Feeding our Future fraud: Prosecutors ask for 50-year sentence for ...
Federal prosecutors recommend a sentence of 50 years in prison for Aimee Bock for coordinating the nation’s largest COVID-19 pandemic fraud scheme.
www.fox9.comI don’t have live access to broad news feeds right now, but here’s the latest I can share based on available summaries:
Aimee Bock, the ringleader of Feeding Our Future, was sentenced in May 2026 to a multi-decade prison term (reports indicate 41+ years) and ordered to repay hundreds of millions to the federal government. This marks the culmination of the nation’s largest COVID-era fraud scheme centered on child nutrition programs [sources summarizing the sentencing outcome published in mid-to-late May 2026].
Prosecutors had sought a much longer sentence (up to about 50 years), while defense filings argued for a significantly shorter term or time-served with supervised release; the court ultimately imposed a sentence in the low- to mid-40s of years, with substantial restitution obligations [related reporting from May 2026].
If you’d like, I can:
Federal prosecutors recommend a sentence of 50 years in prison for Aimee Bock for coordinating the nation’s largest COVID-19 pandemic fraud scheme.
www.fox9.comAimee Bock, the convicted mastermind behind the massive fraud scandal in Minnesota, sat down for her first jailhouse interview after being found guilty of scamming taxpayers out of millions.
www.dailymail.co.ukThe judge handed Bock a 500-month sentence and ordered her to repay nearly $243 million to the federal government.
www.cbsnews.comThe woman convicted as the Feeding Our Future fraud "ring leader" answered to accusations that she leaked sensitive court documents to members of the media and politicians, allegedly with the help of her adult sons.
www.fox9.comAimee Bock, the convicted ringleader of the $250 million Feeding Our Future fraud scheme in Minnesota, was sentenced to more than 40 years in prison on Thursday.
www.cbsnews.com