A 43-year-old Brooklyn Park man on Tuesday became the sixth person to plead guilty in the $250 million federal child nutrition fraud case connected to the Minneapolis nonprofit Feeding Our Future.
Liban Yasin Alishire admitted in a Minneapolis federal courtroom to pocketing more than $700,000 as part of a conspiracy in which he and others grossly overstated how many underprivileged children his Community Enhancement Services and Lake Street Kitchen sites served under the Federal Child Nutrition Program from late 2020 to early 2022 while under the sponsorship of Feeding Our Future.
Alishire pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud and money laundering. He is one of 50 people to be charged in the massive fraud case since last September.
"He realizes he made a terrible mistake," attorney Matthew Forsgren said after Alishire's plea hearing. "Obviously he accepts responsibility; he knows it."
Alishire's plea agreement calculated an expected sentencing guidelines range of 41 to 51 months, but U.S. District Judge Nancy Brasel reminded Alishire that she was not bound by that agreement and could impose a different sentence after further review of his pre-sentencing investigation.
According to Alishire's plea agreement, he submitted fake invoices and attendance rosters to prop up bogus claims that his federal child nutrition sites were serving meals to thousands of children daily. Community Enhancement Services claimed to have served more than 70,000 meals from December 2020 to April 2021. Alishire meanwhile created a distribution company called Ace Distribution Services Inc., which falsely claimed to have served more than 800,000 meals to children from February to October 2021.
"But in reality Community Enhancement Services and Lake Street Kitchen served a small fraction of the meal counts that were claimed, correct?" Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph Teirab asked Alishire during Tuesday's hearing.
"Correct, yes," Alishire responded.