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Ramsey County attorney seeks funding to tackle statewide fraud

Ramsey County Attorney John Choi says his office is willing to become a main prosecutorial hub for complex statewide fraud cases — including schemes tied to state government in St. Paul — but only if lawmakers cough up more money for investigators and attorneys. In an interview with FOX 9, Choi pointed to his office’s past work on a $4 million daycare fraud ring and said they currently handle about 50 fraud cases a year, arguing they could take on more statewide cases because the State Capitol sits in Ramsey County and gives his office jurisdiction over many state‑level crimes that don’t involve federal dollars. A recent state fraud report explicitly recommended boosting the “prosecutorial capacity” of the Ramsey County Attorney’s Office, effectively inviting Choi to step into a bigger role as Minnesota scrambles to respond to mounting fraud scandals in human services and beyond. Choi admits he hasn’t yet had serious funding talks with legislators, calling the idea ‘early stages’ and stressing that any expansion would require a ‘robust’ team of investigators, not just lawyers. For Twin Cities residents watching DHS, Medicaid and childcare fraud stack up while cases bog down, the signal here is clear: Ramsey County is offering to swing harder — but only if the state stops pretending you can do big‑league fraud enforcement on a small‑ball budget.

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📌 Key Facts

  • Ramsey County Attorney John Choi says his office is willing to prosecute more complex statewide fraud cases but needs additional resources, especially investigators.
  • Choi cites a past $4 million daycare fraud case his office prosecuted and says they currently bring about 50 fraud cases per year.
  • A recent state fraud report recommends increasing the prosecutorial capacity of the Ramsey County Attorney’s Office to better handle statewide fraud, but Choi has not yet formally sought extra funding from lawmakers.

📊 Relevant Data

Recent estimates indicate that the total amount of fraud in Minnesota-administered programs since 2018 may reach up to $9 billion, primarily involving federal funds for social services like food aid, childcare, and autism services.

9 billion is the new estimate of the total amount of fraud in Minnesota programs — Facebook (Lou Newsman)

Nearly all defendants in major recent Minnesota fraud cases, including the Feeding Our Future scheme where 70 people were charged for bilking over $250 million and other Medicaid fraud cases exceeding $30 million combined, are from the Somali community.

A Somali-American former investigator: why you're hearing about fraud in my community — Minnesota Reformer

The Somali population in Minnesota is approximately 108,536, representing about 1.9% of the state's total population of roughly 5.7 million, yet they are disproportionately represented in recent major fraud cases.

Latest Data on Somali Minnesotans 2024 — Empowering Strategies

Somali refugees began resettling in Minnesota in the early 1990s to escape civil war and famine in Somalia, facilitated by organizations such as Lutheran Social Service of Minnesota and supported by the U.S. Refugee Act of 1980, leading to Minnesota having the largest Somali population in the U.S.

Somali and Somali American Experiences in Minnesota — MNopedia (Minnesota Historical Society)

📰 Source Timeline (1)

Follow how coverage of this story developed over time

March 17, 2026
2:50 AM
Ramsey County offers to help tackle statewide fraud, but needs more resources
FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul by Mike.Manzoni@fox.com (Mike Manzoni)