The money came fast. Too fast. In just six years, Rep.
Ilhan Omar allegedly went from broke freshman lawmaker
to multimillionaire power player — as her husband’s venture
fund quietly erased its own past. Federal agents are circling Minnesota’s welfare networks.
Scrubbed websites. Empty daycares. Vanished records.
And a paper trail that raises one chilling que… Continues…
Omar’s soaring net worth now shadows every move she makes. Her husband Tim Mynett’s firm,
Rose Lake Capital, exploded from virtually nothing to
a valuation in the tens of millions, even as its website
deleted the powerful Democratic names it once flaunted.
At the same time, Minnesota authorities are unraveling a
web of welfare fraud centered on nonprofits in
Omar’s own backyard, some run by familiar faces who once donated to or worked for her.
She insists the MEALS Act “helped feed kids,”
but prosecutors describe a system that fed luxury lifestyles instead.
Newly empowered FBI Director Kash Patel says investigators have only touched
“the tip of a very large iceberg,” and the bureau is now chasing every
dollar that flowed through pandemic meal programs.
Omar hasn’t been charged.
Yet the question lingers over
Washington and Minneapolis alike: did political privilege turn hunger relief into a personal gold mine?