• Please be sure to read the rules and adhere to them. Some banned members have complained that they are not spammers. But they spammed us. Some even tried to redirect our members to other forums. Duh. Be smart. Read the rules and adhere to them and we will all get along just fine. Cheers. :beer: Link to the rules: https://www.forumsforums.com/threads/forum-rules-info.2974/

SOMALI FRAUD: Ilhan Omar Falls Apart After Unearthed Video Sparks Massive Backlash

300 H and H

Bronze Member
8:20 min.

SyZ84mU6MZ_xXz29LUqoM0SJDK88nQ9zfVjMUGjQRBAo75QQWMwPd69lnSddinPrO63d4USl=s88-c-k-c0x00ffffff-no-rj


2ghi0z0sXuMWPpe5rZ6hVbOBJ4QE-4jGStNDluOXzsj6WIzRbiWeKPNrXVjTiB00gg4zZZhxyjo=s88-c-k-c0x00ffffff-no-rj



Freedom Frontline
https://www.forumsforums.com/javascript:void(0);
and Millionaire Mentor

Ilhan Omar is back under scrutiny after unearthed video clips resurface online amid renewed attention on Minnesota social services fraud and related convictions in the Somali community. The video highlights translated captions from past remarks at campaign events, including comments about Somali clan politics and statements interpreted as leveraging her position inside the U.S. government for Somalia.

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This woman should be thrown out of our nation ASAP.
No excuses for this one, ever.
 
The entire Somali community is now under intense scrutiny.

Maine has discovered massive FRAUD in the Somali community and has cut off funding to some (so-called) charities.

Minnesota has nearly 100 mayors in rebellion over the Somali fraud that has been shown to cost the state possibly as much as 1 BILLION dollars.

The fact that Illhian Omar is actually a citizen is probably a crime. The fact that she was elected to congress seems like it is treason by the voters
 
The entire Somali community is now under intense scrutiny.

Maine has discovered massive FRAUD in the Somali community and has cut off funding to some (so-called) charities.

Minnesota has nearly 100 mayors in rebellion over the Somali fraud that has been shown to cost the state possibly as much as 1 BILLION dollars.

The fact that Illhian Omar is actually a citizen is probably a crime. The fact that she was elected to congress seems like it is treason by the voters
The number now being mentioned is 9 Billion dollars. :mad:
 
Looks like there is at least $9 BILLION in fraud in just Minnesota alone with the Somali community at the heart of the corruption, aided, apparently, by the Democrat politicians and bureaucrats. So tell me again why DOGE was a bad idea as it exposed the tips of a bunch of icebergs.


Front Companies? Bombshell Report Exposes Network Of Somali-Linked "Empty" Daycares Across Minnesota

BY TYLER DURDEN
SATURDAY, DEC 27, 2025 - 10:05 AM
Left-wing Governor Tim Walz, under intensifying federal pressure, faces a widening Somali-linked fraud scandal in Minnesota. Federal prosecutors state that the scheme currently totals at least $9 billion, with the final figure potentially much higher. Recent reporting by Ryan Thorpe and Christopher F. Rufo alleges that some welfare funds were funneled into an overseas terrorist organization. Now, a bombshell video from a citizen journalist suggests the fraud extends beyond Medicaid into the state's daycare system.
A 42-minute bombshell video by journalist Nick Shirley and a local private investigator documents an on-the-ground investigation in Minneapolis that alleges massive, ongoing fraud in government-funded social services. The main focus is on Somali-owned businesses in child daycare, adult/autism care, home healthcare, and non-emergency medical transportation programs that draw from the taxpayer-funded Child Care Assistance Program.
Shirley claims his team uncovered more than $110 million in questionable payments to Somali-owned businesses on just the first day of their investigation, as part of a broader welfare fraud scandal totaling upwards of $9 billion.
Shirley and the investigator visited several childcare facilities that had no visible children, toys, or activities during peak hours. Staff could not answer basic questions about rates or licenses. Both were denied entry to the reception areas of these facilities:
  • Quality Learing Center: Licensed for 99 children; received $4 million over two years. Sign misspells "learning" as "learing"; no children visible, doors locked, no playground.
  • Future Leaders Early Learning Center: Licensed for 90 children; received $6.67 million over two years. Facility empty; staff evasive when asked about child numbers.
  • Mako Child Care and Mini Child Care Center (combined): Licensed for 120 children; received $1.3M (2020), $987K (2021), $714K (2022), $1.6M (2025). No children observed.
  • ABC Learning Center: Licensed for 40 children; nearly $3 million over three years. Blacked-out windows, no activity.
  • Sweet Angel Child Care: Licensed for 74 children; $1.26 million in 2025 alone.
Millions of taxpayer dollars went to one daycare company that could not even spell "learning" correctly...

Shirley, accompanied by an investigator, also conducted site visits to adult day care and autism centers, identifying indicators consistent with the use of front companies.
If accurate, Shirley’s findings indicate a possible coordinated network of Somali-owned front companies structured to maximize extraction from taxpayer programs while minimizing detection, accountability, and the recovery of funds as exposure increases.

Diving into the corporate records of Future Leaders Early Learning Center reveals a familiar pattern. Fahima Mahamud is listed as an officer of the learning center and of multiple other companies, including assisted living and autism centers. The childcare center is also linked to Sharmarke Ali, who is connected to another childcare center as well as a home healthcare company.
The citizen journalist is doing more journalism than MSNBC, CNN, and 60 Minutes combined have done in years, as those outlets often operate more like PR firms than news organizations.
Watch Here:
 
And in Maine, there are Christmas day reports of similar types of fraud in the Somali community there, bilking taxpayers out of millions. At least. So maybe another iceberg of hidden fraud has been uncovered there?


A federal investigator warned Maine officials about possible interpreter fraud schemes in a 2020 report that has not been disclosed until now. The findings come on the heels of fraud allegations against a major health care provider serving immigrants.
In late 2020, a federal investigator identified a concerning pattern within MaineCare, the state’s Medicaid program: Providers were billing for suspiciously high levels of interpreter services in what appeared to be a pattern of waste, abuse or fraud.
Interpreter claims surged by 283% between 2011 and 2017, with costs rising from roughly $800,000 to over $4.1 million annually. The increase occurred even as the number of refugees and immigrants arriving in Maine declined. The investigator wrote a report for fellow police, taking a closer look at billing trends following the high-profile prosecution of two interpreters, two social workers and a counselor in 2019. FULL STORY AT LINK ABOVE ^^^




State suspends MaineCare payments to Portland provider over suspected fraud

Gateway Community Services' Portland office.
Ari Snider
Maine Public
Gateway Community Services' Portland office.
The Department of Health and Human Services is suspending MaineCare provider payments to Gateway Community Services over suspected fraud.
A spokesperson for DHHS said the move follows a recently completed and previously unreported audit in which the Portland-based provider was found to have overbilled MaineCare by more than $1 million. The spokesperson also said that suspending MaineCare payments is imposed when there is suspected fraud, a determination that also triggers a referral to the Office of Attorney General for an investigation.
A spokesperson for the Office of Attorney General would not confirm that it’s investigating Gateway. Nevertheless, the new developments will bring fresh scrutiny for a company already under the microscope for two previously released audits that showed it overbilled MaineCare, the state’s Medicaid program, by more than $660,000.
The two previous audits were completed in 2018 and 2024. The third audit was initiated in 2023, according to DHHS. The company’s billing for interpreter services, services not covered by MaineCare, and a failure to properly document services provided were among the "serious" irregularities identified in the latest audit.
Overbilling in Medicaid is distinct from fraud and is often appealed. An investigation by the attorney general would be aimed at proving actual fraud — the intentional act of deception — occurred so that it can be prosecuted. FULL STRY AT LINK ABOVE ^^^



