HHS takes action in Minnesota amid massive fraud reports

3A63KAR Washington, United States. 24th Mar, 2025. US Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. speaks during a meeting with President Donald Trump and members of his Cabinet in the Cabinet Room at the White House in Washington, DC on March 24, 2025. (Photo by Samuel Corum/Sipa USA) Credit: Sipa USA/Alamy Live News

Photo: Alamy

The Trump administration is taking action against reported fraud in Minnesota. Tuesday night, representatives from both the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Administration for Children and Families announced that the state will be cut off from federal funding for child care payments. 

Deputy HHS Secretary Jim O’Neil and ACF Assistant Secretary Alex J. Adams posted a video on X outlining the situation. O’Neil stated, “We believe the state of Minnesota has allowed scammers and fake day cares to siphon millions of taxpayer dollars over the past decade.”

Adams explained that the ACF grants Minnesota $185 million for child care funding every year, but when he contacted the director of the Minnesota child care services office, “She could not tell me with confidence whether those allegations of fraud are isolated or whether there is fraud stretching statewide.”

This has led the ACF and HHS to require photo evidence before sending funding to any child care centers in the future. They have also opened a fraud reporting hotline where concerned citizens can report suspicions of fraud by calling: 202-690-6782 or emailing: ChildCare.gov@acf.hhs.gov

In addition, they have demanded that Minnesota Governor Tim Walz provide a comprehensive audit of these centers. He must hand over attendance records, licensing information, inspection reports, investigation materials, and complaints against day care centers. 

Waltz publicly responded online by claiming that his state has been punishing “fraudsters” for years, and that President Trump is somehow using the fraud reports to politicize the issue of using taxpayer dollars to fund daycare centers. 

Independent journalist Nick Shirley originally reported on daycare fraud in Minnesota by going to these government-funded centers and discovering that masses of them were empty and run by Somali’s who refused to answer questions regarding their facilities. He also questioned government leaders who have done nothing to end and prevent fraud. The report went viral and has led millions of Americans to question Minnesota’s leadership and its goals. 

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