Unacceptable truth about Ilhan Omar's disappearing $30M fortune and 'accounting errors'... as her husband's mystery assets now come under microscope
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By TOM FITTON FOR THE DAILY MAIL Published: 22:58, 6 May 2026 | Updated: 22:58, 6 May 2026 Minnesota Congresswoman Ilhan Omar went from being one of the poorest members of Congress to potentially one of its richest within a single year. Now the 43-year-old, five-term representative claims she is back at the bottom of the financial barrel in Congress. The wild pecuniary swings of one of the House of Representatives' most outspoken Democratic socialist members - not to mention her ties to a Minnesota community under intense scrutiny for its involvement in an $18 billion Medicaid and COVID fraud scheme - is doubtlessly worthy of investigation. Indeed, the House Oversight Committee is probing the finances of Omar's husband, Tim Mynett, 44. And the Justice Department has been looking into her accounts since 2024. But it is the Congresswoman's most recent disclosures that have raised the most immediate questions. In 2024 financial documents, filed last year, Omar reported that her and her husband's assets ranged between $6 million and $30 million. Then an amended filing in April this year reportedly wiped those valuations away, cutting the couple's assets to between $18,004 and $95,000, and claiming most of their illusory millions in wealth effectively vanished when factoring in 'liabilities,' 'accounting errors' and her husband's income of zero. That explanation, however, is difficult to square with the public record, or the sheer scale of the swing, as detailed in Omar's own explanation. Omar's assets were allegedly held in two companies: a political consulting firm named Rose Lake Capital LLC, valued between $5 million and $25 million and a winery, eStCru LLC, valued at between $1 million and $5 million. Omar's husband was said to be a part owner of both. Though court records show eStCru held just $650 in the bank in February 2024, fifteen months later, it was reportedly worth millions. As of April 4 this year, the winery had ceased business operations. The House Oversight Committee is probing the finances of Omar's husband, Tim Mynett, 44 (Pictured: Rep Omar with husband, Tm Mynett) Minnesota Congresswoman Ilhan Omar went from being one of the poorest members of Congress to potentially one of its richest within a single year That kind of swing shouldn't happen in a system built on sworn, transparent disclosures, as outlined in Ethics Committee policy. It suggests one of two things: either the original filing was wildly wrong, or the later explanation is incomplete. Neither is acceptable. Then there's the problem of Omar's husband, Tim Mynett. Her office says he has zero income. If he made little or nothing, how did these 'businesses' ever justify multimillion valuations? He claims to be working full time at Rose Lake, not in some incidental or advisory role. Strikingly, just six months before Omar's filing, Rose Lake's own CEO, William Hailer, testified under oath that the firm had no assets under management, no investments with its own capital and equity positions worth under $1 million. 'De minimis,' he called them - essentially negligible. Additionally, in 2023, Omar reported $15,000 to $50,000 in income from Rose Lake, valued then at just $1 to $1,000. None of this adds up. And the public is also entitled to ask why the story seems to keep changing. Omar certified her 2024 disclosures as 'true, complete, and correct' under penalty of law, per House Ethics guidelines. False statements on financial disclosures can carry civil and criminal penalties, making accuracy more than a technical requirement. The couple's business picture was one thing in the original filing, another thing after the amendment, and still another thing when outside scrutiny intensified. There is also a larger institutional failure here. The Biden Justice Department opened an investigation into Omar's finances in 2024, but let it go inactive for lack of evidence. No charges. No visible follow-through. Court records show eStCru held just $650 in the bank in February 2024. Fifteen months later, it was reportedly worth millions? As of April 4, the winery had ceased business operations (Pictured: State filing for dissolution of eStCru winery) Her office says he has zero income. If he made little or nothing, how did these 'businesses' ever justify multimillion valuations? If the facts were never fully developed, the matter should not have been quietly dropped as if the public had no right to know more. House oversight should not make the same mistake. When disclosure forms swing from millions to almost nothing, when liabilities suddenly explain away a fortune, the response should be aggressive inquiry, not polite indifference. The question is whether Congress, ethics officials, and prosecutors are prepared to do their jobs and follow the facts where they lead — as Oversight Chairman James Comer has pressed. Washington elites act like the rules apply to everyone but them. If the original disclosure was wrong, say exactly how and why. If the amendment corrected a false filing, explain why the first filing was signed in the first place. If the public was misled, they now deserves the full story. This kind of confusion erodes public trust in government. Omar can't wave it away as an 'accounting problem.' Accounting problems don't produce these numbers. They point to either serious negligence — or something more troubling. And they still don't answer the central question: how did such a dramatic fortune appear — then disappear — on paper? Tom Fitton is president of Judicial Watch, a nonprofit watchdog that investigates claimed misconduct by government officials. No comments have so far been submitted. 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