And even more:


House Oversight Committee widens scope on Somali-led health contractor

Rich McHughDec 26, 2025 / 05:14 PM CST
(NewsNation) — The House Oversight Committee is connecting the dots between a Somali-led community health services contractor and widespread fraud tied to supposed Medicaid payments in Maine that could now have much larger ramifications.
Members of the Oversight Committee have pushed Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to release pertinent bank records tied to Gateway Community Financial Services in Maine. The committee had already been investigating potential fraud linked to Somalis in Minnesota.
But now, members of that committee are crediting NewsNation for its reporting on possible Medicaid fraud in Maine that could link the health services contractor to more wrongdoing.
Maine’s Department of Health and Human Services has already shut off Medicaid payments to Gateway after a whistleblower alerted NewsNation that taxpayers have been bilked out of millions of dollars from Maine’s Medicaid program. The whistleblower, Chris Bernardini, told NewsNation that the state’s Medicaid program was charging residents for services that were never provided.
Audits conducted by state officials between 2015 and 2018 concluded that Gateway overbilled the state by $662,000. In response, the company was issued two notices of violation, and to date, Maine’s Health and Human Services is still attempting to recoup more than $537,000.
Gateway officials denied any wrongdoing that was exposed by NewsNation’s reporting. FULL STORY AT LINK ABOVE ^^^
 
I'm wondering what fraud they will unearth in California it has to be double or triple that.


I'm wondering
  • If any mainstream news will cover this?
  • And if they do, will they cover for the Somalis?
  • And if they do, will they cover for the Democrats involved?
  • And if the Democrat politicians will give back the campaign kickbacks they received from the Somalis who were involved?
  • And if this whole story will blow past the American public in about 72 hours?
 
And now it is the lead story on FOX NEWS so expect some minor coverage by other networks. I'm curious to see what CBS News does with the story under new Editor in Chief Bari Weiss.



Walz slammed in wake of viral video that raises daycare funding questions: 'Needs to be held accountable'

YouTuber's video shows seemingly inactive Minneapolis center that allegedly received $4M in state funding
December 27, 2025 6:58pm EST

Lexington Mayor Mike Murphy reveals a nickname for Gov. Tim Walz allegedly spreading around Minnesota amid the fallout from the state’s massive fraud scandal.
Politicians took to social media Saturday to criticize Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz after a viral video raised questions about a Minneapolis daycare center that allegedly received millions of dollars in state funding despite appearing largely inactive.
Responding to an X post highlighting allegations of Somali Medicaid fraud and voter fraud in the state, Vice President JD Vance described the situation as "a microcosm of the immigration fraud in our system."
"Politicians like it because they get power. Welfare cheats like it because they get rich," Vance wrote. "But it's a zero sum game, and they're stealing both money and political power from Minnesotans."
jd vance sitting
Vice President JD Vance took to social media Saturday to highlight the allegations of fraud in Minnesota. (Aaron Schwartz/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., demanded Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz be "held accountable."
"Folks need to be arrested and prosecuted and the Governor of Minnesota needs to be held accountable," Lawler posted to X on Saturday. "Congress should hold a hearing immediately and start getting answers."
A 42-minute video posted to X and YouTube on Friday by independent reporter Nick Shirley shows Shirley and another man visiting several childcare centers in the blue state, including a location on Nicollet Avenue in Minneapolis. . . . STORY CONTINUES AT FOX LINK ABOVE ^^^
 
I'm wondering
  • If any mainstream news will cover this? no
  • And if they do, will they cover for the Somalis? yes
  • And if they do, will they cover for the Democrats involved? yes
  • And if the Democrat politicians will give back the campaign kickbacks they received from the Somalis who were involved? hell no !!!!
  • And if this whole story will blow past the American public in about 72 hours? nope!!!!!
 
Not reported by most of the mainstream media.

NBC ... no
CBS ... no
ABC ... no

Not on the front web pages of any of those news channels.

 
Uh oh :yum:





Exclusive | Ilhan Omar's hubby's $30M firm quietly scrubs names from website - as 'Squad' member faces mounting questions on sudden wealth amid Minnesota welfare fraud | New York Post

Embattled Rep. Ilhan Omar’s husband’s venture capital firm quietly scrubbed key officer details — including former Obama officials — as scrutiny grows over the family’s skyrocketing wealth, The Post has learned.
Omar (D-MN) went from nearly broke to being worth up to $30 million in just a year — as a massive, up to $9 billion fraud scheme involving the Somali community in her district unfolded right under her nose in Minnesota.
Close to 90 people have been charged so far, including at least three with direct ties to the lefty Squad member, though she has not been charged.
Rep. Ilhan Omar and Tim Mynett smile in the crowd at the Democratic National Convention.
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Ilhan Omar and husband Tim Mynett declared assets between $6 million and $30 million in 2024. Getty Images
It was Somalia-born Omar — who was seen in a resurfaced video last month dishing out food in a restaurant now at the heart of the scandal — who introduced the legislation critics say paved the way for what the feds have called the largest fraud of the pandemic.
The Jimmy Choo wearing socialist introduced the MEALS Act in Congress in 2020, relaxing oversight of government sponsored children’s meals programs during the pandemic, which critics say allowed fraudsters to claim they served millions of meals without verification, while pocketing millions of dollars in government subsidies.
Shortly after the scheme played out, Omar’s husband, political consultant Tim Mynett, launched Rose Lake Capital in 2022, a venture capital management firm.

