GOP Links Omar With Growing Medicaid Fraud Scandal In MN Somali Community-llllllllllllllllll
Republican challenger John Nagel is accusing Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar of being closely linked to the $1 billion Feeding Our Future fraud scandal, which is based in her Minneapolis congressional district. Nagel, who is running against Omar in Minnesota’s 5th Congressional District, claims that legislation introduced by Omar contributed to the circumstances that allowed the fraud to take place.

“Where did this actually start?” Nagel said, Townhall reported. “She passed legislation. Her legislation actually started it, and it allowed people to get into Feeding Our Future.” Nagel pointed to the geographic concentration of the fraud.
“If you look at where the fraud is, it’s primarily her district, the district that I’m running in against her,” he said. “And it’s really odd to think that all the fraud just happened in a particular area.”
Omar introduced the Maintaining Essential Access to Lunch for Students Act, known as the MEALS Act, during the COVID-19 pandemic. The bill allowed states to provide free meals to children during school closures through alternative methods such as grab-and-go distribution and eased eligibility requirements. Omar has denied any wrongdoing.
The legislation was passed by Congress with bipartisan support.
Nagel further alleged that individuals connected to Omar’s political circle financially benefited from the fraud scheme. He said Omar held campaign events at Safari Restaurant, a business tied to the Feeding Our Future investigation, and claimed she had personal familiarity with one of the restaurant’s owners who has since been convicted.
Nagel also asserted that Omar previously employed a staff member who was later convicted in connection with the case. Omar has not publicly addressed those specific allegations.
Last week, Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., spoke on the Senate floor Thursday about a large fraud scheme uncovered in Minnesota involving nonprofit organizations linked to the state’s Somali community.
During his remarks, Tuberville accused Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Omar of failing to prevent the fraud and of defending individuals involved in the scheme. Federal prosecutors have said the case involves the misuse of hundreds of millions of dollars in public funds through child nutrition and other assistance programs.
“Fox News recently reported that members of Minnesota Democratic Representative Ilhan Omar’s inner circle, people working for her, were personally profiting from this fraud,” Tuberville said. “Omar held at least one event at one of the restaurants named in the massive fraud scheme. And by the way, one of Congresswoman Omar’s staffers has already been convicted for his role in the fraud. It runs very deep.”
“All of this has taken place inside of Omar’s congressional district, and she’s doing everything she can to defend these Somali criminals,” he added.
Tuberville criticized Walz for permitting a scam involving a Somali non-profit that falsely claimed to be a housing assistance program.
“These people were empowered by the woke and clueless so-called governor Tim Walz, whose government handed the funds to these Somali criminals. He turned a blind eye,” argued Tuberville.
“For example, one of the scams run by the Somali nonprofit disguised itself as a housing assistance program. Sounds great,” he continued. “The initial budget for this program was $2.6 million. However, the annual budget quickly increased to over $100 million due to fake billing and fraud. And whose money is that? The American taxpayers.”
The senator urged for Walz to be jailed due to his complicity, also highlighting the governor’s expected tendency to label critics of the fraud as racists.
“Tim Walz had every opportunity to see this, investigate, and stop this fraud and corruption,” noted Tuberville. “Instead, he looked the other way. That makes him complicit. He should go to jail for this. Anybody else would. Now he’s trying to deflect by calling those who are angry about the Somali fraud ‘racist.’ That’s the word they always use.”
“This has nothing to do with racism. Somali immigrants stole more than $1 billion and counting from the American taxpayers. Again, proven. That should make every single American’s blood boil,” he added.
My 6-year-old daughter came home with blood on her head after spending the day at my mother and sister’s house. I asked, “What happened?” She cried and said, “I fell off the jungle gym.” I immediately called my mom, but all she said was, “You’re overreacting. Stop making such a fuss.” At the hospital, the doctor looked at me and said, “This was no accident.”

My 6-year-old daughter came home with blood on her head after spending the day at my mother and sister’s house. I asked, “What happened?” She cried and said, “I fell off the jungle gym.” I immediately called my mom, but all she said was, “You’re overreacting. Stop making such a fuss.” At the hospital, the doctor looked at me and said, “This was no accident.”
When Laura Bennett opened the front door that evening, her six-year-old daughter was standing there with dried blood in her hair.
For one second, Laura’s mind refused to understand what she was seeing. Mia was wearing the same pink shirt she had left in that morning when Laura dropped her off at her mother’s house, but now the collar was smeared with red, one sleeve was dirty, and there was a trembling, stunned look in her eyes that no child should ever carry home.
Laura dropped her keys.
“Mia,” she whispered, rushing forward. “What happened?”
The moment Laura touched her, Mia burst into tears. Not loud at first. Just broken, shaky sobs like she had been holding them in for too long.
