Instead of providing free meals to children in need, defendants on trial in the Feeding Our Future case sold some of the food at their Shakopee restaurant, profiting twice — once from government reimbursements and once from the food sales — an FBI forensic accountant testified.
Federal prosecutors called Pauline Roase to the witness stand Tuesday and Wednesday in the high-profile trial to describe how she traced a complex paper trail of financial records to reveal that only $3 million of the nearly $30 million in government reimbursements that went to Empire Cuisine & Market — the restaurant at the center of the trial — went toward buying food, as intended.
“Largely, I didn’t find food purchases,” Roase said.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture reimburses day cares, schools and nonprofits for giving free meals to low-income children after school and during the summer. Instead, Roase testified, defendants used most of that money for real estate, wire transfers to Chinese companies and other personal expenses.
And of the food they did buy, she testified, some went to purchase goat meat, coffee, mango juice and other items that weren’t given to kids, but instead matched food and drinks sold at Empire Cuisine & Market.
The seven defendants are the first to go to trial out of 70 people charged in the sprawling case, which prosecutors have called one of the largest pandemic-related fraud cases in the country, totaling more than $250 million. Since the first charges were filed in 2022, 18 people have pleaded guilty.
The defendants on trial had 50 food distribution sites spanning across the state from Rochester to St. Cloud, and were largely overseen by St. Paul nonprofit Partners in Nutrition as well as St. Anthony nonprofit Feeding Our Future, which is at the center of the case.
The FBI began its massive fraud investigation into Minnesota’s meal programs in April 2021. Starting the next month, Roase said she was tasked with following the money defendants received; they requested $49 million in reimbursements for providing 18 million meals, $5.6 million which went to Partners in Nutrition and Feeding Our Future in administrative fees.