SOMALI CRIMINALS – WALZ & OMAR

A full investigation is not only warranted but criminal charges must be brought against these two thieves. Walz condoned the Somali theft of billions of dollars that went on to Somalia terrorist organization al-Shabab. Under the watchful eyes of a terrorist, who by the way believes in incest, none other than State Representative Omar. How can this be? We have posted here Resume below. And just think that this guy, a Somali plant, Governor of Minnesota, who in cahoots with the Somali community, voted him into office on the premise of “give me the vote, I will give you the booty.”

What to know about Minnesota fraud allegations, as Trump levels attacks on Walz

By Joe Walsh

Updated on: December 4, 2025 / 8:58 PM EST / CBS News

A series of multimillion-dollar alleged fraud schemes in Minnesota has drawn the Trump administration’s attention in recent weeks, vaulting an issue that has brewed in state politics for years into the national conversation.

President Trump has called Minnesota a “hub of fraudulent money laundering activity,” and has lashed out against the state’s Somali community as most of the fraud defendants were of Somali descent — drawing stiff criticism from local officials. This week, the administration launched enhanced immigration operations in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area.

Meanwhile, U.S. House Republicans launched an investigation Wednesday into Democratic Gov. Tim Walz’s handling of the fraud cases, and the U.S. Treasury said Monday it will look into whether tax dollars from Minnesota made their way to al Shabaab, a Somali-based al Qaeda affiliate. And federal prosecutors have continued to bring new charges against alleged fraudsters in the Midwestern state in recent months.

Here’s what to know about the cases:

What was the Feeding Our Future fraud scheme?

Three years ago, federal prosecutors in Minnesota filed the first charges in what they described as the “largest pandemic fraud in the United States.”

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The $250 million scheme — which now includes upward of 75 defendants — revolved around a nonprofit group called Feeding Our Future that partnered with the Minnesota Department of Education and U.S. Department of Agriculture to distribute meals to children. 

During the COVID-19 pandemic, prosecutors say, Feeding Our Future and its affiliated food distribution sites submitted fake meal count sheets and invoices to trick state and federal officials into thinking they had helped serve food to thousands of children. The group allegedly raked in millions in administrative fees for the fake meal distributions, and got kickbacks from people who ran their distribution sites, according to federal charging documents.

Feeding Our Future’s founder, Aimee Bock, was convicted at trial earlier this year. Several other defendants, including distribution site operators, have pleaded guilty or been convicted, in some cases receiving multiyear prison sentences and being ordered to pay millions in restitution. One defendant also pleaded guilty to attempting to bribe a juror, after a member of the jury in his fraud trial found a bag with $120,000 in cash at her home.

Bock has long denied wrongdoing. At various points before charges were filed, Minnesota officials questioned some of the group’s filings and slowed approvals of distribution sites, leading Feeding Our Future to file a lawsuit accusing the state of discrimination.

The case was part of a trend of large-scale fraud across the U.S. during the pandemic, as the federal government poured money into assistance programs at a rapid clip. One former federal watchdog estimated to “60 Minutes” earlier this year that COVID-19 fraud may have cost taxpayers some $1 trillion.

Prosecutors said the program that was allegedly co-opted by Feeding Our Future — the Federal Child Nutrition Program — became more vulnerable to fraud during the pandemic. Oversight was more difficult because of the health crisis, and federal officials waived some of the program’s rules to let restaurants participate and allow off-site meal distribution.

A probe last year by the state’s Office of the Legislative Auditor found the Minnesota Department of Education “created opportunities for fraud” by failing to act on warning signs with Feeding Our Future or investigate complaints about the group.

The report also found that state officials felt they needed to handle Feeding Our Future carefully because the group had responded to a 2020 slowdown in food site approvals by accusing the Minnesota Department of Education of racial discrimination and of depriving needy children of food. In the Feeding Our Future’s lawsuit against the state, it noted that it “caters to members of a protected group of racial minorities and foreign nationals.”

The auditor’s office said “the threat of legal consequences and negative media attention affected MDE’s decisions about the regulatory actions it did and did not take against Feeding Our Future.”

What other fraud allegations have circulated in Minnesota?

The Feeding Our Future scheme isn’t the only fraud case to rattle Minnesota politics.

In August, state officials shut down a fairly new program designed to help seniors and people with disabilities find housing after discovering “large-scale fraud.” 

A month later, federal prosecutors charged eight people with allegedly defrauding the program, which was run through the state’s Medicaid service, by enrolling as providers and submitting millions in “fake and inflated bills.”

Prosecutors said the housing stabilization program was susceptible to fraud because it intentionally had “low barriers to entry” and few recordkeeping requirements. They also noted that spending on the program had ballooned to more than $100 million last year, despite initial estimates that it would cost around $2.6 million a year.

And in late September, a person was charged with defrauding a third state program — in this case, one that provides services to children with autism. Her company was accused of hiring unqualified “behavioral technicians” and submitting false claims to the state that indicated the staff had worked with children enrolled in the program. 

She also allegedly paid kickbacks to parents who agreed to enroll their children in the program, in some cases sending them as much as $1,500, prosecutors said.

The same person, Asha Farhan Hassan, was also charged in September with running a fraudulent food distribution site as part of the Feeding Our Future scheme.

Acting U.S. Attorney Joseph H. Thompson said the case “is not an isolated scheme.”

“From Feeding Our Future to Housing Stabilization Services and now Autism Services, these massive fraud schemes form a web that has stolen billions of dollars in taxpayer money,” the federal prosecutor wrote in a statement.