“I fell off the jungle gym,” she cried.
Laura pulled back just enough to see the wound properly. The blood had clotted near the side of Mia’s scalp, but the skin around it was swollen, and there was bruising she did not remember seeing at pickup. Her stomach turned cold.
Earlier that afternoon, Laura’s mother, Patricia, had acted strangely casual when Laura arrived. She had opened the door only halfway and said Mia was “a little tired” from playing outside. Laura’s younger sister, Vanessa, had stayed on the couch scrolling on her phone, barely looking up. No one mentioned an injury. No one said Mia had fallen. No one suggested Laura should check her daughter’s head.
Now, kneeling in her own hallway with blood under her daughter’s curls, Laura felt terror harden into something sharper.
She grabbed her phone and called Patricia immediately.
Her mother answered with a sigh, as if being interrupted was the real offense.
“What now?”
“Mia is bleeding,” Laura snapped. “What happened?”
Patricia let out a short, annoyed laugh. “You’re overreacting. Stop making such a fuss.”
Laura stared at the wall in disbelief.
“She said she fell at the playground,” Patricia added. “Kids fall. It’s not the end of the world.”
Vanessa’s voice drifted in from the background, lazy and dismissive. “Honestly, Laura, if you’re going to panic every time she gets a scratch, maybe stop babying her.”
Laura ended the call before she said something she could not take back.
Within ten minutes she had Mia in the car and was driving to the emergency room, one hand shaking on the wheel, the other reaching back at every red light just to make sure her daughter was still there, still breathing, still talking.
At the hospital, the nurse at triage took one look at Mia and moved them through faster than Laura expected. A doctor named Dr. Harris examined the cut, asked gentle questions, and sent Mia for imaging because of the way she flinched when he touched the side of her head.
Laura sat beside the hospital bed, trying to stay calm for Mia, but every instinct in her screamed that something was wrong. Children fell all the time, yes. But children who fell by accident usually came home with a story that made sense, and adults who witnessed it did not react with annoyance.
An hour later, Dr. Harris returned holding the scan results.
His face had changed.
He closed the curtain, looked directly at Laura, and said quietly, “This was no accident.”

For a second, Laura forgot how to breathe.
The hospital room seemed to narrow around those four words. Mia sat on the bed clutching a stuffed rabbit from the pediatric cart, exhausted from crying and half-dozing under a thin blanket, while Laura stared at Dr. Harris as if he had just spoken in another language.
“What do you mean?” she asked.
Dr. Harris lowered his voice further. “The injury pattern doesn’t match a simple fall from playground equipment. The angle of impact, the depth of the scalp wound, and the bruising behind her ear suggest force from a direct blow or from being pushed into a hard surface.” He paused. “I can’t tell you exactly how it happened. But I can tell you this explanation doesn’t fit.”
Laura felt her knees weaken.
Mia had said she fell.
But of course she had.
She was six.
A child that young did not always know the difference between what happened and what she had been told happened.
Dr. Harris continued carefully. “Because of the nature of the injury, I’m required to notify hospital social services and file a report. That doesn’t mean anyone is being accused without investigation. It means we need to make sure your daughter is safe.”
Laura looked at Mia, who had gone pale but was listening now.
Safe.
The word sliced straight through her.
She had left her daughter at her mother’s house because she thought, whatever their personal issues, Patricia and Vanessa would at least keep Mia safe. Patricia was cold, judgmental, exhausting—but Laura had still believed there were lines even her family would not cross.
Now that belief lay in pieces on the hospital floor.
When the social worker, Jenna Morales, arrived, she spoke gently with Mia first. Laura stayed nearby, close enough for comfort but far enough not to shape the answers. Jenna asked simple questions in a calm voice.
“Can you tell me about the jungle gym?”
Mia twisted the rabbit’s ear in her hands. “I wasn’t at the jungle gym.”
Laura’s heart stopped.
Jenna kept her tone soft. “Okay. Do you remember where you were?”
Mia nodded slowly. “At Grandma’s house.”
“What happened there?”
Mia’s eyes filled instantly. “Aunt Vanessa got mad because I spilled juice.” She swallowed hard. “She said I never listen. Then she grabbed my arm and took me outside to the back porch.”
Laura closed her eyes for one second, barely holding herself together.
Mia kept going in small, broken pieces. Vanessa had told her to stand on the wooden bench by the porch railing as punishment. Mia said she was scared and wanted to get down. Patricia told her to “stop being dramatic.” When Mia tried to climb down, Vanessa shoved the bench with her foot because she said Mia was “moving too slow.” Mia lost her balance, hit the side of her head on the metal grill, and fell onto the patio.
Jenna asked quietly, “What did Grandma do?”
