Ilhan Omar’s Alleged Marriage to Brother Occurred At Time of Massive Immigration Fraud
This
week,
PJ Media editor and investigative journalist David Steinberg published
another in his series of bombshell reports on the twists and turns in the
family life of Ilhan Omar, a candidate for the open Fifth Congressional
District seat in Minnesota.
The seat has been occupied since 2007 by Rep. Keith Ellison
(D-MN-05), now a candidate for Minnesota attorney general. The district
includes all of Minneapolis, the city with the largest population of Somali
immigrants in North America.
Believed to be a shoe-in, Omar, once a Somali refugee herself,
has never fully explained the circumstances surrounding allegations that she
was married to her brother.
According to Steinberg:
Immediately after being elected
to her current seat in 2016, Omar faced allegations — soon backed by a remarkable
amount of evidence — that she had married her
own brother in 2009, and was still legally his
wife. They officially divorced in December 2017.
The motivation for the marriage
remains unclear. However, the totality of the evidence points to possible
immigration fraud and student loan fraud.
Rep. Omar has stated that she did
marry “British citizen” Ahmed Nur Said Elmi in 2009, though the allegation that
he is her brother is “absurd and offensive.”
…exclusive new evidence — from
official archived high school records and corroborating sources — strongly
supports the claim that Ahmed Nur Said Elmi is indeed her brother.
Reporters and commentators have speculated that the marriage
involved immigration fraud and have urged the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ)
to investigate the matter.
The timing of Omar’s 2009 marriage to Elmi nearly coincides with
the 2007-2008 scandal surrounding the Somalian community in which the FBI revealed that
many young Somali men were leaving the U.S. to fight for the terrorist
organization al-Shabaab.
While this was happening, an additional scandal rocked the
Somalian community in Minnesota in 2008 when the U.S. Department of State
(DOS) discovered widespread fraud in one of its largest programs for
admissions to America, the so-called P-3 family reunification program.
First revealed by Miriam Jordan
writing at The Wall Street Journal, the DOS
learned that as many as 30,000 Somalis had entered America under the false
pretense of “family members,” but were later determined through random DNA
testing to have used the program fraudulently.
Large numbers of Somali refugee family members were found to not be
biologically related at all. Under the scandal, Somali “relatives”
were continuously being “found” and joining their “family” in the U.S. As Frontline
reported
in 2015, they were making up “ghost children.”
The degree of the fraud shocked the outgoing Bush Administration
and as President Barack Obama took charge of the DOS, it had no choice but to
suspend the program indefinitely. From 2008-2012, family reunification from
Somalia, and other east African countries, was closed.
However, no effort was made by the Obama administration’s
immigration officials to discover and remove those found to have committed
immigration fraud. There is no evidence to date that Omar’s family participated
in the widespread practice.
Indeed, when allegations surfaced in 2016 about Omar’s
questionable marriage, then Minnesota U.S. Attorney Andrew Lugar, an Obama
appointee, refused to investigate, and corrected
local affiliate KMSP Fox 9 for reporting that he
did.
“U.S. Attorney Andy Luger says he did not ask U.S. Immigration
& Customs (ICE) to investigate the immigration status of legislative
candidate Ilhan Omar,” Fox 9 reported.
But now, under a new Republican administration, the DOJ and
Attorney General Jeff Sessions have reopened investigations into fraudulent
immigration, which, if the allegations against her are true, Omar could be tied
up in.
In Nov. 2017, for instance, the DOJ revoked the citizenship of
four Somalians living in Minnesota who had lied on their visa applications.
“The current immigration system is easily abused by fraudsters
and nefarious actors, and that’s certainly true of the Diversity Immigrant Visa
Program,” Sessions said
at the time. “If the fraud is not detected and swift enforcement actions are
not taken, chain migration only multiplies the consequences of this abuse.”
Omar Silent on New Claims That She Has a Different Real Name and Entered Country Fraudulently
A
bombshell report released Thursday claims that Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN-05)
entered the country fraudulently in 1995 as a member of the “Omar” family,
which allegedly isn’t her real family.
The article was published Thursday at Powerline by David Steinberg, formerly an editor of PJ Media who has written extensively on Omar
over the past three years.
In his article, Steinberg claims:
“In 1995, Ilhan entered the
United States as a fraudulent member of the ‘Omar’ family. That is not her
family. The Omar family is a second, unrelated family which was being granted
asylum by the United States. The Omars allowed Ilhan, her genetic sister Sahra,
and her genetic father Nur Said to use false names to apply for asylum as
members of the Omar family.”
He goes on to claim that Omar’s real name, before applying for
asylum, was Ilhan Nur Said Elmi. The family split up in 1995 when three of her
siblings were granted asylum by the United Kingdom, including Ahmed Nur Said
Elmi, whom Omar allegedly married in 2009 and divorced in 2017. As The Minnesota Sun has previously reported, this alleged marriage
to her brother occurred at a time of massive immigration fraud.
Steinberg cites as his sources multiple members of the
“Minneapolis Somali community,” who claim that Omar was born as Ilhan Nur Said
Elmi, as well as marriage records, address records, court documents, and online
communications that he provides pictures of in his article.
He concludes the article by declaring that law enforcement has
enough information to “open an investigation.”
“I believe Scott Johnson, Preya Samsundar, and me, with our
three years of articles, columns, and posts, have provided more than enough
evidence to give law enforcement authorities probable cause to open an
investigation,” he writes.
The
Minnesota Sun reached out to Omar’s office for comment on the allegations, but
didn’t receive a response.
“We do not share the personal information of refugees, due to
privacy considerations,” a State Department spokesperson told The
Minnesota Sun in response to a
request for confirmation of the information in the article.
Steinberg’s full article can be read here.
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