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The company saw its reported value go from nearly zero in 2023, to between $5 million and $25 million in just a year, and touted its officers’ $60 billion in “previous” assets under management — an amount many Wall Street money managers only dream of.
“There’s a lot of strange things going on,” said Paul Kamenar, counsel to the National Legal and Policy Center. “She was basically broke when she came into office and now she’s worth perhaps up to $30 million…she needs to come clean on these assets.”
Rose Lake Capital, which touts its “deep global networks built from on-the-ground work in more than 80 countries,” had less than $1,000 in assets in 2023, according to Omar’s financial disclosure.
Ilhan Omar wearing a hijab and an apron at Safari Restaurant's children's meal drive.
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Omar is seen here in a video promoting the meals program at Safari, the restaurant at the heart of fraud charges. Somali TV of Minnesota/YouTube
U.S. Representative Ilhan Omar and husband Tim Mynett pose at the Power To The Patients event.
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Omar’s husband Tim Mynett has faced fraud allegations in the past related to a winery venture. Getty Images for Power to the Patients
Yet despite the reported windfall, the business’s only address is a WeWork in DC, according to its LinkedIn page.
Between September and October — when federal prosecutors announced charges to eight more individuals, including six of Somali descent, for their roles in the welfare scheme — the names and bios of Rose Lake Capitals’s nine officers and advisors were removed from the website. None of them were charged in the fraud.
These names include lobbyist and former Obama Ambassador to Bahrain Adam Ereli; former Senator and Obama Ambassador to China Max Baucus; DNC Finance Chair associate Alex Hoffman; former DNC treasurer William Derrough and former ex-CEO of Amalgamated Bank Keith Mestrich, who once described Amalgamated as “the institutional bank of the Democratic Party.”
Meanwhile Mynett’s other business, a California winery that previously faced fraud allegations and was declared a failed venture in 2023, was suddenly worth between $1 million and $5 million in 2024 — a windfall of 9,900%.
Rep. Ilhan Omar celebrates her primary victory with supporters at Safari Restaurant in south Minneapolis.
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Omar held her 2018 victory party at the Safari restaurant whose owner was convicted of fraud in the welfare scheme. Alamy Stock Photo
The Devil Lie Malbec from eStCru Wines.
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This red called “The Devil’s Lie” was one of the products in Mynett’s line of wines. eStCru Wines/Instagram
The fraud case involved a wine investor suing Mynett in Oct. 2023, accusing him of swindling him of $900,000 as he “fraudulently misrepresented … that estCru, LLC was a legitimate company.” Mynett claimed he simply struggled to build a business during the pandemic.
The case settled out of court in November.
The winery, eStCru, at some point around 2022 promoted a line of wines with names like “Blockchain” and “The Devil’s Lie,” with a prestigious California winemaker who said she abruptly stopped getting paid in early 2023. The business was only worth between $15,000 and $50,000 in Omar’s financial disclosure that year, making the sudden windfall the next year even more puzzling.
It, too, is listed as operating out of a WeWork, and doesn’t appear to actually sell any wines anymore, according to extensive internet searches.
Despite the high worth placed on the business, its website is a broken link, the phone number is disconnected and the last social media post for the winery dates back to 2023.
Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., outside the U.S. Capitol.
11
Omar was worth nothing when she first took office in 2019, with only debt to her name. CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images
“While working families were being ripped off by a massive welfare scam, Omar’s campaign took money from convicted fraudsters, her husband launched a firm that suddenly ballooned in value, and [Minnesota Gov.] Tim Walz looked the other way,” slammed Kiersten Pels, spokesperson for the Republican National Committee.
When she first took office in 2019, the left-wing “Squad” member declared a net worth between negative $25,000 and negative $65,000, claimed to own no assets and only carrying student and car debt.
Now Omar’s assets have suddenly skyrocketed to anywhere between $6 million to $30 million, according to her latest financial disclosure — just months after the congresswoman dismissed claims she was a millionaire as “ridiculous” and “categorically false.”
Her links to the Minnesota welfare scheme have started to come to light in recent weeks.
Man wearing a face mask and gloves hands a bag of food to a child, next to food drive boxes.
11
Children’s meals programs have been at the heart of the fraud scandal involving the Somali community in Minnesota. Getty Images
Her campaign received $7,400 in direct donations from at least three now-convicted fraudsters, though the Squad member defended she returned the donations after the scandal broke.
She’s been closely linked to at least two individuals from Minnesota’s Somalian community who’ve been charged in the fraud.
One is Salim Ahmed Said, the co-owner of Safari Restaurant, where Omar held her 2018 congressional victory party.
Said was found guilty in August of stealing more than $12 million for serving 3.9 million “phantom” meals during the COVID-19 pandemic, blowing much of the money on a $2 million Minneapolis mansion and a $9,000-a-month shopping habit at Nordstrom, according to prosecutors.
“Does Ilhan Omar know these people? Are they from her wonderfully managed Home Country of Somalia?” President Trump posted on his Truth Social platform when the news of the charges first broke. “Somali gangs are terrorizing the people of that great state, and billions of dollars are missing. Send them back to where they came from.”
A man in white robes and a white head covering exits the Safari Restaurant & Banquet Center carrying two bags. A NOW OPEN! sign for the restaurant is in the foreground.
11
Since the scandal exploded, the Safari restaurant is now listed as permanently closed on Google. Star Tribune via Getty Images
As the scam was underway in 2020, Omar even appeared on video at Minneapolis’ Safari Restaurant to praise the program.
“Every day Safari provides 2,300 meals to children and their families,” she boasted in Somali in the video, while being filmed handing trays of food in a parking lot with her pandemic-era facemask pulled down below her nose.
The other individual, Guhaad Hashi Said, worked on Omar’s campaign in 2018 and 2020, and pleaded guilty in August to running a fake food site called Advance Youth Athletic Development, where he falsely claimed to serve 5,000 meals a day and pocketed $3.2 million out of the food program.
Ilhan Omar, candidate for State Representative for District 60B, campaigns on election day.
11
The Somali community in Omar’s district in Minnesota has been thrown into the spotlight in recent weeks. AFP via Getty Images
On Capitol Hill last week, Omar said she had no regrets about introducing the MEALS Act.
“Absolutely not, it did help feed kids,” she told a reporter.
Minnesota governor Tim Waltz – Kamala Harris’ former running mate – has also faced intense scrutiny for letting the scandal unfold under his watch.
Education Secretary Linda McMahon wrote a letter calling for him to resign, and Rep. Tom Emmer (R-MN) hinted at possible criminal charges.
“Ilhan Omar is as disingenuous as they come,” he told The Post Saturday. “She promotes socialist policies while cashing in a taxpayer-funded paycheck and sitting on tens of millions of dollars. At least now we have an explanation for why she’s so out of touch with the priorities of hardworking, everyday Minnesotans.”
Ilhan Omar and Tim Mynett attend the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation annual Legislative Conference Phoenix Awards dinner.
11
Omar and Mynett have seen their fortune skyrocket in the last year. Getty Images for Congressional Black Caucus Foundation
Tim Mynett and Ilhan Omar pose at an outdoor event in front of the White House.
11
Mynett’s venture capital firm claims to already have $60 billion in assets under management. @TimMynett/X
The Treasury and Justice Department has already launched an investigation into the alleged money laundering.
When reached for comment, Omar’s communications director sent The Post a message saying the entire office was closed until Jan. 5 – without offering an alternative contact.
Mynett did not return The Post’s messages, and both his businesses’ numbers were not working.
 
And more . . . tip of the iceberg? No, it is even deeper than that.




FBI Says Minnesota Fraud Arrests "Tip" Of The Iceberg... Here's Just What Nick Sherley Found

