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Bloomington nonprofit leader tied to Feeding Our Future agrees to step down

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After a grand jury charged Ayan Abukar in a federal fraud case tied to Feeding Our Future a year ago, the 42-year-old Bloomington woman continued to stay involved in her nonprofit, even pressuring an employee to alter past financial transactions “to help with my case,” according to the state Attorney General’s office.

The office, which regulates state charitable giving laws, filed an order in Hennepin County District Court on Friday stipulating that Abukar’s nonprofit, Action for East African People, sever ties with Abukar and one her daughters, who had been the nonprofit’s treasurer and secretary.

Abukar founded the organization in 2017 to help East African women and children, and it operates Action Care Community Clinic, a dental clinic in Bloomington that serves low-income patients.

In the Feeding Our Future federal fraud case, a grand jury charged Abukar last March with defrauding the government in a program to feed low-income children after school. Instead, prosecutors allege, she submitted fraudulent invoices and fake attendance rosters, claiming to serve more than 3 million meals to children in just over a year.

Prosecutors say only a fraction of those meals were served, and much of the $5.8 million in U.S. Department of Agriculture funds that Action for East African People received went to personally enrich her, her family members and co-conspirators.

Neither Abukar nor an attorney representing her could be reached Friday. Abukar pleaded not guilty last March. Her daughter hasn’t been charged, so the Star Tribune isn’t naming her.

After the federal charges were announced, the Attorney General’s charities division, which regulates charities that solicit donations in Minnesota, launched an independent investigation of Action for East African People.

The office can pursue civil cases for nonprofits violating state charitable giving laws, not enforce criminal laws. Last year, the office sought to shut down 23 nonprofits tied to Feeding Our Future.

In this civil case, the settlement allows the “important work of the dental clinic” to continue serving people in need, Attorney General Keith Ellison said in a statement, while separating the organization from the “bad actors that took advantage of their organization and the community it is supposed to serve.”

In the court agreement, signed by board chair Abdullahi Haji Somo, the nonprofit agreed to remove Abukar — who the Attorney General’s Office said continued to serve as executive director after being charged — and her daughter, who served on its board.

“We think a lot of the information that’s in the Attorney General’s allegations is wrong,” said Jason Steck, the nonprofit’s attorney who is representing several other defendants in the federal case. “We believe it’s in the best interest of the clinic to enter into this settlement agreement and that’s why we did it. The clinic provides an important service for the community [and] provides dental services to a very underserved community.”

He said Abukar no longer has any position with the nonprofit, but declined to answer how she stayed involved after the charges. The nonprofit is being run by Somo, Steck said.

Action for East African People was sponsored in the meal program by Feeding Our Future, a St. Anthony nonprofit at the center of the $250 million fraud scheme, and Partners in Nutrition in St. Paul, which oversaw several organizations tied to the scheme, though no one affiliated with it as been charged.

Since the first charges were announced in September 2022, 70 people connected to Feeding Our Future have been charged and 17 people have pleaded guilty. The first trial is slated to start April 22. No trial date has been set yet in Abukar’s case.

Federal prosecutors allege that Abukar diverted millions of dollars to shell companies to launder and benefit herself, including buying a $1.5 million 37-acre property in Lakeville and a plane in Nairobi, while other funds benefited her family.

The Attorney General’s Office says $725,000 was transferred to MN Food Grocery LLC, a business owned by Abukar’s son, while $253,000 was transferred to Dimespeak, a corporation started by her daughter.

The Attorney General’s Office said the nonprofit also paid Abdukar’s family members through “contractor payments” including to two daughters and her sister. The board was largely unengaged, so the lack of oversight allowed mismanagement and fraud to continue, the Attorney General’s Office wrote. After Abukar was indicted, she pressured the clinic manager to change financial records to “consulting” fees to help her case, according to the Attorney General’s Office.

The nonprofit violated a number of state laws, including failing to file or register annual reports. The settlement agreement requires the nonprofit bolster oversight by training board members and reviewing its policies and procedures, among other measures.



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One man shot dead, another wounded near Willmar soon after gunman opened fire from Lyndale Av. balcony

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Bystanders observing the scene in Minneapolis recalled hearing the female police negotiator pleading with Matariyeh to surrender. When shots rang out over the phone, the negotiator dropped to her knees and cried. Colleagues could be seen comforting her.

O’Hara said the shots in Minneapolis were fired shortly after an altercation involving Matariyeh’s ex-girlfriend and her current boyfriend, who arrived to the apartment to retrieve some items. Matariyeh and the woman share a child, who was at day care at the time. Police went there to ensure the child’s safety shortly after the suspect fled. The ex-girlfriend and the boyfriend were also not harmed.

The chief said that when police initially responded, it was unclear whether the suspect was still inside the apartment. There is no indication of a domestic violence history between the pair.

At one point after Mayerchak was shot, an officer or dispatcher radioed that the suspect was the man from Minneapolis: “He did say he was willing to shoot cops. Proceed cautiously.”

A short time later, the suspect was leading police on a chase of speeds of more than 100 mph while on the phone with the Minneapolis negotiator, threatening “suicide by cop.”

At about 2:29 p.m., Matariyeh was arrested, and a gun was recovered in the ditch.



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8 candidates compete for Shakopee council as city faces big issues

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He said he would continue to support economic development projects, including one aimed at stabilizing the riverfront and preserving cultural sites that were significant to both the Dakota people and European settlers.

“We want to have good things,” Whiting said. “I’m pretty fiscally conservative for being called the liberal that I am. But, if it makes sense, we’re going to do it.”

Yttreness, who has lived in Shakopee since 1998, spent years with the Fire Department, serving first as a volunteer. He worked most recently as assistant fire chief, a role he left earlier this year.

Yttreness declined to speak in detail about his management of the department, saying, “I’m no longer with them, so that’s the past.”

He said he is running to “get involved in trying to manage the city’s expenses more” and “give some guidance and support to our city employees, public works, police.” He said he believes his knowledge of city operations could be helpful and he wants to “try to do zero tax increases, if possible.”



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St. Paul woman shot to death in North End apartment is identified

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Authorities identified a 35-year-old St. Paul woman found shot to death last week in a North End apartment.

The St. Paul Police Department said Damara Alexis Stowers was the woman found shot in her apartment on Oct. 19.

Police found Stowers at around 9 p.m. in the dwelling in the 100 block of Sycamore Street East after reports of a shooting. Officers rendered aid until Saint Paul fire medics arrived and pronounced her dead at the scene.

Investigators believe a carjacking reported that same night is connected to Stowers death, but no arrests have been announced. The victim in that carjacking was shot, but Regions Hospital staff treated them for noncritical injuries.

Stowers’ death marked the fourth homicide in the capital city in 10 days, and the 25th homicide this year according to a Star Tribune database. There were 28 homicides by this time last year.



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