Kelly Loeffler, who leads the U.S. Small Business Administration, also alleged Tuesday that some of the groups linked to the Feeding Our Future scheme received COVID-era emergency loans. She said she has ordered an “investigation into the network of Somali organizations and executives implicated in these schemes.” She did not provide details on the probe.

What is the connection to Minnesota’s Somali community?

Most of the people charged in the Feeding Our Future case are of Somali descent, though Bock, the group’s founder and the scheme’s alleged “mastermind,” is White.

Prosecutors in the alleged autism services fraud scheme said the defendant “approached parents in the Somali community to recruit their children.”

The named fraud defendants appear to represent a small percentage of Minnesota’s Somali American community, which is among the largest in the nation.

Some 76,000 people of Somali descent live in the state, more than half of whom were born in the U.S., according to Census Bureau figures from last year. The vast majority of the state’s foreign-born Somali population has U.S. citizenship, and most entered the U.S. before 2010.

Around 65% of Somali people in Minnesota ages 16 and over were employed as of last year, according to the Census Bureau, roughly equivalent to the state population as a whole.

Last year, a Somali American former investigator in the Minnesota attorney general’s office, Kayseh Magan, wrote about what he called an “uncomfortable and true” reality that many people who have been charged with fraud in the state are of Somali descent.

Listen to this Muslim terroris answer questioned on why she is being questioned. Get her out of the country, NOW. She is playing the RACE CARD.

House Oversight Committee launches investigation into Minnesota fraud claim


by MATT GALKA | The National News DeskWed, December 3, 2025 at 3:56 PM

Updated Wed, December 3, 2025 at 4:37 PM

WASHINGTON (TNND) — The House Oversight Committee is launching an investigation into claims of widespread fraud in Minnesota’s social service programs. The claim involves billions of dollars in fraud where state and public assistance tax dollars have allegedly been funneled to terrorist organizations based in Somalia.

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer gave Walz until Dec. 17 to respond to the claims.

The Committee on Oversight and Government Reform is investigating reports of widespread fraud in Minnesota’s social services programs. The Committee has serious concerns about how you as the Governor, and the Democrat-controlled administration, allowed millions of dollars to be stolen,” Comer said in a written statement.

The allegations of fraud stem from a report from the City Journal. Officials alleged that portions of the money taken from Minnesota’s Medicaid and social-service programs were routed overseas to Somalia, which is where the potential ties to Al-Shabaab come in. Al-Shabaab is an al-Qaeda-linked terrorist organization operating in Somalia.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Minnesota has charged dozens of defendants across multiple schemes, including housing-assistance fraud, pandemic child-nutrition fraud, and millions of dollars in false billing for autism therapy. Collectively, prosecutors estimate taxpayers have lost billions.

THE ILHAN OMAR CON

Posted in April 2021

Ilhan Omar

Omar was born in Mogadishu, Somalia, in October 1982. According to the biography posted on her own website, she lived there for around eight years before her family fled to a refugee camp in Kenya, moving to the United States four years later, and eventually settling in the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood of Minneapolis in 1997. 

In a 2018 interview with the Intercept website’s “Deconstructed” podcast, Omar said she became a naturalized U.S. citizen before she turned 18 years old, explaining that, “My father became a citizen and so I got my citizenship through that process.”

In the same interview, she said her family resettled in the U.S. in 1995. Since a would-be naturalized citizen must first live in the U.S. as a permanent resident for five years, 2000 would be the earliest year in which Omar’s father (and Omar herself) could become citizens. Since Omar was born in October 1982, she turned 18 in October 2000. So, based on the sequence of events presented by Omar, it appears she became a U.S. citizen at the age of 17, some time between January and October 2000 —

Although Omar’s account makes sense, and we found no substantive dispute over it, we were unable to locate any official documentation that supports that version of events. We asked Omar’s spokesperson and district director to provide any official documentation that would confirm the date of her naturalization, but we received no such evidence.

The Congresswoman’s spokesperson reiterated that she became a U.S. citizen in 2000, and pointed out that an individual cannot be elected to the U.S. House of Representatives without demonstrating citizenship, but the spokesperson did not have Omar’s “personal government documents.”

Until and unless evidence of that nature becomes available to us, definitively establishing that Omar became a U.S. citizen in 2000 she has pull off one of the greatest cons in history.

Excerpts above taken from article by Dan MacGuill Published 16 July 2019

CLICK HERE FOR IMMIGRATION FRAUD PERPETRATED BY THIS RAT

In the AP story, Omar’s replies to all this are those of the victim combined with overtones of the royal “we”:

“We choose not to further the narratives of those who would oppose us” Omar’s statement said, adding that she believes the claims are being made by people who want to stop a black, female Muslim from sitting in Congress.

The chronology of all this, briefly, follows:

  • 1982 — Born in Somalia;
  • 1991 — Went to refugee camp in Kenya;
  • 1995 — Came to United States as a refugee, becoming a citizen at some later point;
  • 2002 — Took out a marriage license to marry Ahmed Hirsi (AKA Ahmed Aden), but did not marry him except in a Muslim ceremony; they had two kids;
  • 2008 — Parted from Hirsi; a Muslim divorce, not recorded, took place;
  • 2009 — Married Ahmed Elmi; a marriage certificate exists;
  • 2011 — Parted from Elmi, with a Muslim divorce;
  • 2012 — Reunited with Hirsi and had a third child;
  • 2017 — Formally divorced Elmi (after being elected to the legislature);
  • 2018 — Married (re-married?) Hirsi and was nominated for Congress.

At the very least, a busy lady — one with a fondness for guys named Ahmed.