A viral video that has topped 76 million views on X within 48 hours has significantly heightened public scrutiny of multiple Minneapolis daycare centers linked to Somali operators that received millions in state and federal funding despite showing minimal operational activity. The apparent mismatch between allocated taxpayer funds and observable services strengthens a recent report by Christopher F. Rufo, which alleges that Somali-linked fraud in the left-wing-controlled state may involve front companies potentially diverting taxpayer funds to at least one overseas terrorist network.
Update: And according to FBI Director Kash Patel, the agency will "continue to follow the money" in Minnesota, and their investigation is "ongoing." (And why did it take Chris Rufo cracking the case before they took action?)
"To date, the FBI dismantled a $250 million fraud scheme that stole federal food aid meant for vulnerable children during COVID. The investigation exposed sham vendors, shell companies, and large-scale money laundering tied to the Feeding Our Future network," Patel said on Sunday.
Meanwhile, the Democratic Party and its PR machine across left-wing corporate media outlets, including CBS, PBS, CNN, MSNBC, ABC, NBC, 60 Minutes, The New York Times, and the Associated Press, have largely remained silent on citizen journalist Nick Shirley's investigation.
We assess that as the dominant narrative of the widening Somali-linked fraud scandal in Minneapolis continues to go viral on X through "America First"-linked accounts, Democrats and their PR machine will move to advance a counter-narrative, given how optically damaging these revelations are ahead of the midterm cycle.
The days of Democrats defaulting to labeling opponents as "racists" or "fascists" appear to be over. They will likely need to develop new pejoratives to target those investigating allegations of welfare fraud on a scale larger than Somalia's GDP.
In just one day, Shirley and a private investigator visited Somali-linked businesses operating in the child daycare, adult and autism care, home healthcare, and non-emergency medical transportation industries. They say they uncovered $110 million in highly questionable payments, largely because many of these companies were not operating as they should during peak hours of operation and appeared mostly inactive.
The next critical step, and one we suspect federal investigators are already pursuing, is comprehensive entity mapping of the targets Shirley identified.
This analysis moves beyond isolated entities and enables the detection of network behavior, including shared addresses, recycled officers, repeated vendors, circular payment flows, and clusters of entities with minimal real-world operations. Such pattern recognition is essential for identifying front companies.
Here is the network mapping of Shirley's identified targets:
Mako Childcare Center, Inc.
Mini Childcare Center Inc.
Pattern detection: Both Mako and Mini share the same address.
Sweet Angel Child Care Inc.
Quality Learning Center Inc.
And now the fun begins.
Future Leaders Early Learning Center
Shirley and the private investigator note that Creative Minds Daycare L.L.C. was shuttered due to violations and reopened the next day as Super Kids Daycare Center LLC.
Creative Minds Daycare L.L.C.
Super Kids Daycare Center LLC
Minnesota Childcare Center Inc.
And this.
To sum up, this data transforms fragmented public records into actionable network intelligence maps, enabling X users to dig deeper and understand how money, control, and influence actually flow across Shirley's target entities.
 
And it gets deeper . . .


Kash Patel threatens Somali scammers with denaturalization, deportation over uncovered Minnesota fraud: ‘Tip of a very large iceberg’

Updated Dec. 28, 2025, 8:39 p.m. ET
FBI Director Kash Patel says the multimillion-dollar fraud uncovered in Minnesota “is just the tip of a very large iceberg,” as he threatened convicted Somali scammers with denaturalization and deportation.
Director Patel said that the FBI “had surged personnel and investigative resources” to the North Star State to take down the fraud schemes even before they had gained attention online, in a lengthy statement on social media.
FBI agents removing boxes from a business during a search warrant execution.
3
Federal agents executed a search warrant Dec. 18, 2025, at Ultimate Home Health Services, a Somali-owned home care agency, as part of a widening investigation into a Minnesota Medicaid fraud scandal, according to law enforcement sources. FNTV
Many of those indicted for fraud were from Minnesota’s Somali population — the largest immigrant group in the state.
“To date, the FBI dismantled a $250 million fraud scheme that stole federal food aid meant for vulnerable children during COVID,” Patel wrote.
“The investigation exposed sham vendors, shell companies, and large-scale money laundering tied to the Feeding Our Future network,” he added.

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That case saw 78 indictments and 57 convictions.
“Defendants included Abdiwahab Ahmed Mohamud, Ahmed Ali, Hussein Farah, Abdullahe Nur Jesow, Asha Farhan Hassan, Ousman Camara, and Abdirashid Bixi Dool, each charged for roles ranging from wire fraud to money laundering and conspiracy,” he said.
“Abdimajid Mohamed Nur and others were charged for attempting to bribe a juror with $120,000 in cash. Those responsible pleaded guilty and were sentenced, including a 10-year prison term and nearly $48 million in restitution in related cases,” Patel said, before warning that the issues may go far deeper.
“The FBI believes this is just the tip of a very large iceberg. We will continue to follow the money and protect children, and this investigation very much remains ongoing,” he said.
Nick Shirley
3
Many of the facilities appeared to be non-operational fronts, according to the footage shared by independent journalist Nick Shirley (pictured). X / Nick Shirley
“Furthermore, many are also being referred to immigrations officials for possible further denaturalization and deportation proceedings where eligible,” he said.
Patel’s announcement came in the wake of a viral social media video highlighting alleged fraud involving Minn. childcare and learning centers.
In the video, many of the facilities appeared to be non-operational fronts, according to the footage shared by independent journalist Nick Shirley.
Many Republican lawmakers, including Vice President JD Vance, responded to the viral video, slamming Gov. Tim Walz of sitting “idly by while billions were stolen from hardworking Minnesotans,” according to House Majority Whip Tom Emmer, R-Minn.
Abdimajid Mohamed Nur
3
Abdimajid Mohamed Nur was charged with trying bribe a juror with $120,000. Sherburne County Jail
Gov. Walz addressed the alleged fraud at a press conference back in November, before the full scale of the purported abuse came to light.
The scandal “undermines trust in government,” and “undermines programs that are absolutely critical in improving quality of life,” Walz said.
“If you’re committing fraud, no matter where you come from, what you look like, what you believe, you are going to go to jail,” he added.
Shirley blasted Walz’s critiques during an appearance on Fox’s “The Big Weekend Show” Sunday evening, claiming that he just “wants votes.”
“There better be change. People are demanding it. The investigation have been launched just from that video alone. So there better be change, like I said we work way too hard to be paying taxes and not knowing where our money’s going,” Shirley said.
He cheekily added that the fraud was so blatant that “even a kindergartener” could figure it out.
The alleged fraud schemes date back to 2015, when day care centers were accused of overcharging Minnesota’s Child Care Assistance Program.
More recent alleged scams have involved Medicaid-funded disability schemes, including a housing program that help seniors and disabled people find and move into housing.
Following the uncovering of what authorities called “large-scale fraud,” that scheme was shut down earlier this year.
President Trump last month announced he was suspending Temporary Protected Status for Somali immigrants, as he claimed Minnesota was “a hub of fraudulent money laundering activity.”
 
Now if none of that seems odd or makes you angry due to some very suspicious allegations of fraud, read this article where Omar and her husband become overnight multi-millionaires. Where his former wine business when from negative value to millions. Where his new start up went from zero to having $60 BILLION in ASSETS under management, yet where they have no working telephone numbers and no permanent address for either business and both are listed at "WeWork" work share locations. Something smells like 3 day old fish here.

Exclusive story from the NY Post, which, unlike the NY Times, 60 Minutes, WaPo, and the mainstream media, apparently still employs journalists.



Exclusive | Ilhan Omar's hubby's $30M firm quietly scrubs names from website — as 'Squad' member faces mounting questions on sudden wealth amid Minnesota welfare fraud | New York Post



Embattled Rep. Ilhan Omar’s husband’s venture capital firm quietly scrubbed key officer details — including former Obama officials — as scrutiny grows over the family’s skyrocketing wealth, The Post has learned.

Omar (D-Minn.) went from nearly broke to being worth up to $30 million in just a year— as a massive, up to $9 billion fraud scheme involving the Somali community in her district unfolded right under her nose in the North Star State.

Close to 90 people have been charged so far, including at least three with direct ties to the lefty “Squad” member, though she has not been accused of wrongdoing.

Rep. Ilhan Omar and Tim Mynett smile in the crowd at the Democratic National Convention.
11
Ilhan Omar and husband Tim Mynett declared assets between $6 million and $30 million in 2024. Getty Images
It was Somalia-born Omar — who was seen in a resurfaced video last month dishing out food in a restaurant now at the heart of the scandal — who introduced the legislation that critics say paved the way for what the feds have called the largest fraud of the pandemic.

