Medicaid fraud at Minnesota autism centers was said to be rampant. Two people have been charged.
At two
That is one way authorities claim those individual health care providers defrauded a state program, billing the
Assistant
Six months after charges were first filed in court, however, it remains unclear exactly how business owners could have green-lit children for services. It’s a mystery since industry experts say autism diagnoses — a necessary factor to qualify — rely on in-depth, one-on-one interviews with the child and parents.
Yet charging documents against the owners of Star Autism and
National outrage over fraud, tinged by anti-Somali bias in Trump’s public remarks, has given the administration ammunition to pursue cuts to Medicaid and social services, though few cases have been brought to court. A judge on
So far,
Demand for autism treatment is reaching new heights across the country. About 1 in 31 children today are diagnosed as on the autism spectrum. Cases accelerated over the past 20 years as diagnostic criteria loosened, detection methods advanced and general understanding of autism expanded.
Minnesota’s Early Intensive Developmental and Behavioral Intervention program for kids with autism always relied on front-end safeguards such as clinical supervision to ensure the basic requirement that the children enrolled actually have autism.
Those safeguards are facing intense scrutiny from
Federal prosecutors say the business owners either “worked with” or forged the signatures of medical experts known as qualified supervising professionals, or QSPs. One unnamed witness said Smart Therapy also paid off parents who agreed to let their kids go into autism treatment, though no charges have been brought against parents.
“To run their fraud scheme, [Smart Therapy owner
“Where a child did not have an autism diagnosis and an individual treatment plan, Hassan and her partners worked with a QSP [qualified supervising professional] to get the recruited children qualified for autism services. There was no child that Smart Therapy was not able to get qualified for autism services.”
Dr.
Diagnosing a child with autism to qualify for state services is designed to be lengthy and intensive.
It generally requires in-person observation of the child, a parent diagnostic interview and the development of a comprehensive multidisciplinary evaluation, which usually requires hours of work, said Dr.
“It’s not just boxes you check,” she said.
As a behaviorally defined diagnosis, Esler said, autism has “very fuzzy” boundaries. In her practice, she typically sees children who are difficult to diagnose, often those on the lighter end of the spectrum or those with advanced medical complexity.
If it’s true that many children who did not need autism services were given false diagnoses, Esler said, any qualified person who helped facilitate that “certainly went outside the professional ethics of our profession.”
She added that many of her patients are afraid and frustrated with an ongoing threat to cut off funding to the legitimate providers in
The FBI searched the two autism centers so far connected to criminal activity in
One search warrant affidavit says an unnamed source who worked as a “behavioral technician” for Smart Therapy told investigators that his co-workers did not provide real therapy services nor were they qualified to do so. Rather, the source said, the other behavioral technicians would often show up late to work and scroll on their phones. The job required no formal education or training to start administering therapy.
“Many of the children appeared to have other developmental delays such as speech delays, but not autism,” the source told the FBI, though court records don’t say how they knew that.
The source also tipped off investigators to alleged kickback payments made to parents of children enrolled for autism treatment at Smart Therapy.
The source said the center’s owner even coordinated door-knocking campaigns to recruit Somali families to sign up for services.
“Individual A did not pay any patients directly or know the amount of the payments but observed parents picking up white envelopes from Smart Therapy’s autism center,” an FBI agent investigating the case wrote in the affidavit supporting a search warrant in 2024.
Business and financial records reviewed by the FBI suggested the center’s administrators billed for services purportedly overseen by medical providers who did little to no work for the autism centers.
In
In defrauding the state’s autism program, only the business’ registered owners — Hassan of Smart Therapy and Abdinajib Hassan Yussuf of Star Autism — were federally charged.
After Trump began attacking
Optum’s heavily redacted preliminary analysis was released publicly in February. It revealed approximately
The analysis also flagged 90% of claims that Medicaid-funded autism intervention providers billed the state, saying those veered from acceptable standards.
Since the scrutiny began, the
Under Minnesota’s autism program, it used to be common practice for licensed professionals to work as contractors, sometimes from out of state, for autism centers.
During a February legislative hearing, top
“We have questions. Is this clinical professional actually overseeing service delivery at five, six, seven autism centers? That’s a program design gap there,” Clark said.
Jay O’Neil, president of Behavioral Dimensions, an in-home autism therapy provider, said some professionally licensed supervisors did not have sustained involvement. He said fraud could go undetected if a qualified professional is “not doing their due diligence.”
“I think that was a big, big problem,” O’Neil said.
Wilson said the allegations about false diagnoses are a sensitive area for many people with autism who already experience prejudices and disbelief.
“People don’t believe that they are disabled in the first place,” she said.
©2026 The Minnesota Star Tribune. Visit startribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC



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