Trenton, NJ – Large-scale government program fraud, like the massive “Feeding Our Future” scandal that shook Minnesota, or the latest child daycare fraud, has not only happened in New Jersey but continues to surface across multiple public funding systems.
Experts and investigators say the same structural weaknesses that allowed the Minnesota nonprofit to siphon tens of millions of federal dollars—rapid expansion, reduced oversight, and heavy reliance on third-party operators—are present in programs throughout New Jersey.
What has been confirmed
In Minnesota, prosecutors allege that individuals connected to the “Feeding Our Future” nonprofit exploited pandemic-era meal programs to steal more than $250 million intended to feed low-income children. Federal investigators described it as one of the largest cases of COVID-19 relief fraud in the nation. That case exposed how easily public programs, when flooded with emergency funds and administered through nonprofit intermediaries, can be manipulated through falsified documentation and inflated claims.
Daycare fraud
New allegations and investigations into daycare fraud surfaced this week in Minnesota, but can that happen in New Jersey too?
While no single fraud in New Jersey has matched that level of loss to date, the state has faced its own share of widespread deception involving public funds—particularly in welfare, healthcare, and education programs. The repeated pattern, investigators say, underscores a consistent vulnerability in the administration of aid programs, especially those that rely on trust-based systems with limited real-time auditing.
One of New Jersey’s most prominent examples came in 2017 in the township of Lakewood, where more than two dozen residents were charged in a massive welfare fraud scheme.
Authorities alleged that families had collected millions in Medicaid, housing, and food assistance benefits by concealing income and assets. The case drew national attention not only for its scale but for revealing how sophisticated fraud could persist for years under fragmented oversight.
In the wake of the Lakewood scandal, the state began cross-referencing benefit records with tax and wage databases, but enforcement remains a constant challenge.
Fraud has also appeared in other federally funded programs. A 2013 report from the Office of the State Comptroller found “widespread fraud and abuse” in New Jersey’s school lunch programs.
The audit discovered that parents and school staff had falsified income information to secure free or reduced-price meals, while some school districts lacked sufficient verification systems to catch discrepancies. The report warned that without consistent monitoring, such programs could easily become conduits for waste and deception.
The healthcare sector—particularly Medicaid—remains one of the state’s largest and most complex targets for fraud. Each year, billions in federal and state Medicaid dollars flow to New Jersey hospitals, nursing homes, and healthcare providers. According to OSC data, tens of millions in improper payments are identified and recovered annually.
A recent investigation revealed that owners of two South Jersey nursing homes allegedly diverted over $100 million in Medicaid funds into personal ventures while their facilities suffered from severe understaffing, unsafe conditions, and resident neglect.
The case, now under review by state and federal authorities, illustrates how profit motives can collide with public care obligations when oversight weakens.
Healthcare fraud in New Jersey extends beyond long-term care facilities. The state has served as a central hub in several nationwide telemedicine and durable medical equipment (DME) fraud rings, which federal prosecutors say have collectively caused more than $1.2 billion in losses.
In these operations, companies allegedly paid kickbacks to doctors and marketers to generate fake prescriptions and insurance claims for unnecessary or nonexistent equipment. The fraudulent reimbursements were then laundered through shell corporations, making detection difficult until large-scale federal audits exposed the pattern.
The addiction recovery industry has also come under fire.
In 2024, the New Jersey State Commission of Investigation released a report documenting “widespread fraud and corruption” in substance abuse treatment centers across the state. Investigators found that some facilities engaged in “patient brokering”—paying middlemen to recruit individuals with health insurance into treatment programs regardless of medical need. Others billed insurers for services never provided, exploiting both patients and public funding sources.
The SCI called for stronger licensing standards, real-time billing oversight, and criminal penalties for facilities found engaging in deceptive practices.
The pandemic era brought new opportunities for fraud through emergency relief programs like the federal Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) and Economic Injury Disaster Loans (EIDL). New Jersey has seen hundreds of criminal cases involving business owners and individuals accused of falsifying payroll records, creating shell companies, or inflating expenses to obtain relief loans. In one notable case, a Bergen County man was sentenced after prosecutors said he used PPP funds meant for employee retention to purchase luxury vehicles and cryptocurrency. State officials noted that such crimes are often detected only after funds are disbursed, as agencies struggle to balance rapid relief with fraud prevention.
Despite ongoing challenges, New Jersey has implemented a range of systems to detect and prevent fraud before it reaches large-scale levels.
The Office of the State Comptroller uses electronic data-matching tools that compare applicant information against tax filings, wage records, and other public databases. Medicaid transactions are monitored through algorithms designed to flag anomalies in billing patterns. The state also participates in multi-agency task forces that share intelligence across state lines, recognizing that many fraudulent schemes operate regionally rather than locally.
However, watchdog agencies warn that even the best technology cannot fully compensate for lapses in human oversight. The Minnesota case demonstrated how program expansion—especially during emergencies—creates gaps that criminals can exploit. New Jersey’s own experience with rapidly scaled programs, from pandemic relief to healthcare subsidies, shows similar vulnerabilities when administrative systems are overwhelmed.
To strengthen accountability, officials encourage residents to report suspicious activity. The National Center for Disaster Fraud (NCDF) maintains an online complaint system for federal programs, while the New Jersey Office of the State Comptroller operates a dedicated tip line at 1-855-OSC-TIPS. Reports can be filed anonymously, and information often plays a critical role in identifying fraud that automated systems miss.
Experts in public finance say that while New Jersey’s enforcement track record is improving, no program that distributes large sums of taxpayer money is completely immune to manipulation.
Fraud tends to evolve as oversight mechanisms tighten—moving from simple falsification to more elaborate corporate and nonprofit structures that obscure accountability. As long as federal and state programs rely on intermediaries to deliver aid, investigators say, the risk of large-scale abuse will persist.
For New Jersey, the lesson from Minnesota’s scandal is both cautionary and familiar: whenever public programs expand faster than the systems built to monitor them, opportunities for exploitation grow in equal measure.