The Jimmy Choo-wearing socialist introduced the MEALS Act in Congress in 2020, relaxing oversight of government-sponsored children’s meal programs during the pandemic, which critics say allowed fraudsters to claim they served millions of meals without verification, while pocketing millions of dollars in government subsidies.

Shortly after the scheme played out, Omar’s husband, political consultant Tim Mynett, launched Rose Lake Capital, a venture capital management firm, in 2022.

Explore More

The company saw its reported value go from nearly zero in 2023 to between $5 million and $25 million in just a year, and touted its officers’ $60 billion in “previous” assets under management — an amount many Wall Street money managers only dream of.

“There’s a lot of strange things going on,” said Paul Kamenar, counsel to the National Legal and Policy Center. “She was basically broke when she came into office and now she’s worth perhaps up to $30 million … she needs to come clean on these assets.”

Rose Lake Capital, which touts its “deep global networks built from on-the-ground work in more than 80 countries,” had less than $1,000 in assets in 2023, according to Omar’s financial disclosure.

Ilhan Omar wearing a hijab and an apron at Safari Restaurant's children's meal drive.
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Omar in a video promoting the meals program at Safari, the restaurant at the heart of fraud charges. Somali TV of Minnesota/YouTube
U.S. Representative Ilhan Omar and husband Tim Mynett pose at the Power To The Patients event.
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Omar’s husband, Tim Mynett, has faced fraud allegations in the past related to a winery venture. Getty Images for Power to the Patients
Yet despite the reported windfall, the business’s only address is a WeWork in DC, according to its LinkedIn page.

Between September and October — when federal prosecutors announced charges against eight more individuals, including six of Somali descent, for their roles in the welfare scheme — the names and bios of Rose Lake Capital’s nine officers and advisers were removed from the website. None of them were charged in the fraud.

These names include lobbyist and former Obama Ambassador to Bahrain Adam Ereli; former Senator and Obama Ambassador to China Max Baucus; DNC Finance Chair associate Alex Hoffman; former DNC treasurer William Derrough; and former ex-CEO of Amalgamated Bank Keith Mestrich, who once described Amalgamated as “the institutional bank of the Democratic Party.”

Meanwhile, Mynett’s other business, a California winery that previously faced fraud allegations and was declared a failed venture in 2023, was suddenly worth between $1 million and $5 million in 2024 — a windfall of 9,900%.

Rep. Ilhan Omar celebrates her primary victory with supporters at Safari Restaurant in south Minneapolis.
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Omar held her 2018 victory party at the Safari restaurant, whose owner was convicted of fraud in the welfare scheme. Alamy Stock Photo
The Devil Lie Malbec from eStCru Wines.
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This red called “The Devil’s Lie” was one of the products in Mynett’s line of wines. eStCru Wines/Instagram
The fraud case involved a wine investor suing Mynett in October 2023, accusing him of swindling him out of $900,000 as he “fraudulently misrepresented … that estCru, LLC was a legitimate company.” Mynett claimed he simply struggled to build a business during the pandemic.

The case settled out of court in November.

The winery, eStCru, at some point around 2022 promoted a line of wines with names like “Blockchain” and “The Devil’s Lie,” with a prestigious California winemaker saying she abruptly stopped getting paid in early 2023. The business was only worth between $15,000 and $50,000 in Omar’s financial disclosure that year, making the sudden windfall the next year even more puzzling.

It too is listed as operating out of a WeWork, and doesn’t appear to actually sell any wines anymore, according to extensive internet searches.

Despite the high worth placed on the business, its website is a broken link, the phone number is disconnected and the last social media post for the winery dates back to 2023.

Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., outside the U.S. Capitol.
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Omar was worth nothing when she first took office in 2019, with only debt to her name. CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images
“While working families were being ripped off by a massive welfare scam, Omar’s campaign took money from convicted fraudsters, her husband launched a firm that suddenly ballooned in value, and [Minnesota Gov.] Tim Walz looked the other way,” according to Kiersten Pels, spokesperson for the Republican National Committee.

When she first took office in 2019, the left-wing “Squad” member declared a net worth between negative $25,000 and negative $65,000, claimed to own no assets and be only carrying student and car debt.

Now Omar’s assets have suddenly skyrocketed to anywhere between $6 million and $30 million, according to her latest financial disclosure — just months after the congresswoman dismissed claims that she was a millionaire as “ridiculous” and “categorically false.”

Her links to the Minnesota welfare scheme have started to come to light in recent weeks.

Man wearing a face mask and gloves hands a bag of food to a child, next to food drive boxes.
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Children’s meal programs have been at the heart of the fraud scandal involving the Somali community in Minnesota. Getty Images
Her campaign received $7,400 in direct donations from at least three now-convicted fraudsters, though the “Squad” member insisted she returned the donations after the scandal broke.

She’s been closely linked to at least two individuals from Minnesota’s Somalian community who’ve been charged in the fraud.

One is Salim Ahmed Said, the co-owner of Minneapolis’ Safari Restaurant, where Omar held her 2018 congressional victory party.

Said was found guilty in August of stealing more than $12 million for serving 3.9 million “phantom” meals during the COVID-19 pandemic, blowing much of the money on a $2 million Minneapolis mansion and a $9,000-a-month shopping habit at Nordstrom, according to prosecutors.

“Does Ilhan Omar know these people? Are they from her wonderfully managed Home Country of Somalia?” President Trump posted on his Truth Social platform when the news of the charges first broke. “Somali gangs are terrorizing the people of that great state, and billions of dollars are missing. Send them back to where they came from.”

A man in white robes and a white head covering exits the Safari Restaurant & Banquet Center carrying two bags. A NOW OPEN! sign for the restaurant is in the foreground.
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Since the scandal exploded, the Safari restaurant is listed as permanently closed on Google. Star Tribune via Getty Images
As the scam was underway in 2020, Omar even appeared on video at Safari Restaurant to praise the program.

“Every day Safari provides 2,300 meals to children and their families,” she boasted in Somali in the video, while being filmed handling trays of food in a parking lot with her pandemic-era facemask pulled down below her nose.

The other individual, Guhaad Hashi Said, worked on Omar’s campaign in 2018 and 2020, and pleaded guilty in August to running a fake food site called Advance Youth Athletic Development, where he falsely claimed to serve 5,000 meals a day and pocketed $3.2 million out of the food program.

Ilhan Omar, candidate for State Representative for District 60B, campaigns on election day.
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The Somali community in Omar’s district in Minnesota has been thrown into the spotlight in recent weeks. AFP via Getty Images
On Capitol Hill last week, Omar said she had no regrets about introducing the MEALS Act.

“Absolutely not, it did help feed kids,” she told a reporter.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Waltz — Kamala Harris’ former running mate — has also faced intense scrutiny for letting the scandal unfold on his watch.

Education Secretary Linda McMahon wrote a letter calling for him to resign, and Rep. Tom Emmer (R-Minn.) hinted at possible criminal charges.

“Ilhan Omar is as disingenuous as they come,” he told The Post Saturday. “She promotes socialist policies while cashing in a taxpayer-funded paycheck and sitting on tens of millions of dollars. At least now we have an explanation for why she’s so out of touch with the priorities of hardworking, everyday Minnesotans.”

