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Posted: 2024-06-26T16:40:46Z | Updated: 2024-06-26T16:40:46Z 5 Charged With Attempting $120K Bribe To Juror In Pandemic Aid Fraud Case | HuffPost

5 Charged With Attempting $120K Bribe To Juror In Pandemic Aid Fraud Case

Five people, including a man acquitted in the fraud trial, now face new federal charges in connection with the bag of $120,000 in cash.

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Five people were charged on Wednesday for trying to bribe a juror in one of the countrys largest pandemic aid fraud cases with a bag of $120,000 in cash, the U.S. Attorneys Office and the FBI announced Wednesday.

Abdiaziz Shafii Farah, Abdimajid Mohamed Nur, Said Shafii Farah, Abdulkarim Shafii Farah and Ladan Mohamed Ali were each charged with one count of conspiracy to bribe a juror, one count of bribery of a juror and one count of corruptly influencing a juror.

Abdiaziz Shafii Farah was also charged with one count of obstruction of justice.

The bribe attempt, which U.S. Attorney Andrew Luger on Wednesday called a chilling attack on our justice system, brought renewed attention to the trial of seven Minnesota defendants accused of coordinating to steal more than $40 million from a federal program that was supposed to feed children during the coronavirus pandemic. Five of the defendants were convicted earlier this month, but the bribe scheme disrupted the trial and sent federal authorities racing to uncover who was responsible.

According to an FBI agents affidavit, a woman rang the doorbell at the home of Juror #52 in the Minneapolis suburb of Spring Lake Park the night before the case went to the jury. A relative answered the door and was handed a gift bag with a curly ribbon and images of flowers and butterflies. The woman said it was a present for the juror .

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This photo supplied by the U.S. Attorney's Office for Minnesota shows cash from a bag that was left at the home of a juror in a massive fraud case, June 2, 2024, outside Minneapolis.
Associated Press

The woman told the relative to tell Juror #52 to say not guilty tomorrow and there would be more of that present tomorrow, the agent wrote. After the woman left, the relative looked in the gift bag and saw it contained a substantial amount of cash.

The juror called police right after she got home and gave them the bag, which held stacks of $100, $50 and $20 bills totaling around $120,000.

The woman who left the bag knew the jurors first name, the agent said. Names of the jurors have not been made public, but the list of people with access to it included prosecutors, defense lawyers and the seven defendants.

After the juror reported the bribe attempt, the judge ordered all seven defendants to surrender their cellphones so that investigators could look for evidence. A second juror who was told about the bribe also was dismissed. The FBI investigated the attempted bribe for weeks, raiding the homes of several of the defendants homes. A federal judge also ordered all seven taken into custody and sequestered the jury.

Seventy people have been charged in federal court for their alleged roles in the pandemic fraud scheme that prosecutors say centered on a nonprofit called Feeding Our Future. In addition to the five convictions in early June, eighteen other defendants have already pleaded guilty. Trials are still pending for the others.

Federal prosecutors say the conspiracy exploited rules that were kept lax so the economy wouldnt crash during the pandemic. The FBI began digging into it in the spring of 2021. The defendants allegedly produced invoices for meals never served, ran shell companies, laundered money, indulged in passport fraud and accepted kickbacks. More than $250 million in federal funds were taken overall in the Minnesota scheme and only about $50 million of it has been recovered, authorities say.

The money came from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and was administered by the state, which funneled the funds through partners including Feeding Our Future. The Minnesota Legislatures watchdog arm found that the state education department provided inadequate oversight of the federal program, which opened the door to the theft.

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