A Shakopee man has become the 50th person charged so far in the Feeding Our Future-related fraud scheme, the largest pandemic fraud in the country.
In a federal indictment unsealed Wednesday, Abduljabar Hussein, 42, was charged with wire fraud, federal programs bribery, money laundering and other charges for his involvement in what prosecutors say is a more than $250 million scheme to steal money meant to feed needy children during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Hussein is the husband of Mekfira Hussein, 38, also of Shakopee, who was charged and arrested in September. She ran the Brooklyn Center nonprofit, Shamsia Hopes. Prosecutors say her husband created Oromia Feeds LLC in December 2020 to supply food to her nonprofit.
Prosecutors allege the couple created fake invoices and claimed to feed thousands of children a day, but spent only a fraction of their federal reimbursement money on food. Instead, the prosecutors say, the couple pocketed millions of dollars for themselves.
Abduljabar Hussein was represented Wednesday by a public defender who couldn't be reached for comment. Attorney Jason Steck, who represents Mekfira Hussein, said she was scammed by a Feeding Our Future employee who submitted fraudulent invoices that appeared to be from her and who made it look as if he was assisting the couple.
"Ms. Hussein was serving the kids that she claimed to be serving, and we believe the evidence is going to prove that," Steck said. "Over 90% of that [federal funding she received] was actually spent on food that was distributed to children."
Steck said Abduljabar Hussein was a legitimate vendor buying food for children.
"The inferences that the government drew from the evidence that it did obtain weren't correct and when the evidence is fully revealed, then they'll discover that Ms. Hussein did nothing wrong and was feeding the children that she said she was feeding," Steck said.