Ilhan Omar and Tim Mynett attend the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation annual Legislative Conference Phoenix Awards dinner.
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Omar and Mynett have seen their fortune skyrocket in the last year. Getty Images for Congressional Black Caucus Foundation
Tim Mynett and Ilhan Omar pose at an outdoor event in front of the White House.
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Mynett’s venture capital firm claims to already have $60 billion in assets under management. @TimMynett/X
The Treasury and Justice Department has already launched an investigation into the alleged money laundering.

When reached for comment, Omar’s communications director sent The Post a message saying the entire office was closed until Jan. 5 – without offering an alternative contact.

Mynett did not return The Post’s messages, and both his businesses’ numbers were not working.
 
No evidence that Tim Walz committed any actual crime.

But he would have to be a total idiot to not know that the fraud was happening.

And, no doubt, the Somali community has been giving a lot of "political donations" to the entire Walz crew that enabled all this crime, fraud and abuse to occur.

Read this and get even more angry.

From POWERLINE:


Is It Over for Tim Walz?

Over the last couple of months, the Minnesota fraud scandal has exploded from a local news story to perhaps the number one story in the national (and even international) news. We at American Experiment have been in the middle of the storm. One tweet we did about the Feeding Our Future scandal that was retweeted by Libs of TikTok, Chris Rufo, Elon Musk and many others got 47 million views on X alone.
The scandal has now expanded far beyond Feeding Our Future. Joe Thompson, the Assistant U.S. Attorney who has prosecuted the fraud cases, has said publicly that at least half of all spending on Minnesota Medicaid programs is fraudulent. That would be around $9 billion. And there are other welfare programs that are neither Feeding Our Future (administered by the Department of Education) nor Medicaid. Child care centers, for example.
The latest fraud bombshell is a video by a young YouTuber named Nick Shirley. Shirley travels around doing interviews of various kinds; he has been to Paris and New York, and probably other places, as well as Minnesota. I don’t know Shirley, but I have no reason to doubt that his videos are genuine:
Shirley went to one Minnesota child care center after another, all of them Somali-owned. From public records, he would point out that a particular day care center had gotten, say, $3 million in state funding, and supposedly was caring for 90 kids. But one after another “day care center” turned out to be more or less deserted. No kids in sight, and Shirley and his companion being threatened if they didn’t go away. Even when Shirley said he was looking for a day care in which to enroll his son. Shirley’s video has gotten many millions of views across the country and around the world.
So in a sense, we are back where we began. At least a decade ago, there were criminal prosecutions arising out of child care fraud among Minnesota Somalis. The dodge was simple, and it has never changed: a Somali would purport to set up a day care center and would put in for state funding. He or she would claim to have a certain number of children enrolled, most or all of whom were fictitious. A number of Somalis went to prison, years ago, but it didn’t deter others from carrying out similar frauds, on a grander scale, across the entire spectrum of state welfare spending. The total stolen on Tim Walz’s watch surely exceeds $10 billion.
With the incompetence (or worse) of Tim Walz’s administration being the number one news story in the country, my non-Minnesota friends ask me: “Tim Walz couldn’t possibly be re-elected. Could he?”
Let’s first dispose of any criminal issue. Elon Musk, in the tweet embedded above, urges that Walz be prosecuted. But there is no evidence that he, or other members of his administration, have committed crimes. Rather, they have perpetrated the dodge that has been a mainstay of the Democratic Party for going on 100 years: buying votes with other people’s money. They have pumped billions of dollars into Minnesota’s relatively small (100,000-150,000) and insular Somali community, and by doing so have created a solid and reliable voting bloc that has helped to swing one election after another their way. Why should they care if half or more of those billions of dollars were fraudulent? Criminal or not, the spending bought votes.
Did Tim Walz know the frauds were going on? Of course. Even Walz isn’t that stupid. But absent taking bribes, of which there is zero evidence, he has not committed a crime.
That said, Walz’s standing with Minnesota voters is teetering on the edge. Conventional polling has shown him around even in approval/disapproval, with approval a little under 50%. Not great, but not hopeless. I think the most meaningful poll is the one that was conducted for American Experiment by Meeting Street Insights and published here. We found a very high level of awareness of the frauds among Minnesota voters, and also a high level of concern: 68% said that fraud would play a role in their vote for governor in 2026, with 50% saying it would play a major role.
As for Tim Walz, 56% said he did not do enough to prevent fraud, while 34%–loyal Democrats!–said he has done enough. More significantly, by 61% to 39%, suburban voters–in Minnesota as in most states, where elections turn–say Walz hasn’t done enough to prevent fraud.
We did that polling in September, before Minnesota turned into a national and international joke. Walz’s numbers would undoubtedly be worse today.
So what are his prospects for re-election? To begin with, he is running for a third term, which is always hard and is unprecedented in Minnesota. Even before the scandals went nuclear, most Minnesotans were telling pollsters that they preferred that Walz not run again.
So will he get the DFL nomination, or will he be forced out, like Joe Biden? Both the New York Times and the Washington Post ran articles on the frauds that were severely critical of Walz. That was taken by many as a sign that national Democrats would like to see him go. It could happen, especially because the DFL raises most of its money outside of Minnesota. JB Pritzker, the Governor of Illinois, is the DFL’s number one donor. If he and some other national Democrats (George Clooney, maybe?) leaned heavily on Walz to withdraw, it might work.
One problem is that the Democrats don’t have a great candidate waiting in the wings. Walz’s lieutenant governor, Peggy Flanagan, is running for our open Senate seat. And of course, she is tarred by the scandals as much as Walz. Who else is there? Maybe Steve Simon, our colorless Secretary of State, who has devoted his term in office to facilitating voter fraud. Republicans would probably like to see voter fraud added to the issue mix along with all the other scandals. The Democrats’ strongest candidate would be Representative Angie Craig, who has the reputation of being a moderate, even though she votes the same as all other House Democrats. But she is not popular with the DFL base that will choose the nominee.
I estimate that there is a 40% chance that Walz will either opt not to run again–i.e., if his own polls are looking hopeless–or will be forced out of the race against his will.
What if the Democrats decide they don’t have a better option, the polls aren’t looking so bad, and they conclude they may as well try to run the rapids with Walz? Many observers around the country assume it is inconceivable that he could win, but they likely are not familiar with Minnesota voters. The loyalty of most Minnesota Democrats to their party is fanatical. There is nothing Walz could do to lose their votes. His strategy will be to run against Donald Trump, and say as little as possible about his own eight years in office. Is that too lame to work? We will see.
A lot depends, of course, on whom the Republicans nominate for governor. There are quite a few hopefuls on the Republican side, of whom perhaps five are serious candidates. I think there are at least two who would probably beat Walz. Sadly, however, Minnesota Republicans do not have a good track record when it comes to nominating their best candidates.
We should not overlook the fact that, scandals apart, Tim Walz’s record in office has been horrific. Under his leadership, Minnesota has become, for the first time in its history, an economically below-average state. Crime has spiked. The downtowns of both Minneapolis and St. Paul are largely abandoned. Our schools have declined badly, with a majority of students no longer able to either read or write at grade level. (These issues are getting some attention, too. A video that American Experiment released last week exposing the anti-American, racist content of the Walz administration’s Ethnic Studies curriculum, retweeted by Elon Musk among others, has gotten tens of millions of views.) And on top of those issues we can now add the multi-billion dollar frauds that have occurred while Walz was, at best, asleep at the switch.
All of that considered, I think that if Walz does run for re-election, and if the GOP nominates a strong candidate–a big if–there is a 60% chance the Republican will win.
Putting those numbers together, I estimate there is around a 24% chance that Tim Walz will be elected to a third term. If Minnesota Republicans don’t screw it up.
 
