A Minneapolis Daycare center is searching for child actors on Craigslist after the taxpayer funding was “cruelly ripped away without cause.”
The ad says,
“To help hurry this state vetting process, we are looking to hire 20 child actors for 3 days while the state is present on site.”
They listed $1,500/day for compensation.
As Minnesota is under investigation for massive welfare, healthcare, autism, housing and daycare fraud, the Minneapolis-based daycare appears to be trying to trick state inspectors into thinking they have more children at the center, so they can get their federal funding back.
Critics say the post, which is still active on the site as of Tuesday morning even though it was flagged, shows the lengths Somali migrant daycare operators will go to continue stealing money from the American taxpayer.
The ad, titled “Daycare hiring child actors for 3 day contract (Ventura Village),” was posted days ago and updated two days later.
It details a family-run facility called “Help Us Daycare” in the city’s Ventura Village neighborhood, claiming to have operated for over five years until funding was paused last Monday.
The poster attributes the cut to “insane poor decision clear in white supremacy,” which lines up with the Somali migrant community’s practice of accusing anyone who investigates their fraud of being racist.
The ad explains that the sudden funding loss forced an immediate closure.
Interested parties are told to email the child’s age, a note on what makes them a “special actor,” and a phone number for quick interviews.
The post emphasizes “principals only” and bans recruiters from contacting the job poster.******
The Somali fraudsters have been stealing hundreds of millions of dollars, meant to support low-income families, often through inflated attendance claims and fake enrollments.
Investigators say the fraud in the state could top $9 billion when all is revealed.
Latest details:
HHS announced a freeze on all child care payments to Minnesota last week, citing persistent fraud risks and inadequate attendance tracking.
A new state law took effect this year to combat theft by mandating better attendance monitoring at subsidized daycares
In a suspicious twist, the Somali-run Nokomis Daycare Center in south Minneapolis reported a break-in four days ago, where thieves allegedly stole sensitive documents including enrollment and attendance records—precisely the materials used in fraud investigations.
Police have disputed aspects of the claim, noting no forced entry through a concrete wall as initially described, raising questions about whether the “burglary” was staged to destroy evidence.
The preliminary report also showed that nothing was missing, only to be amended days later by the daycare.
Another facility, the misspelled “Quality Learing” daycare, drew attention after a viral video showed it operating without children, only to suddenly bus in kids during the middle of the day despite telling people they were only open during after school hours – fueling suspicions of on-demand staging for inspections.









