Attorney General Ellison's fraud fighting legislation passes House Public Safety Committee

March 24, 2026 (SAINT PAUL) — This afternoon, Attorney General Keith Ellison, Representative Matt Norris, and Senator Ann Johnson Stewart’s legislation to combat Medicaid fraud passed the Minnesota House Public Safety Committee. The legislation, known as the Medical Assistance Protection Act or MAP Act, will expand Attorney General Ellison’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit (MFCU), give them new investigative authority, and strengthen state Medicaid fraud laws to make it easier to prosecute those who steal from Medicaid.

Following the bill’s passage, it was referred to the House Ways and Means Committee. The MAP Act was previously heard in and passed the House Human Services Committee on February 26 and the House Judiciary Committee on March 10.

The MAP Act will improve Attorney General Ellison’s ability to investigate and prosecute fraudsters by:

Last year, Attorney General Ellison's MFCU ranked sixth in investigations per Medicaid expenditure, fifth in fraud charges, and eight in fraud convictions in the entire country. Further, Attorney General Ellison’s MFCU ranks fifth in fraud convictions in the entire country over the last six years on average.

Minnesota’s MFCU has achieved this long-running track record of success despite having a smaller staff than other, comparable states. Nationwide, MFCU staffing recommendations are based on the size of a state’s Medicaid budget. The present size of Minnesota’s MFCU, 32, was set when the state’s Medicaid budget was roughly $13 billion. Now that the Medicaid budget is roughly $20 billion, HHS OIG recommends Minnesota’s MFCU increase its staffing levels.

States with similar Medicaid budgets to Minnesota’s often have larger MFCUs, as illustrated below using data from HHS OIG‘s 2024 annual report:

State Medicaid Budge MFCU Staff
Virginia $22,354,412,784 92
Washington $21,318,488,278 57
Arizona $20,388,207,470 33
Indiana $20,020,602,077 59
Minnesota $19,328,609,948 32