Vance withholds Medicaid funds from Minnesota amid fraud probe

Vice President JD Vance announced the withholding of nearly $260 million in Medicaid funding to Minnesota due to ongoing fraud issues in state programs. The move targets reimbursements for services already paid by the state, giving Governor Tim Walz 60 days to address the concerns. Officials emphasized that the action aims to curb fraud without impacting providers or beneficiaries directly.

Vice President JD Vance, recently appointed by President Donald Trump to lead the administration's anti-fraud efforts during Tuesday's State of the Union address, took his first major step on Wednesday by freezing federal Medicaid reimbursements to Minnesota. The decision affects nearly $260 million intended for the Democrat-controlled state, which Vance said must demonstrate it "takes its obligation seriously to be good stewards of the American people’s tax money."

At a White House press conference alongside Dr. Mehmet Oz, administrator for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Vance clarified that providers in Minnesota have already received payments from the state budget. "What we’re doing is we’re stopping the federal payments that will go to the state government until the state government takes its obligations seriously to stop the fraud that’s being perpetrated against the American taxpayer," Vance stated.

The administration has focused on 14 programs in Minnesota, including autism services and medical transport, believed to be vulnerable to fraud. Federal prosecutors have secured dozens of convictions in a scheme involving the "Feeding Our Future" program, which received federal funds to provide meals to children during the COVID pandemic but allegedly did not distribute them. Most individuals charged were of Somali descent.

Oz warned that failure to resolve the issues could lead to $1 billion in deferred payments for the state this year. He described a specific fraud tactic where mothers receive around $1,000 to falsely enroll children as autistic, allowing billing for millions in unrendered services. "These schemes disproportionately involve immigrant communities," Oz noted, adding that they divert resources from children who truly need autism support.

Scrutiny has also fallen on daycare and learning centers in the Minneapolis area linked to Somali immigrants, following a December video by independent journalist Nick Shirley showing empty facilities despite receiving state funding. Oz assured that the freeze would not harm residents, citing Minnesota's rainy-day fund, and urged affected parties to contact Governor Walz. "This is not a problem with the people of Minnesota, it’s a problem with the leadership," he said. The administration has given Walz 60 days to respond to the notification letter.

Oz described the initiative as the "largest anti-fraud effort of its kind" in CMS history, targeting waste in Medicaid preservation.

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