Vice President JD Vance has asked the Justice Department to consider a criminal investigation related to allegations in a Republican-led House Oversight Committee report that Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison failed to curb fraud risks in state-administered, federally funded programs.
Vice President JD Vance has asked the Justice Department’s National Fraud Enforcement Division to review allegations laid out in a Republican-led House Oversight Committee report that accuses Minnesota officials of failing for years to adequately address fraud risks in state-administered social-services programs. In a post on X, Vance said he had referred the House committee’s report for a criminal investigation, writing that “Minnesota state officials are not above the law,” and that if officials “facilitated fraud, lied under oath … or harassed and intimidated whistleblowers,” they “must face justice.” (theguardian.com) The House Oversight Committee report, described by local and national outlets as roughly 205 pages, asserts that state leaders were aware of vulnerabilities as early as 2019 and did not take sufficient action to stop misuse of federal funds. The report estimates roughly $300 million in federal child nutrition funds were lost and warns that up to $9 billion in Medicaid-related funding was lost or placed at significant risk. (oversight.house.gov) The Justice Department’s fraud division is a relatively new unit. DOJ’s website says Colin McDonald was sworn in on April 1, 2026, as the first assistant attorney general leading the National Fraud Enforcement Division. (justice.gov) Walz and Ellison have denied wrongdoing and have argued that Minnesota has taken steps to crack down on fraud, while describing the House committee’s investigation and some federal actions as politically motivated. (apnews.com) Separately, the Trump administration has announced restrictions on federal child-care funding tied to fraud allegations amplified by viral videos about Minnesota day care providers. However, reporting has differed on whether payments were fully halted: some outlets described a freeze or halt affecting Minnesota, while Reuters reported the administration was tightening national documentation requirements and demanding an audit, but that Minnesota funds were not frozen. (pbs.org) The controversy has also drawn political attention in other states. In Ohio, state officials and lawmakers have publicly weighed how to respond to similar viral claims, though reporting has emphasized that online videos alone are not necessarily evidence of fraud. (statenews.org)