Mia looked confused, as children often do when faced with adult failure that makes no sense. “She said if I told Mommy, everybody would get in trouble because I ruined dinner.”
Laura turned away so her daughter would not see her face collapse.
It was worse than negligence.
It was cruelty followed by coaching.
Dr. Harris returned after hearing enough to understand the basics, and this time his expression was no longer cautious. It was grim. The hospital contacted police. The social worker began formal documentation. Jenna asked Laura if Mia could safely return home with her and whether Patricia or Vanessa had keys or access to the apartment.
Laura answered every question with a clarity that shocked her.
No, they did not have keys anymore. No, Mia would not be left alone with them ever again. Yes, she wanted the report filed. Yes, she would cooperate fully.
Then her phone rang.
Patricia.
Laura stared at the screen until it stopped.
Then came a text from Vanessa:
You better not be causing drama. Mom said Mia is fine.
Laura looked down at her daughter, who was lying in a hospital bed with a concussion, stitches, and terror still living in her small body.
Drama.
That word lit something final inside her.
She handed the phone to Jenna as evidence.
Then, when the detective arrived and asked whether she wanted to make a formal statement that night or wait until morning, Laura answered without hesitation.
“Tonight,” she said.
Because whatever came next, one thing was already certain:
Her mother and sister had made the mistake of thinking she would choose family peace over her child’s safety.
They were about to learn she would not.

Part 3
The investigation moved faster than Patricia and Vanessa expected.
By the next morning, both women had already been contacted by police. At first Patricia repeated the same bored line she had given Laura on the phone: Mia fell, children get hurt, Laura was hysterical. Vanessa went further, claiming Mia was clumsy and “always exaggerating for attention.” But lies are fragile things when they meet evidence.
The hospital report documented an injury inconsistent with the story they gave. The social worker recorded Mia’s statement. Photos of the porch showed the bench, the grill corner, and faint smears of blood Patricia clearly had not cleaned as thoroughly as she thought. Most damaging of all, a neighbor’s security camera partially captured the back patio through a gap in the fence. The video did not show the exact moment of impact clearly, but it did show Vanessa jerking Mia by the arm toward the porch and Patricia standing nearby while the child cried.
That was enough to destroy the easy version of events.
Patricia called Laura fourteen times in one afternoon.
Vanessa called even more.
When Laura finally answered, she put the phone on speaker with Detective Cole sitting across from her dining table.
Her mother was already shouting.
“How dare you involve the police over a parenting misunderstanding?”
Laura’s voice stayed calm. “You told my daughter to lie.”
Patricia inhaled sharply. “I was protecting this family.”
“No,” Laura said. “You were protecting yourselves.”
Vanessa grabbed the phone next. “It was an accident! I barely touched her.”
Detective Cole wrote something down.
Laura looked through the bedroom doorway at Mia, who was napping with a bandage on her head and the stuffed rabbit tucked under her chin.
“You made a six-year-old stand on a bench near a metal grill because she spilled juice,” Laura said. “Then you left her bleeding and sent her home without telling me. Don’t ever call this an accident again.”
Vanessa cursed. Patricia started crying. Laura ended the call.
Over the following weeks, the consequences kept coming. Child endangerment charges were considered. At minimum, Vanessa faced formal criminal investigation for assault on a minor, while Patricia was investigated for reckless endangerment and failure to seek care. A protective order was granted quickly, barring unsupervised contact with Mia. Family members who once told Laura she was “too harsh” suddenly became very careful with their words once they saw the hospital paperwork and detective reports.
Some still tried, of course.
An aunt called to say, “Your mother didn’t mean for anyone to get hurt.”
Laura answered, “But she meant to protect the person who caused it.”
That ended the conversation.
At home, the healing was slower.
Mia became afraid of raised voices. She cried when juice spilled, even by accident. She asked every night for a new promise: “You won’t leave me there again, right?”
And every night, Laura gave the same answer.
“Never again.”
She got Mia into therapy. She sat through every doctor follow-up. She learned how to wash around stitches without causing pain and how to stay steady when her daughter woke from bad dreams about falling. She also learned something else, something painful but clean: the guilt she felt for trusting Patricia and Vanessa was real, but it could not be allowed to become bigger than the responsibility to act now.
So she acted.
She changed emergency contact forms. Blocked numbers. Informed the school. Told neighbors not to open the building door to her mother. When Patricia sent a letter filled with excuses, Laura did not read past the second paragraph. When Vanessa wrote, I hope you’re happy ruining our lives, Laura deleted it without replying.

Because that was the final truth of it: their lives were not ruined by being reported.
Their lives were disrupted by being exposed.
And Mia?
