With latest Minnesota fraud case looming, the lead prosecutors have quit
CBSN
The four prosecutors who spearheaded a $250 million Minnesota fraud case will not be in court at the next trial because they've all left the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Minnesota in recent days, along with more than a dozen others in a growing wave of resignations. In:
The four prosecutors who spearheaded a $250 million Minnesota fraud case will not be in court at the next trial because they've all left the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Minnesota in recent days, along with more than a dozen others in a growing wave of resignations.
The departures have left the already-diminished office with as few as 17 assistant U.S. attorneys, according to sources inside the office — down from 70 during the Biden administration.
Former prosecutors Joe Thompson, Harry Jacobs, Daniel Bobier and Matthew Ebert — the four attorneys who had been leading the $250 million Feeding Our Future fraud case, which was the first shoe to drop in the massive Minnesota fraud scandal — have handed off the prosecution to relative newcomers to the office.
Harry Jacobs, who was recently named head of the office's criminal division, was also involved in the prosecution of Vance Boelter, the man accused of assassinating former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark.
Sources close to the attorneys who left have cited a variety of factors for the staff shakeup, including caseload management, structural issues within the office, the Trump administration's influence on the office, and concerns related to Operation Metro Surge — the ongoing immigration enforcement operation in the Twin Cities that has led to thousands of arrests as well as repeated clashes with protesters, two of whom were killed by federal agents.