Now if none of that seems odd or makes you angry due to some very suspicious allegations of fraud, read this article where Omar and her husband become overnight multi-millionaires. Where his former wine business when from negative value to millions. Where his new start up went from zero to having $60 BILLION in ASSETS under management, yet where they have no working telephone numbers and no permanent address for either business and both are listed at "WeWork" work share locations. Something smells like 3 day old fish here.

Exclusive story from the NY Post, which, unlike the NY Times, 60 Minutes, WaPo, and the mainstream media, apparently still employs journalists.



Exclusive | Ilhan Omar's hubby's $30M firm quietly scrubs names from website — as 'Squad' member faces mounting questions on sudden wealth amid Minnesota welfare fraud | New York Post



Embattled Rep. Ilhan Omar’s husband’s venture capital firm quietly scrubbed key officer details — including former Obama officials — as scrutiny grows over the family’s skyrocketing wealth, The Post has learned.

Omar (D-Minn.) went from nearly broke to being worth up to $30 million in just a year— as a massive, up to $9 billion fraud scheme involving the Somali community in her district unfolded right under her nose in the North Star State.

Close to 90 people have been charged so far, including at least three with direct ties to the lefty “Squad” member, though she has not been accused of wrongdoing.

Rep. Ilhan Omar and Tim Mynett smile in the crowd at the Democratic National Convention.
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Ilhan Omar and husband Tim Mynett declared assets between $6 million and $30 million in 2024. Getty Images
It was Somalia-born Omar — who was seen in a resurfaced video last month dishing out food in a restaurant now at the heart of the scandal — who introduced the legislation that critics say paved the way for what the feds have called the largest fraud of the pandemic.

The Jimmy Choo-wearing socialist introduced the MEALS Act in Congress in 2020, relaxing oversight of government-sponsored children’s meal programs during the pandemic, which critics say allowed fraudsters to claim they served millions of meals without verification, while pocketing millions of dollars in government subsidies.

Shortly after the scheme played out, Omar’s husband, political consultant Tim Mynett, launched Rose Lake Capital, a venture capital management firm, in 2022.


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The company saw its reported value go from nearly zero in 2023 to between $5 million and $25 million in just a year, and touted its officers’ $60 billion in “previous” assets under management — an amount many Wall Street money managers only dream of.

“There’s a lot of strange things going on,” said Paul Kamenar, counsel to the National Legal and Policy Center. “She was basically broke when she came into office and now she’s worth perhaps up to $30 million … she needs to come clean on these assets.”

Rose Lake Capital, which touts its “deep global networks built from on-the-ground work in more than 80 countries,” had less than $1,000 in assets in 2023, according to Omar’s financial disclosure.

Ilhan Omar wearing a hijab and an apron at Safari Restaurant's children's meal drive.'s children's meal drive.
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Omar in a video promoting the meals program at Safari, the restaurant at the heart of fraud charges. Somali TV of Minnesota/YouTube
U.S. Representative Ilhan Omar and husband Tim Mynett pose at the Power To The Patients event.
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Omar’s husband, Tim Mynett, has faced fraud allegations in the past related to a winery venture. Getty Images for Power to the Patients
Yet despite the reported windfall, the business’s only address is a WeWork in DC, according to its LinkedIn page.

Between September and October — when federal prosecutors announced charges against eight more individuals, including six of Somali descent, for their roles in the welfare scheme — the names and bios of Rose Lake Capital’s nine officers and advisers were removed from the website. None of them were charged in the fraud.

These names include lobbyist and former Obama Ambassador to Bahrain Adam Ereli; former Senator and Obama Ambassador to China Max Baucus; DNC Finance Chair associate Alex Hoffman; former DNC treasurer William Derrough; and former ex-CEO of Amalgamated Bank Keith Mestrich, who once described Amalgamated as “the institutional bank of the Democratic Party.”

Meanwhile, Mynett’s other business, a California winery that previously faced fraud allegations and was declared a failed venture in 2023, was suddenly worth between $1 million and $5 million in 2024 — a windfall of 9,900%.

Rep. Ilhan Omar celebrates her primary victory with supporters at Safari Restaurant in south Minneapolis.
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Omar held her 2018 victory party at the Safari restaurant, whose owner was convicted of fraud in the welfare scheme. Alamy Stock Photo
The Devil Lie Malbec from eStCru Wines.
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This red called “The Devil’s Lie” was one of the products in Mynett’s line of wines. eStCru Wines/Instagram
The fraud case involved a wine investor suing Mynett in October 2023, accusing him of swindling him out of $900,000 as he “fraudulently misrepresented … that estCru, LLC was a legitimate company.” Mynett claimed he simply struggled to build a business during the pandemic.

The case settled out of court in November.

The winery, eStCru, at some point around 2022 promoted a line of wines with names like “Blockchain” and “The Devil’s Lie,” with a prestigious California winemaker saying she abruptly stopped getting paid in early 2023. The business was only worth between $15,000 and $50,000 in Omar’s financial disclosure that year, making the sudden windfall the next year even more puzzling.

It too is listed as operating out of a WeWork, and doesn’t appear to actually sell any wines anymore, according to extensive internet searches.

Despite the high worth placed on the business, its website is a broken link, the phone number is disconnected and the last social media post for the winery dates back to 2023.

Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., outside the U.S. Capitol.
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Omar was worth nothing when she first took office in 2019, with only debt to her name. CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images
“While working families were being ripped off by a massive welfare scam, Omar’s campaign took money from convicted fraudsters, her husband launched a firm that suddenly ballooned in value, and [Minnesota Gov.] Tim Walz looked the other way,” according to Kiersten Pels, spokesperson for the Republican National Committee.

When she first took office in 2019, the left-wing “Squad” member declared a net worth between negative $25,000 and negative $65,000, claimed to own no assets and be only carrying student and car debt.

Now Omar’s assets have suddenly skyrocketed to anywhere between $6 million and $30 million, according to her latest financial disclosure — just months after the congresswoman dismissed claims that she was a millionaire as “ridiculous” and “categorically false.”

Her links to the Minnesota welfare scheme have started to come to light in recent weeks.

Man wearing a face mask and gloves hands a bag of food to a child, next to food drive boxes.
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Children’s meal programs have been at the heart of the fraud scandal involving the Somali community in Minnesota. Getty Images
Her campaign received $7,400 in direct donations from at least three now-convicted fraudsters, though the “Squad” member insisted she returned the donations after the scandal broke.

She’s been closely linked to at least two individuals from Minnesota’s Somalian community who’ve been charged in the fraud.

One is Salim Ahmed Said, the co-owner of Minneapolis’ Safari Restaurant, where Omar held her 2018 congressional victory party.

Said was found guilty in August of stealing more than $12 million for serving 3.9 million “phantom” meals during the COVID-19 pandemic, blowing much of the money on a $2 million Minneapolis mansion and a $9,000-a-month shopping habit at Nordstrom, according to prosecutors.

“Does Ilhan Omar know these people? Are they from her wonderfully managed Home Country of Somalia?” President Trump posted on his Truth Social platform when the news of the charges first broke. “Somali gangs are terrorizing the people of that great state, and billions of dollars are missing. Send them back to where they came from.”

