Minnesota Fraudster So Terrified of Trump's DOJ He Literally Jumps Off a Building

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Minnesota Fraudster So Terrified of Trump's DOJ He Literally Jumps Off a Building

The Trump Department of Justice just dropped a $90 million Medicaid fraud hammer on 15 individuals in Minnesota — eight of them of Somali descent — and one of the accused was so desperate to avoid accountability that he launched himself off a fourth-floor balcony like a man who just remembered he stole ninety million dollars.

Because apparently the elevator was too slow when the FBI comes knocking.

Muhammad Abdulqadir Omar, 32, was charged by indictment with one count of conspiracy to commit health care fraud and four counts of health care fraud in connection with a scheme to bilk the Housing Stabilization Services Program of Minnesota Medicaid. Omar allegedly submitted $3.3 million in fraudulent claims through two companies he owned — North Home Health Care LLC and South Home Health Care LLC — of which approximately $3.2 million was actually paid out by the state. His escape plan? A fourth-story swan dive. He remains on the run as of this writing.

Let that sink in. The man's defense strategy was gravity.

The broader case, announced Thursday by the DOJ, involves seven state-managed Medicaid programs in Minnesota that were systematically looted. FBI Co-Deputy Director Christopher Raia was on hand for the press conference, which officials described as an "opening salvo" in the Trump administration's crackdown on fraud in the state. And "opening salvo" is doing a lot of heavy lifting there — because if this is just the appetizer, Minnesota's fraud buffet is about to get cleaned out.

One of the programs targeted — a homeless housing fund — saw its annual costs skyrocket from $2.5 million to over $104 million in just four years. The program had to be scrapped entirely in 2025 because the alleged fraudsters had pilfered it dry. Read that again. They didn't just steal from the program. They killed it.

Omar's companies billed Minnesota Medicaid for services that were never provided, submitted claims for hospitalized patients, and — wait for it — even billed for dead people. Nothing says "legitimate health care business" like invoicing the government for treating a corpse.

This all happened on the same day that Aimee Bock, the mastermind behind Minnesota's infamous $250 million Feeding Our Future fraud scheme, was sentenced to 500 months — that's 41 and a half years — in federal prison. She was also ordered to repay nearly $243 million in restitution. As Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz has made clear, this administration isn't playing around with fraud.

Conservative Review, which originally reported via the Free Beacon, noted that eight of the 15 charged appear to be of Somali descent. The scale of the alleged theft — across seven programs, involving fake claims and phantom services — paints a picture of a fraud infrastructure that operated in plain sight for years under previous leadership.

Minnesota, of course, is the same state that gave us Governor Tim Walz, who presided over a fraud environment so generous it practically came with a welcome mat. The Trump DOJ is now ripping that mat out from under them.

As for Muhammad Omar — if you're reading this from whatever rooftop you landed on, buddy, I'd suggest turning yourself in. The landing from a federal sentencing is going to hurt a lot worse than the one from that balcony.


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