutors disagree and call her the leader of the largest pandemic fraud in American history. The judge will decide the sentence on Thursday, May 21, 2026.
- prosecutor
- a lawyer who works for the government and tries to prove that a person broke the law
- nonprofit
- an organisation that exists to help people or a cause, not to make money for owners
- pandemic
- an outbreak of a disease that spreads across many countries at once
- fake
- not real, made to look real in order to trick people
- jury
- a group of ordinary people who listen to a court case and decide if a person is guilty
- guilty
- responsible for breaking the law
- bribery
- the crime of giving someone money or gifts to make them act dishonestly
- sentence
- the punishment that a judge gives to a person after they have been found guilty
Level 3 — Intermediate
Federal prosecutors in the District of Minnesota have filed a 78-page sentencing memorandum asking U.S. District Judge Nancy Brasel to impose a 50-year custodial sentence on Aimee Bock, the Minneapolis nonprofit founder whose organisation, Feeding Our Future, served as the pass-through sponsor for what the Justice Department has called the largest pandemic-era fraud uncovered anywhere in the United States. The memorandum, lodged on May 18, 2026, frames Bock as the architect of a scheme that diverted roughly 250 million dollars in federal child-nutrition reimbursements through more than 200 sham meal sites across the Twin Cities and outstate Minnesota.
The underlying programme is the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Summer Food Service Program, which was rapidly expanded during the COVID-19 pandemic so that nonprofits could reimburse small meal sites for free meals served to children outside school hours. Prosecutors allege that Bock's organisation knowingly approved fictitious site rosters, inflated meal counts and falsified attendance records, and that participating site operators sent kickbacks back to Bock and her senior staff through real-estate purchases, luxury vehicles and offshore wires.
A jury in the District of Minnesota convicted Bock on March 19, 2026 on all seven counts she faced — wire fraud, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, federal-programmes bribery, money laundering, and related offences. The same trial separately convicted her co-defendant Salim Said. Of approximately 70 people charged in the broader Feeding Our Future investigation, more than 35 have already pleaded guilty and several have been sentenced to prison terms ranging from seven to twenty-one years.
Defence counsel argues in its own sentencing memorandum that Bock should receive no more than 37 months, citing mental-health treatment needs, the welfare of her young child, and what the defence characterises as an overstated leadership role. Prosecutors counter that the 50-year recommendation reflects both the unprecedented dollar volume and the moral gravity of stealing from a programme designed to feed hungry children during a public-health emergency. Judge Brasel is scheduled to impose sentence on Thursday, May 21, 2026, with restitution proceedings to follow.
- memorandum
- a formal written document in which a party to a case sets out its arguments or position for the judge
- custodial sentence
- a punishment that requires the convicted person to be held in prison rather than serve outside it
- pass-through sponsor
- an organisation that receives federal money and distributes it onward to smaller sub-recipients, with responsibility for oversight
- kickback
- an illegal payment made to someone in return for arranging a contract, approval or other favour
- wire fraud
- the federal crime of using electronic communications across state lines to carry out a scheme to defraud
Level 4 — Advanced
Federal prosecutors in the District of Minnesota filed a 78-page sentencing memorandum on May 18, 2026 seeking a 50-year custodial term for Aimee Bock, the founder and former executive director of the Minneapolis-based nonprofit Feeding Our Future, whose stewardship of federal child-nutrition pass-through funds the Justice Department has characterised as the largest pandemic-era fraud uncovered anywhere in the country. The memorandum, filed by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Joseph Thompson, Matthew Ebert and Harry Jacobs and supervised by Acting U.S. Attorney Lisa Kirkpatrick, asks Judge Nancy Brasel to find that Bock orchestrated the diversion of roughly 250 million dollars in U.S. Department of Agriculture Summer Food Service Program and Child and Adult Care Food Program reimbursements through more than 200 sham meal sites across the Twin Cities, Willmar, Mankato and outstate Minnesota between March 2020 and the FBI raids of January 2022.
The underlying mechanics turned on a statutory feature of the relevant USDA child-nutrition streams: sponsoring nonprofits could pre-approve and reimburse newly opened sub-recipients for meal counts certified only after the fact, and pandemic-era waivers temporarily removed the on-site documentation requirements that would otherwise have surfaced anomalies more quickly. Prosecutors argue that Bock's organisation systematically exploited that pre-approval discretion, attesting in writing that fictitious meal sites — including operations registered to vacant storefronts and to single-family residences — were serving thousands of meals per day to children who did not exist, and routing the resulting cost reimbursements through layered limited-liability companies that funnelled kickbacks back to Bock and her senior staff in the form of real-estate purchases in Prior Lake and St. Anthony, luxury vehicles, and offshore wire transfers to accounts in Kenya, the United Arab Emirates and Turkey.
A jury in the District of Minnesota convicted Bock on March 19, 2026 on all seven counts of a superseding indictment charging wire fraud, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, federal-programmes bribery under 18 U.S.C. § 666, money laundering, and aiding-and-abetting offences; the same trial separately convicted co-defendant Salim Said. Of approximately 70 people charged across the broader Feeding Our Future investigation, more than 35 have pleaded guilty and several — including Abdulkadir Nur Salah and Mukhtar Mohamed Shariff — have already been sentenced to terms ranging from approximately seven to twenty-one years in federal prison. Prosecutors note that Bock occupied the apex of the pass-through funnel, signed the underlying federal sub-recipient agreements personally, and continued to recruit new sham sites even after staff members raised internal concerns and after the Minnesota Department of Education first attempted to suspend reimbursements in summer 2021.
Defence counsel, in a parallel memorandum filed earlier the same week, argues that a sentence of no more than 37 months — effectively time served — is sufficient under 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a), citing Bock's documented mental-health treatment needs, the welfare of her young child, and what the defence characterises as an overstated leadership role relative to the more entrepreneurial site operators. Prosecutors counter that the 50-year recommendation reflects both the unprecedented loss amount under the Sentencing Guidelines' fraud table at U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 and the moral gravity, in the government's framing, of converting a programme designed to feed hungry children during a public-health emergency into a personal-enrichment vehicle on a hitherto unseen scale. Judge Brasel is scheduled to impose sentence on Thursday, May 21, 2026 in the Diana E. Murphy U.S. Courthouse in Minneapolis, with restitution proceedings under 18 U.S.C. § 3663A and asset-forfeiture orders to follow.