A man in white robes and a white head covering exits the Safari Restaurant & Banquet Center carrying two bags. A NOW OPEN! sign for the restaurant is in the foreground.
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Since the scandal exploded, the Safari restaurant is listed as permanently closed on Google. Star Tribune via Getty Images
As the scam was underway in 2020, Omar even appeared on video at Safari Restaurant to praise the program.

“Every day Safari provides 2,300 meals to children and their families,” she boasted in Somali in the video, while being filmed handling trays of food in a parking lot with her pandemic-era facemask pulled down below her nose.

The other individual, Guhaad Hashi Said, worked on Omar’s campaign in 2018 and 2020, and pleaded guilty in August to running a fake food site called Advance Youth Athletic Development, where he falsely claimed to serve 5,000 meals a day and pocketed $3.2 million out of the food program.

Ilhan Omar, candidate for State Representative for District 60B, campaigns on election day.
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The Somali community in Omar’s district in Minnesota has been thrown into the spotlight in recent weeks. AFP via Getty Images
On Capitol Hill last week, Omar said she had no regrets about introducing the MEALS Act.

“Absolutely not, it did help feed kids,” she told a reporter.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Waltz — Kamala Harris’ former running mate — has also faced intense scrutiny for letting the scandal unfold on his watch.

Education Secretary Linda McMahon wrote a letter calling for him to resign, and Rep. Tom Emmer (R-Minn.) hinted at possible criminal charges.

“Ilhan Omar is as disingenuous as they come,” he told The Post Saturday. “She promotes socialist policies while cashing in a taxpayer-funded paycheck and sitting on tens of millions of dollars. At least now we have an explanation for why she’s so out of touch with the priorities of hardworking, everyday Minnesotans.”

Ilhan Omar and Tim Mynett attend the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation annual Legislative Conference Phoenix Awards dinner.
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Omar and Mynett have seen their fortune skyrocket in the last year. Getty Images for Congressional Black Caucus Foundation
Tim Mynett and Ilhan Omar pose at an outdoor event in front of the White House.
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Mynett’s venture capital firm claims to already have $60 billion in assets under management. @TimMynett/X
The Treasury and Justice Department has already launched an investigation into the alleged money laundering.

When reached for comment, Omar’s communications director sent The Post a message saying the entire office was closed until Jan. 5 – without offering an alternative contact.

Mynett did not return The Post’s messages, and both his businesses’ numbers were not working.
They never charged hitlery clinton for her servers do you actually think they do some thing now???? i hope so but I'm not holding my breath!!!!!!
 
The administration is not doing "Nothing." What they are doing is investigating and exposing the fraud. The Fraud that it has been "apparent." And now is plainly obvious.

I am hopeful that this doesn't blow over. Given that the dollars and scope of these cheating programs is so huge and exposed, how could "nothing" be done and any government credibility remain?

The midterms are up soon. Nobody on the right is likely to ignore the opportunities.

I don't see that happening.
 
And now we see Somali FRAUD in OHIO and the States Attorney is jumping on it!

So far ZEROHEDGE is the major source reporting:



"I Flagged Them All": Attorney Says US Gov't Investigating Somali Welfare Fraud In Ohio​

Allegations of welfare fraud involving Minneapolis daycare centers tied to Somali operators have circulated in the news cycle for years with limited traction; however, it was not until a high-visibility, bombshell investigation by citizen journalist Nick Shirley that the topic was reignited and thrust back into the news cycle. The focus is now shifting from Democrat-run Minneapolis to what is being framed as a potentially nationwide welfare fraud epidemic.

On Sunday, Breitbart News published an interview with Ohio attorney Mehek Cooke, who alleges that members of the Somali community in Ohio have defrauded millions of dollars from the state's Medicaid program.

"So these individuals tried to report the fraud that was happening in Ohio and eventually came to me saying that we are watching providers rubber-stamp paperwork for home health
And there are many states like this, Pennsylvania and others too, where you can go in and say, 'My aging parent needs home health care. I want to provide it.'
The state will, as long as a doctor has approved it, continue to pay you. It could be for 10 hours, 12 hours, up to 24 hours when it is critical care.
So you could sit at home without caring for an elderly parent who really does not need it and make about $75,000 to $90,000 a year. Now you add two parents, that is $180,000. Now you add your in-laws, $250,000.
You continue to add this and you wonder, what services are actually being provided? So a lot of providers came to me and said fraud is occurring because we refused to rubber-stamp this paperwork.
So they went to other providers in their home health care networks saying, 'We will make it worth your while.' Well, that sounds like a kickback to me.
So we really need to investigate the Medicaid system, how much it has expanded since the Somali population arrived, and who truly needs critical care, because that is meant for the disabled, the elderly, and people who genuinely need it, not for people to live off the system.
And that is what is happening in Ohio. I think it is ridiculous. I think it is despicable. But authorities are now looking at it, from the Attorney General's office to the U.S. Attorney's office.
I flagged them all because these are Ohio tax dollars and we have to take it seriously. I am tired of people telling me, 'Well, this is the way it has always been. It is subjective, and we cannot really check.'
No, you can. Audit America. Audit Ohio now."
Elon Musk, the former DOGE head who was investigating this kind of fraud on the federal level, noted, "The fraud of your taxpayer money is happening nationwide and is liberally applied to attract illegal (and some legal) immigrants who will reliably vote Democrat. The more you look, the more you find. And you don't need to be a world-class detective to figure it out. This is brazen, daylight robbery."

Remember, it was the Democratic Party that threw a fit when DOGE began investigating fraud, waste, and abuse on the federal level. And now we know why. What comes next is likely an expansion of DOGE-esque investigations (perhaps with an army of citizen journalists) aimed at blue states suspected of massive welfare fraud schemes.
 
And the SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION is cutting off loans to Somali scammers in Minnesota now that the publicity and awareness are ramping up. Hopefully the will also look at Somali scams in Maine, Ohio and do the same there. Then look to other states!

 
One independent investigative reporter with nothing more than a cell phone easily exposes the extent of corruption. The lamestream worthless media and that includes Faux News should be ashamed of themselves. Nothing but a bunch of worthless asswipes who have no idea whatsoever how to do their jobs or even care for that matter.
 
One independent investigative reporter with nothing more than a cell phone easily exposes the extent of corruption. The lamestream worthless media and that includes Faux News should be ashamed of themselves. Nothing but a bunch of worthless asswipes who have no idea whatsoever how to do their jobs or even care for that matter.
Until the people ( or should that be sheepeople) stop watching the mainstream media and let them die they will still be bought by bug business and influenced by government pushing their narrative's.
People have been brainwashed by schools and teachers unions, and the department of miseducation for 6 or 7 decades not teaching the children to learn teaching them to "test better making the administration look better" but they can't even boil water when they graduate high school let alone ballance a cheque book.
 
539 Child Care Centers in Washington State run by Somalis.
How many are under suspicion of fraud? The number is NOT ZERO.

Indiana just did 2 things. Last year we enacted new legislation to eliminate this sort of abuse and reign in abuse. And we also just arrested and indicting a Kokomo, IN Somali resident for exactly this sort of potential abuse. Obviously he is innocent until proven guilty but, but the suspicion loom large.

Here is what is happening in WASHINGTON STATE:

 
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