2026年4月28日 / 美国东部时间上午11:49 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻
作者:乔纳·卡普兰
乔纳·卡普兰 调查记者
乔纳·卡普兰是一名屡获殊荣的记者,以其平衡的报道、深入的访谈和对影响社区的高影响力议题进行深度调研而享有盛誉。他的作品出现在WCCO所有的新闻节目中,并经常登上哥伦比亚广播公司新闻的节目和平台,包括《CBS晚间新闻》《CBS早间新闻》和CBS 24/7。
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乔纳·卡普兰
多名官员向哥伦比亚广播公司新闻证实,多组联邦探员于周二清晨再次涌入明尼阿波利斯部分区域,针对约20家托儿中心执行搜查令,调查其涉嫌欺诈行为。
此次突袭未逮捕任何人——这与去年冬季“都会突袭行动”期间的移民打击行动形成鲜明对比——但此次大范围执法行动似乎标志着联邦当局重新聚焦调查明尼苏达州数十亿美元的新冠疫情时期欺诈计划,这类骗局曾引发特朗普政府的关注与愤怒。
“今日,联邦调查局联合州、地方执法部门,正在法院授权下开展执法行动,作为一项 ongoing 欺诈调查的一部分,”美国司法部发言人周二在一份声明中表示。
“如果你在明尼苏达州实施欺诈,你一定会被抓获——我们今日看到的正是这样的结果,”明尼苏达州州长蒂姆·瓦尔兹(民主党人)在一份声明中说道。“通过州与联邦机构共享信息,我们能够抓获罪犯。联合调查行之有效,伸张正义有赖于此。”
自2021年以来,已有92人因这类骗局被起诉,67人被定罪,其中包括上月对其在“喂养我们的未来”丑闻中所涉行为认罪的5人,该丑闻利用了一项联邦营养计划牟利。
“我为我们的检察官团队、联邦探员和执法合作伙伴感到骄傲,他们持续揭露明尼苏达州猖獗的欺诈行为,”美国检察官丹尼尔·N·罗森于3月20日表示。
罗森周二拒绝置评。
哥伦比亚广播公司新闻明尼苏达州分社的摄制组于当地时间清晨6点刚过,在南明尼阿波利斯的迷你托儿所目击了约12名探员开展行动。一名探员正在拍照,另一名探员则扛着一个大型便携式文件箱进入内部。
值得注意的是,迷你托儿所曾出现在去年12月YouTube博主尼克·雪莉发布的一段走红社交媒体视频中,该博主走访了约12家索马里人经营的托儿所和医疗诊所。这段视频被埃隆·马斯克、副总统J·D·万斯以及前司法部长帕姆·邦迪转发,将欺诈事件推至全国舆论的中心。
特朗普总统和其他共和党议员进一步将注意力集中在该州庞大的索马里裔社区,因为大多数欺诈被告都有索马里血统,这招致了包括瓦尔兹在内的当地官员的强烈批评,瓦尔兹谴责特朗普的批评是“针对我们明尼苏达州同胞的卑劣、种族主义谎言和诽谤”。
尽管如此,瓦尔兹还是日益陷入守势,甚至于1月5日结束了连任竞选,同时宣布任命一名“欺诈专员”以保护纳税人资助的社会项目。
然而,随后的几周彻底改变了整个局势,来自海关与边境保护局(CBP)和移民与海关执法局(ICE)的2000多名联邦探员涌入双子城,引发了与抗议者的激烈冲突,并导致两名美国人蕾妮·古德和亚历克斯·普雷蒂被枪击身亡。约3700名移民被逮捕和拘留,其中大多数并非索马里裔,也与任何涉嫌欺诈无关。
妮科尔·斯甘加和乔·沃尔什为本报道贡献了内容。
Months after Operation Metro Surge, federal agents return to Minneapolis to target daycares for suspected fraud
April 28, 2026 / 11:49 AM EDT / CBS News
By Jonah Kaplan
Jonah Kaplan Investigative Reporter
Jonah Kaplan is an award-winning journalist who has built a strong reputation for his balanced reporting, thoughtful interviews, and deeply researched coverage of high-impact issues affecting the community. His work appears on all of WCCO’s newscasts and is often featured on CBS News’ programs and platforms, including the CBS Evening News, CBS Mornings and CBS 24/7.
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Jonah Kaplan
Teams of federal agents once again swarmed sections of Minneapolis early Tuesday morning, multiple officials confirmed to CBS News, exercising search warrants at about 20 childcare centers for suspected fraud.
No one was arrested in the raids — a stark contrast from last winter’s immigration crackdown during Operation Metro Surge— but the sweeping law enforcement activity did appear to signal a refocused effort on the part of federal authorities to investigate the billion-dollar COVID-era fraud schemes in Minnesota that had once drawn the Trump administration’s attention and ire.
“Today the FBI with federal, state and local law enforcement is involved in court-authorized law enforcement activity as part of an ongoing fraud investigation,” a Justice Department spokesperson said in a statement Tuesday.
“If you commit fraud in Minnesota you’re going to get caught — and that’s exactly what we saw today,” Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, a Democrat, said in a statement. “We catch criminals when state and federal agencies share information. Joint investigations work, and securing justice depends on it.”
Since 2021, 92 people have been charged in the schemes, with 67 convicted, including five people who pleaded guilty last month for their roles in the Feeding Our Future scandal that exploited a federal nutrition program.
“I am proud of our team of prosecutors, federal agents, and law enforcement partners who continue to expose the rampant fraud in Minnesota,” U.S. Attorney Daniel N. Rosen said on March 20.
Rosen declined comment on Tuesday.
A CBS News Minnesota crew witnessed about a dozen agents operating at the Mini Childcare Center in South Minneapolis just after 6 a.m. local time. One agent was taking photos while another was seen walking a large portable file case inside.
Mini Childcare Center, notably, was mentioned in a viral social media video posted last December by YouTuber Nick Shirley, who went door to door to about a dozen Somali-owned daycares and health clinics. That video was amplified by Elon Musk, Vice President J.D. Vance and then-Attorney General Pam Bondi, who pushed the fraud story into the center of the national conversation.
President Trump and other Republican lawmakers further focused that attention on the state’s large Somali community, as most of the fraud defendants are of Somali descent, drawing stiff criticism from local officials, including Walz, who denounced Mr. Trump’s criticism as “vile, racist lies and slander towards our fellow Minnesotans.”
Still, Walz was increasingly put on the defensive, and even ended his reelection campaign on Jan. 5, while also announcing the appointment of a “fraud czar” to protect taxpayer-funded social programs.
The ensuing weeks changed the entire dynamic, however, with more than 2,000 federal agents from Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) descending on the Twin Cities, igniting fierce clashes with protesters and resulting in the shooting deaths of two Americans, Renee Good and Alex Pretti. Roughly 3,700 immigrants were arrested and detained, most of whom were not Somali nor connected to any alleged fraud.
Nicole Sganga and Joe Walsh contributed to this report.
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