Witness Drops Bombshell in Minnesota Childcare Fraud Probe, Claims Lawmakers Received Over $1 Million as Scandal Deepens

Silencing the Sentinels: Whistleblower Reveals Systematic Protection of Million-Dollar Child Care Fraud Within Minnesota’s DHS

In a testimony that can only be described as a seismic event for Minnesota state government, Jay Swanson, a retired captain of the Minnesota State Patrol and former manager of investigations at the Department of Human Services (DHS), has laid bare a culture of corruption, intimidation, and systemic theft. Standing before a legislative committee, Swanson detailed how a dedicated team of veteran investigators was systematically dismantled by senior officials to protect a massive, organized criminal enterprise that was siphoning millions of dollars from the Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP). His testimony portrays a department that didn’t just fail to catch fraud, but actively worked to shield it from public and legislative scrutiny.

Swanson’s background is that of a quintessential public servant: 34 years as a state trooper, rising to the rank of captain, followed by five years at DHS overseeing the CCAP fraud investigation unit. He arrived at the department in 2014, a time when the unit initially enjoyed support from the Inspector General’s office. However, by 2017, the atmosphere shifted from one of enforcement to one of suppression. Swanson and his team, comprised of retired police officers with decades of experience in narcotics, fraud, and homicide, found themselves with a “front row seat” to a pillaging of the public benefit system that was both brazen and sophisticated.

The sheer scale of the fraud described by Swanson is staggering. Tips flooded into the unit at a rate they could barely manage. Investigators were dealing with centers receiving between $700,000 and over $1 million in annual funding while providing little to no actual child care. In one instance, a fire department reported a center that was always empty during inspections, yet records showed the state was paying for 90 children across two shifts, seven days a week. Swanson recalled receiving calls from mothers complaining that their “cash kickbacks” from center owners had stopped, and from disgruntled co-owners who felt they hadn’t received their fair share of the “fraud proceeds.”

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The evidence gathered through surveillance and digital forensics was equally damning. Swanson shared a text exchange found on one owner’s phone where a friend asked how much longer the “daycare scam” would continue. The owner, who was on public assistance at the time and vacationing in Dubai, replied that they would do it for another year or two before buying “nice homes in Nairobi.” Perhaps most disturbingly, Swanson testified that individuals entering the country as refugees admitted they had heard about the “daycare scam” while still in camps in Kenya, identifying Minnesota as the easiest and most profitable state in which to execute it.

However, the most explosive part of Swanson’s testimony was not the actions of the criminals, but the actions of his superiors at DHS. When the Office of the Legislative Auditor (OLA) began a review of the CCAP program in 2018, Swanson was ordered by a senior DHS official to submit his answers to the department first. Upon reading his reports on fraud trends, the official reportedly entered Swanson’s office “red-faced and almost yelling,” demanding the deletion of multiple paragraphs. When Swanson warned that this was illegal, he was told to “be ready for the blank storm that’s coming your way.”

What followed was a campaign of harassment and institutional sabotage. DHS spent $90,000 on a consultant with no experience in fraud investigation to label the unit’s findings as “unreliable.” When that failed to stop the investigators, the department implemented a “continuous improvement program” that Swanson described as a 30-minute berating session where veteran law enforcement officers were told they were “incompetent and terrible employees.” This program effectively paralyzed the unit for six months, forcing investigators away from their cases and into endless meetings and “homework assignments.”

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The final blow to the unit’s integrity came through a series of mandated policy changes. Authority to choose cases was stripped from Swanson and given to a committee dominated by officials with no investigative experience. Prioritization based on the amount of funding was banned, forcing investigators to spend 50% of their time on small-scale cases while million-dollar frauds continued unchecked. Most pointedly, investigators were forbidden from contacting the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) without explicit permission, and BCA agents were eventually forced out of the DHS building.

Swanson’s resignation in 2019 was an act of moral protest. “I was not going to be a party to this,” he told the committee. His testimony serves as a harrowing reminder of what happens when the mechanisms of accountability are subverted by the very people tasked with upholding them. For the taxpayers of Minnesota, the message is clear: millions of dollars were stolen, the people who tried to stop it were punished, and the officials who presided over this “storm” of corruption are, in many cases, still in their positions today. The quest for justice for the “honest people of Minnesota” has found its most powerful voice in a retired trooper who refused to look the other way.