Minnesota persists in funding Somali charity despite fraud charges against chairman
State officials in Minnesota, under Democrat Gov. Tim Walz, have kept the cash flowing to a Somali charity called Ka Joog, even as its chairman faces serious fraud allegations.
Records reveal that Ali Elmi, chairman of Ka Joog, was arrested in the fall of 2023 and charged with stealing $9 million from the state’s Personal Care Assistance program, yet the state continued sending $600,000 payments to the charity without hesitation, Breitbart News reported.
Authorities laid out a clear case against Elmi, accusing him of siphoning off millions meant for welfare support. Despite this, no one in St. Paul seemed to hit the brakes on funding Ka Joog, raising sharp questions about oversight.
State Agencies Ignore Red Flags
Republican Rep. Isaac Schultz didn’t hold back, calling out the Department of Human Services for being “asleep at the wheel.” If a chairman is charged with fraud, shouldn’t someone at least check the books before wiring another half-million?
Schultz pointed to a deeper rot, saying, “The left hand isn’t talking to the right hand.” State agencies and elected officials seem to operate in silos, leaving taxpayer dollars exposed to potential misuse.
No effort has surfaced to verify if Ka Joog’s work is even legitimate. With Elmi under scrutiny, the absence of any probe into the charity itself feels like a deliberate blind spot.
Charity’s Status Raises Eyebrows
Ka Joog remains listed as an active charity in good standing with the state, despite the allegations against its leader. How does a group tied to a $9 million fraud case escape even a cursory review?
Further digging by local media uncovered a pattern of negligence, with Ka Joog failing to file the required paperwork. Accountability seems to be a foreign concept, yet state funding hasn’t dried up.
Reports also show the charity isn’t even properly registered as an official nonprofit due to missing financial records. Still, over $2.7 million in public money has poured into its accounts, unchecked and unquestioned.
Broader Failures in Welfare Funding
Beyond Ka Joog, the problem stretches wider, with up to $20 million in state welfare funds handed out to organizations dodging registration requirements. Why are these groups, lacking basic compliance, still cashing government checks?
Schultz captured the public’s exasperation, stating, “Minnesotans are incredibly frustrated by this.” When oversight collapses, trust in state institutions erodes just as fast.
The lack of accountability stings even more when no one faces consequences for such lapses. Taxpayers deserve to know their money isn’t padding the pockets of the unscrupulous under the guise of charity.
Time for Real Oversight
Minnesota’s leadership needs to wake up and stop treating public funds like Monopoly money. Fraud charges against a charity’s chairman should trigger immediate scrutiny, not business as usual.
Gov. Walz and his administration must prioritize tightening the reins on welfare disbursements. Progressive policies are one thing, but enabling potential theft through negligence is a betrayal of public trust.
Until the state demands transparency and enforces compliance, stories like Ka Joog’s will keep surfacing. Minnesotans aren’t asking for much, just a government that guards their hard-earned dollars with the same care they do.



