The alleged attempted bribery of a juror this month in the Feeding Our Future trial could complicate the federal court’s ability to find jurors for upcoming trials in the sprawling fraud case, prompting prosecutors to raise the prospects for anonymous or sequestered juries.
Legal experts say that news about the surveillance and a $120,000 attempted bribe of a juror, who immediately reported it to police, could deter prospective jurors from wanting to serve in the trials of the more than 40 people who still face federal charges. The five convicted this month were the first to face trial among the 70 people charged since 2022, accused of stealing money from programs meant to feed low-income kids during the COVID-19 pandemic.
In announcing charges against five people in the bribery case Wednesday, including three of the men who were on trial this month, U.S. Attorney Andrew Luger said his office will seek more anonymous juries and sequester juries in some cases.
“This form of corruption has now made its way to Minnesota,” Luger said, comparing the state’s first federal juror bribery case in generations to what he saw while prosecuting organized crime at the start of his career in New York. “We must therefore take this threat to our system of justice seriously going forward.”
Luger said this week that his office will work with the FBI and other law enforcement partners to “examine when and whether to seek anonymous and sequestered juries to protect from what happened here.”
Senior Judge Kevin Burke, a former chief judge in Hennepin County, said widespread publicity about the attempted bribe and case could make it harder to find jurors for the other fraud trials — although, he added, fewer people pay attention to local news and may still be unaware of the Feeding Our Future case, which has been in the news since January 2022.
It took four days of jury selection in this month’s trial to find jurors from across the state who weren’t connected with the case or didn’t have strong opinions about it.
Burke said anonymous juries, where jurors’ names aren’t revealed even to attorneys in the case, are rarely used in the United States and were never used in his career as a judge and attorney. He said attorneys will need to prove that it’s necessary and balance the need for public transparency.