A defendant in the Feeding Our Future trial testified Thursday that he doled out food to thousands of children in Bloomington, but wasn’t responsible for any of the financial paperwork that resulted in millions of dollars in federal reimbursements.
Mukhtar Mohamed Shariff, 33, of Burnsville, was the only one of the seven defendants in the joint trial to take the stand to testify and the only one who called witnesses in his defense. The six others rested their case without any testimony.
Shariff’s attorney, Frederick Goetz, asked Shariff if he was involved in the dozens of invoices, child attendance rosters, reimbursement claims or meal count forms that the Bloomington company he was CEO of submitted in the federal child nutrition programs — forms that prosecutors have alleged were inflated or made up to rake in money.
“No, that wasn’t my role,” Shariff said Thursday, the second day of his testimony, adding that he didn’t even review some documents that he forwarded on to Feeding Our Future, the St. Anthony nonprofit at the center of the case. But, he added: “I had no reason to believe there was an issue.”
Thursday was the final day of testimony in the high-profile six-week trial. Attorneys will give their closing arguments Friday and Monday before the jury starts deliberations.
The trial is the first one in a broader FBI investigation that has led to charges against 70 people accused of stealing money meant to fund meals for kids in need during the COVID-19 pandemic. Prosecutors say it’s one of the largest pandemic-related fraud cases in the U.S., with more than $250 million stolen from U.S. Department of Agriculture reimbursements given to schools, day cares and nonprofits for feeding low-income children after school and during the summer.
Prosecutors allege the defendants created shell companies to launder money disguised as consulting fees, submitted rosters of made-up children’s names and inflated meal claims to receive more than $40 million for 18 million meals at food sites across the state.
Shariff testified for about five hours while his mother, wife and other family members looked on. The married father of two was asked by Goetz about the businesses he built pre-pandemic. Were they shell companies, Goetz asked.