Months later, when the bruises were gone and the stitches had become a pale line hidden in her hair, she sat at the kitchen table drawing a picture of herself and Laura holding hands in front of a house with a bright yellow sun overhead. At the bottom, in shaky child handwriting, she wrote:
Mommy kept me safe.
Laura looked at that drawing for a long time.
Sometimes the most important moment in a story is not when someone hurts your child. It is the moment you stop calling it “family conflict,” stop minimizing, stop hoping people will become better on their own—and decide, without apology, that your child’s fear will not be buried under someone else’s comfort.
Part 4
Court made everything official in a way emotions never could.
The first hearing was short, procedural, almost clinical. Names were read. Charges outlined. Dates set. But to Laura, every word felt like a line being drawn—clear, permanent, undeniable.
Patricia sat on one side of the courtroom in a pressed blouse, her posture rigid, her expression carefully arranged into something that might pass for dignity. Vanessa sat beside her, arms crossed, jaw tight, radiating the same defiance she had shown from the beginning.
Neither of them looked at Mia.
That told Laura everything she needed to know.
When it was Laura’s turn to speak, she didn’t raise her voice. She didn’t cry. She simply described what had happened—step by step, detail by detail, just like she had told the detective.
The spilled juice.
The punishment.
The bench.
The push.
The fall.
The delay.
The lie.
Silence followed.
Not the kind filled with doubt.
The kind filled with recognition.
The judge granted an extended protective order immediately. No contact. No visits. No indirect communication. Violations would carry consequences neither Patricia nor Vanessa seemed prepared to face.
Vanessa’s attorney tried to argue it had been “a lapse in judgment.”
Laura responded before her own lawyer could stop her.
“A lapse in judgment is forgetting to lock a door,” she said evenly. “Not putting a child in danger and then telling her to lie about it.”
The judge didn’t reprimand her.
He nodded.
That mattered more.
Outside the courtroom, Patricia finally tried to speak.
“Laura, please—” she began, reaching out.
Laura stepped back.
For years, that gesture—her mother reaching, her voice softening just enough—would have worked. It would have pulled Laura into another cycle of excuses, minimization, reluctant forgiveness.
Not anymore.
“You don’t get access to her,” Laura said. “Not after this.”
Patricia’s face cracked, not with guilt, but with something closer to disbelief.
As if she still thought she had a right.
That illusion ended there.
Part 5
Healing didn’t look like closure.
It looked like small, stubborn routines.
Mornings where Mia hesitated before walking past the front door, as if expecting someone to be waiting on the other side. Evenings where she asked the same question again:
“They can’t come here, right?”
“No,” Laura would say. “They can’t.”
And slowly, that answer began to stick.
Therapy helped.
Not in dramatic breakthroughs, but in quiet shifts. Mia started using words instead of silence. She drew pictures of what scared her. She learned that accidents and harm were not the same thing—that what happened to her had a name, and it wasn’t her fault.
Laura sat in on some sessions, listening more than speaking.
One day, the therapist asked Mia, “What makes you feel safe?”
Mia thought for a moment, then said, “When Mommy believes me.”
Laura had to look away.
Because that was the part she would never forget—not the injury, not the courtroom, not the anger.
That sentence.
Back at home, life rebuilt itself piece by piece.
New emergency contacts.
New boundaries.
New habits.
Old numbers stayed blocked.
Old doors stayed closed.
When Patricia sent another letter—longer this time, filled with explanations, apologies twisted into justifications—Laura didn’t open it. She placed it directly into a drawer and left it there.
Some things didn’t need to be read to be understood.
Vanessa never apologized.
Instead, she sent one final message through a relative:
You’re tearing this family apart.
When Laura heard about it, she simply said, “No. I’m deciding what I allow near my child.”
And that was the difference.
Months later, on a quiet Sunday morning, Mia sat at the kitchen table coloring while sunlight spilled across the floor. The scar on her head had faded into something only visible if you knew where to look.
“Mom?” Mia said.
“Yes?”
“Can I have juice?”
Laura smiled faintly. “Of course.”
Mia poured it carefully. A few drops spilled onto the table.
She froze.
For a split second, fear flashed across her face.
Then she looked up at Laura.
Laura grabbed a napkin, wiped it gently, and said, “It’s okay. It’s just juice.”
Mia stared at her… then smiled.
And just like that, something invisible but heavy lifted out of the room.
Not all at once.
But enough.
Laura watched her daughter return to coloring, humming softly under her breath, and felt something settle deep in her chest.
Not relief.
Not victory.
Something steadier than both.
Certainty.
Because in the end, this wasn’t about revenge.
It wasn’t even about justice, not completely.
It was about one decision, made at the exact moment it mattered most:
To believe her child.
And once she did—
everything else followed.