A Minnesota judge has overturned a jury’s guilty verdict in a Medicaid fraud case involving a Minneapolis man and his wife, a decision that could affect additional fraud prosecutions in the state.
The ruling comes amid a series of ongoing fraud investigations connected to programs including Medicaid, Feeding Our Future, and state housing initiatives.
State investigators presented evidence that the couple, identified in court as Yusuf and his wife, operated what was described as a “home health company” from a mailbox address used by multiple similar companies.
Prosecutors also introduced records showing tens of thousands of dollars spent on luxury items. A jury found both defendants guilty after approximately four hours of deliberation.
The verdict was reversed by Hennepin County Judge Sarah West. Defense attorney Joe Tamburino, who was not part of the case but reviewed the decision, explained the basis of the ruling.
“It’s reversing or overturning a jury’s verdict,” Tamburino said.
He said Judge West concluded that the state’s case relied “heavily on circumstantial evidence” and did not “exclude other reasonable, rational inferences.”
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“That, in fact, there could’ve been other reasonable theories other than guilt in this case. That’s what it comes down to,” Tamburino said.
Judge West wrote that she was “troubled” by the fraud presented in the case but determined the evidence did not meet the legal threshold required to uphold the convictions.
State Rep. Kristin Robbins, chair of the House Fraud Prevention and State Oversight Committee, said she was “stunned” by the ruling.
She said the case highlighted gaps in current law.
“We want to strengthen state law so that we can get prosecutions out of these cases,” Robbins said.
“Because clearly a jury thought he was guilty.”
Members of the jury expressed similar reactions.
Jury foreman Ben Walfoort said he was “shocked” by the decision to overturn the verdict.
“I’m shocked based off of all of the evidence that was presented to us and the obvious guilt that we saw based off of said evidence,” Walfoort said.
“It was not a difficult decision whatsoever. The deliberation took probably four hours at most.”
“Based off of the state’s evidence that was presented, I was beyond a reasonable doubt,” he said.
🚨 BREAKING: A judge in deep blue Hennepin County has OVERTURNED the guilty verdict of Abdifatah Yusuf after stealing $7.2M from taxpayers.
The ruling could now open the door for other fraud convictions in Minnesota to be overturned.
Jurors are shocked by the decision.
WTF? pic.twitter.com/smo10o3xs6
— Dustin Grage (@GrageDustin) November 25, 2025
The Minnesota Attorney General’s Office has filed an appeal seeking to reinstate the convictions.
Judge West previously worked as a public defender and as a transaction manager at Barclays before being appointed to the bench.
The case is one of several developments arising from fraud investigations involving public programs in Minnesota.
State officials have reported large-scale fraud in multiple systems, including Medicaid and Feeding Our Future, with related cases involving allegations of improper payments, shell organizations, and money transferred out of the country.
Federal and state agencies continue to pursue active investigations, and lawmakers have held hearings examining oversight procedures.
The appeal filed by the Attorney General’s Office will move to the Minnesota Court of Appeals, where judges will review the record and determine whether the trial court appropriately applied the legal standards governing the reversal of jury verdicts.
Judge Sarah West didn’t just overturn a jury who convicted Abdifatah Yusuf of stealing millions from taxpayers, she didn’t even really explain why except that he could’ve not been guilty.
Judges like this are destroying trust in our system. We need MAJOR change to restore trust. https://t.co/evIesLtaD7
— Robby Starbuck (@robbystarbuck) November 25, 2025
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