The U.S. Treasury Department has begun a federal review focused on how taxpayer funds were overseen in Minnesota during Governor Tim Walz’s administration, following multiple high-profile fraud cases tied to state programs.
According to federal officials, the review will examine whether financial safeguards were adequate and if warning signs of misuse were properly addressed as public funds flowed through nonprofits and contractors. The effort is part of a broader push by the Treasury to tighten oversight where large sums of federal and state money are involved.
Authorities emphasized that the review is aimed at understanding systemic failures, not issuing immediate accusations against elected officials. No criminal charges have been announced, and the inquiry remains in its early stages.
Authorities emphasized that the review is aimed at understanding systemic failures, not issuing immediate accusations against elected officials. No criminal charges have been announced, and the inquiry remains in its early stages.
The move comes as lawmakers continue to raise concerns about accountability after several fraud schemes were uncovered in Minnesota, costing taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars over recent years.
State officials have said they support federal involvement and welcome steps that could help strengthen financial controls and prevent future misuse of public funds.
The Treasury has not set a public timeline for when findings may be released.
