Aimee Bock, the convicted mastermind of Feeding Our Future, was sentenced to 41 years in federal prison on Thursday, marking the longest and most severe punishment to date out of all 78 defendants indicted in the free meal delivery fraud case.
The 45-year-old executive director of Feeding Our Future faced a statutory maximum sentence of 100 years behind bars. Prosecutors recommended a 50-year prison sentence, while Bock’s defense team requested either time served or no more than 37 months, an equivalent of three years incarcerated, accompanied by mental health treatment and vocational training.
Judge Nancy Brasel, an appointee of President Donald Trump, scolded Bock as she handed down her sentence at Thursday’s highly anticipated hearing.

Bock ran the Minnesota nonprofit organization known as Feeding Our Future, which approved millions of dollars in fraudulent reimbursement claims for the cost of meals supposedly served.
The pandemic-era billing scheme, which involved dozens of sham catering companies across Minnesota, stole approximately $250 million in child nutrition funds from a federal food assistance program meant to feed disadvantaged children during the COVID-19 crisis. Many of the food distribution sites that Feeding Our Future, which served as their organizational sponsor in exchange for a cut of the proceeds, had recruited into its reimbursement network never actually fed any children.
“This is a vortex of fraud, and you were at the epicenter,” Brasel said, condemning Bock’s actions.
Brasel noted that Bock cannot be automatically held legally responsible for the federal government’s total loss because other conspirators contributed to the taxpayer theft. But Brasel said Bock played a central role in the criminal conspiracy, both in an administrative and financial capacity. Bock, the judge mentioned, signed almost all of the checks made out to the fake food distributors, created a fictitious board of advisers, and forged board minutes.
“Feeding Our Future was Bock, and Bock was Feeding Our Future,” prosecutors said in the government’s sentencing memorandum. “Perhaps most importantly for loss calculations in this case, Bock herself certified each false claim being submitted for reimbursement.”
Brasel agreed with prosecutors that the total loss was around $243 million, a staggering amount that greatly enhanced Bock’s penalty. The judge determined that Bock’s ballpark estimate of between $80 million and $132 million in stolen meal funds was simply not believable based on the evidence presented at trial.
“This is not a close call,” Brasel said.
A jury found Bock guilty in 2025 of seven counts, including conspiracy to commit wire fraud, wire fraud, conspiracy to commit federal programs bribery, and federal programs bribery.
At the sentencing hearing, prosecutors defended their proposed lengthy prison sentence.
“In light of this defendant’s absolute refusal to take a single inkling of responsibility, not just for her leadership role as the beating heart of feeding our future but also for any criminal conduct whatsoever, it is the government’s belief that disabling Aimee Bock from ever meaningfully participating in society ever again is the only just outcome,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Rebecca Kline said.
Kline acknowledged that Bock did not profit as much as other conspirators, but she said Bock benefited from the praise she received from the Somali community.
In her presentencing plea, Bock pinned the blame on her Somali accomplices, insisting that they orchestrated the fraud and deceived her in doing so.
FEEDING OUR FUTURE MASTERMIND SAYS SOMALI ACCOMPLICES SCAMMED HER
“Eidleh and Ahmed knew that Bock did not speak Somali,” her attorneys argued. “They used Bock’s unfamiliarity with Somali to isolate her from uncovering their fraud.”
Bock is white, while most of the Feeding Our Future suspects are Somali immigrants.