The fallout from Minnesota’s ballooning social-services fraud scandal has widened, with an expert arguing that cultural isolation, weak oversight, and a climate of racial fear all helped the schemes grow undetected for years.
According to Fox News, federal prosecutors say the state is now confronting one of the largest social-services fraud cases in U.S. history.
More than 70 defendants — many connected to Somali-run nonprofits — have been charged with what prosecutors describe as “schemes stacked upon schemes,” draining hundreds of millions in taxpayer funds from child-nutrition and Medicaid housing programs.
Dozens have already been convicted.
Amid continuing indictments and ongoing state and federal investigations, questions have mounted over how the intricate fraud networks operated for so long without intervention.
Simon Hankinson, a senior research fellow at the Heritage Foundation’s Border Security and Immigration Center, told Fox News Digital that a breakdown in immigrant assimilation played a major role in preventing early detection.
“Assimilation is a two-sided coin,” he said. “The pressure comes from inside, from you wanting to assimilate… but it also comes from outside, where the society says, ‘Hey, we expect you to do this.’ We don’t really expect anything of our immigrants.”
He argued that a lack of shared cultural expectations and civic engagement created gaps in oversight and reporting.
While stressing that the vast majority of Minnesota’s roughly 80,000 Somali residents had no involvement in the scheme, Hankinson said the tight-knit nature of the community sometimes discouraged individuals from alerting authorities.
“If your neighbor came to you and said, ‘Hey, we got this cool thing going…’ they’re not going to rat out the clan member, the family member,” he said.
Hankinson pointed to prosecutors’ allegations that fraudulent autism diagnoses were used to drain millions from Minnesota’s Medicaid autism program. He questioned why drastic shifts in reported autism rates did not prompt earlier scrutiny.
“There should have been some oversight,” he said. “You get into the whole American racial guilt… where if you’re an unscrupulous scammer, you can always play the race card… because people are terrified.”
“Nobody likes to be called a racist,” he added, suggesting that fear of backlash made state officials reluctant to act quickly.
The expert also criticized Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz for previously accusing the Trump administration of “demonizing” Somalis when it announced enforcement actions.
Hankinson said that the response ignored the scale of the fraud occurring under state supervision.
“I can’t take Tim Walz seriously… He was asleep at the switch,” he said.
Despite the criticism, Hankinson emphasized that responsibility lies with the individuals who committed the crimes — not the Somali community at large — and said he hopes more Somalis will help expose the small group responsible.
“It’s not a question of scapegoating,” he said. “We have laws. When you break those rules, you are going to get punished.”
He added that honest voices within the community are essential to “give their community the reputation that it deserves.”














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