The convicted ringleader of the Feeding Our Future fraud is blaming her Somali co-conspirators for orchestrating the sprawling billing scheme that stole more than $250 million from a federal food assistance program, insisting ahead of this week’s sentencing hearing that she, too, was duped by the Minnesota-based network of Somali fraudsters.
Aimee Bock faces a statutory maximum sentence of 100 years in federal prison in what would be the lengthiest and most severe punishment yet in the Feeding Our Future fraud case, a penalty to be determined at Thursday’s sentencing hearing.
Federal prosecutors have recommended a 50-year prison sentence, maintaining that Bock was the brains behind the operation.
Bock, meanwhile, is requesting either time served or no more than 37 months, followed by supervised release with mental health treatment and vocational training, for the part she, according to her attorneys, unwittingly played.
Trending: BREAKING: Sinkhole Shuts Down Runway At Major U.S. Airport
Bock points the finger at Somali accomplices
Continue reading
Join the conversation!
Please share your thoughts about this article below. We value your opinions, and would love to see you add to the discussion!