A man portrayed by prosecutors as one of the pinnacle players in the massive Feeding Our Future fraud investigation received a nearly three-decade federal prison sentence Wednesday.
U.S. District Judge Nancy Brasel sentenced Abdiaziz Shafii Farah, 36, to a 28-year prison term during a hearing in a Minneapolis federal courtroom after a jury convicted him last year of 23 counts on a variety of offenses, including wire fraud, conspiracy to commit money laundering and conspiracy to commit federal programs bribery.
“You’ve shown utter and flagrant disregard for the laws of the United States,” Brasel said to Farah after handing down the sentence, calling his actions motivated by “pure, unmitigated greed.”
Through his restaurant Empire Cuisine and affiliated sites, Farah and his co-conspirators claimed to feed 18 million kids at various food sites and submitted $49 million in reimbursements. Farah enrolled the Shakopee-based restaurant in the federal child nutrition program in April 2020, making him one of the earliest participants in the plot.
The only other defendants in the same echelon as Farah, acting U.S. Attorney Joe Thompson described in court, are the fraud’s ringleaders, Aimee Bock and Salim Said. Jurors found both guilty this spring in the $250 million scheme.
Farah personally pocketed $8 million of the proceeds, which he used to buy a number of luxury items including a Tesla, Porsche and real estate in Kenya. Farah was also previously accused to trying to flee to Kenya and found guilty of attempting to obtain a passport by falsely claiming his was lost. Instead, federal agents had seized the document during search warrants carried out early in the investigation.
Brasel confirmed with prosecutors during Wednesday’s hearing that the money routed to Kenya can never be recovered.
“This really is the nightmare fraud scheme that people are so concerned about,” Thompson said.