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NEW: Ilhan Omar Faces Potential Legal Trouble After Ignoring Fraud Committee Deadline

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Rep. Ilhan Omar is facing fresh scrutiny in Minnesota after a state House oversight committee said she has not complied with a document request tied to the sprawling “Feeding Our Future” fraud scandal.

State Rep. Kristin Robbins, chair of the House Fraud Prevention and State Agency Oversight Committee, has been pressing Omar’s office for records and answers related to the congresswoman’s contacts, public messaging and potential connections to individuals linked to the case. Robbins has argued the committee’s deadline has come and gone without the response she says lawmakers requested.

Omar, a Democrat who represents Minnesota’s 5th Congressional District, has been under pressure for weeks after Robbins accused her of “ghosting” the panel and declining to appear at a state hearing.

Robbins and other Republicans say the committee’s interest centers on Omar’s work around pandemic-era federal nutrition policy and how it intersected with the program that prosecutors say was exploited in one of the largest COVID-era fraud schemes in the country.

The Feeding Our Future case has drawn national attention after federal prosecutors alleged that hundreds of millions of dollars meant for child nutrition were siphoned off through fake meal counts, inflated invoices and coordinated paperwork. While Omar has not been charged in the case, Republicans have pointed to what they describe as unanswered questions and communications they want reviewed.

Committee critics say Omar’s name appeared more than once in communications tied to people later implicated in the scandal. One email chain, according to those critics, carried the subject line “ILHAN’S OFFICE.” The committee has not publicly released the full context of that chain in the material provided here.

Robbins’ allies have argued the situation warrants escalated scrutiny and additional review beyond the state level. They say the committee’s work is focused on potential misuse of taxpayer-funded programs and whether any lawmakers or political operations played a role in promoting or enabling organizations later accused of fraud.

Omar’s office has previously pushed back on allegations tying her directly to wrongdoing in the Feeding Our Future case. The committee dispute now adds another layer, as Republicans argue that failure to provide requested records could raise legal and procedural questions depending on what was requested and what authority the committee has to compel cooperation.

Separate from the Minnesota fraud controversy, Omar has also faced renewed attention over her personal financial disclosures.

Ilhan Omar filed an amended 2024 financial disclosure on March 26, 2026, sharply reducing her reported household assets. The amended filing was first reported publicly in April and showed Omar and her husband, Tim Mynett, held assets worth between $18,004 and $95,000.

Her original 2024 disclosure, filed in May 2025, listed two Mynett business interests with combined values that could reach $30 million. Omar’s office said the earlier filing failed to account for liabilities and created a misleading picture of the couple’s finances.

RELATED: Ilhan Omar Skips Her Own Hearing As Walls Close In On Fraud

The change drew attention because House financial disclosures are signed under penalties tied to accuracy, and they are commonly used by ethics watchdogs and investigators to assess whether lawmakers properly reported assets, income and business interests.

Republicans have seized on the amendment as part of a broader narrative that Omar is avoiding transparency while facing multiple lines of scrutiny. They have argued that the combination of the committee dispute and the disclosure revision raises questions that deserve answers, even if they do not amount to proof of criminal conduct.

At this stage, the committee fight is political and procedural, but it could escalate if lawmakers attempt additional steps to enforce compliance or if other authorities decide the matter merits review.

RELATED: Ilhan Omar Blames ‘Accounting Error’ For Eyebrow-Raising Tax Filing: ‘Not A Millionaire’

For now, Omar remains at the center of a widening storm in Minnesota, with Republicans demanding documents, Democrats largely dismissing the accusations as political warfare, and the congresswoman’s office pointing to administrative explanations in at least one key area: the revised financial filing.

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