Minnesota Faces Alleged Fraud in Medical Transport and Interpreter Services Last updated 2 minutes ago Investigators and researchers like Hoch and YouTuber Nick Shirley allege widespread fraud in Minnesota's non-emergency medical transport and interpreter services, where nearly 900 Somali-owned firms—often without real operations—bill Medicaid for nonexistent rides and overcharge for interpreters at $100 per hour minimum. This builds on a state scandal with over 90 federal indictments since 2020 for schemes stealing hundreds of millions from programs like child nutrition and autism therapy, mostly involving Somali-Americans, amid claims of empty day cares receiving millions. While DHS has frozen enrollments, revoked licenses, and started reviews, critics say the fraud is overstated and unfairly targets a community of over 100,000, as federal probes and audits continue. This story is a summary of posts on X and may evolve over time.
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REPORT: The Somali fraud scandal keeps on dripping, and it’s not just daycare centers anymore.
We’re now learning that dozens of Somali transport companies are taking government funds — while transporting NO ONE.
David Hoch visited 70 of them, and he was stunned to discover that they “DON’T EXIST.”
And when you add interpreters for doctors’ appointments to the mix, the money being sucked out of the system adds up quickly.