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Who Is Aimee Bock? Inside Feeding Our Future Scandal

Prosecutors detail control behind $250M fraud scheme.

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Prosecutors have portrayed Aimee Bock, founder of the Minnesota-based nonprofit Feeding Our Future, as the central figure behind what authorities describe as a $250 million fraud scheme involving federal child nutrition funds.

Bock, who established the organization in 2016, is accused of exercising extraordinary control over a sprawling network of meal providers—using intimidation, financial leverage, and what prosecutors called false accusations of racism to silence critics and evade scrutiny from state regulators.

Prosecutors’ Case Against Bock

According to court filings, prosecutors argue that Bock was not a conspicuous spender like many co-defendants, but rather the gatekeeper who approved sites and reimbursements that allowed the scheme to grow.

A cooperating witness described her authority bluntly.

“Aimee Bock was a God,” testified Hanna Marekegn, referring to the power Bock allegedly wielded over operators seeking reimbursement.

Prosecutors said Bock approved implausible meal counts and cut off operators who refused to comply. Qamar Hassan, who ran S&S Catering, told jurors: “If I say no, I’m not getting any more money.”

Money Flow and Alleged Kickbacks

Court records show that more than $1 million flowed to Bock’s longtime boyfriend, Empress Malcolm Watson Jr. Trial exhibits showed Watson posing in luxury vehicles, including a Rolls-Royce, with Bock nearby—images prosecutors said illustrated her proximity to wealth generated by the scheme.

While many defendants allegedly spent proceeds on luxury homes, vehicles, and overseas property, witnesses said Bock discouraged lavish spending, focusing instead on controlling approvals and payments. Prosecutors highlighted a $30,000 cash withdrawal by Bock and multiple reimbursement checks she signed for fraudulent sites as evidence of her central role.

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Watson has not been charged in the Feeding Our Future case, though he faces separate felony tax charges and is currently held in Anoka County jail on an unrelated probation violation.

How the Scheme Expanded During Covid-19

Feeding Our Future initially processed $3–$4 million annually in federal reimbursements. Prosecutors said that changed during the Covid-19 pandemic, when emergency rule changes reduced oversight and allowed claims without standard verification.

Bock allegedly oversaw a network claiming to have served 91 million meals, resulting in nearly $250 million in reimbursements. Subsequent filings placed the alleged total closer to $300 million.

Witnesses testified that operators paid kickbacks to Feeding Our Future employees or intermediaries to keep funds flowing—and that refusing to participate meant losing all reimbursements.

Claims of Racism and State Oversight

The Department of Justice presented evidence that Bock accused the Minnesota Department of Education (MDE) of racism when officials questioned suspicious claims. In 2021, Feeding Our Future sued the state alleging racial discrimination after regulators attempted to halt payments. A judge ordered reimbursements to resume—an outcome prosecutors said allowed the alleged fraud to accelerate.

One prosecution slide stated: “Bock lied to MDE and falsely accused state officials of racism to keep the money flowing.”

Bock testified that approving 21 meal sites along a 1.8-mile stretch of Lake Street was justified because grocery stores were damaged during the George Floyd unrest, calling the area a “food desert.”

Verdict and Broader Case

A federal jury ultimately found Aimee Bock guilty on all counts, including wire fraud, conspiracy, and bribery. Her co-defendant Salim Said was also convicted on multiple charges, including wire fraud, bribery, and money laundering. Authorities say at least 78 people have been indicted in the wider investigation.

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