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‘Squad’ Member Omar Faces Ethics Complaint For Not Disclosing Husband’s Assets

WASHINGTON, DC - APRIL 9: Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) speaks during a press conference at Black Lives Matter Plaza calling for an end to U.S. support for a Saudi Arabia-led blockade of Yemen on April 9, 2021 in Washington, DC. 26 year-old Iman Saleh is on her 12th day of a hunger strike for Yemen in Washington, DC. Millions of Yemenis, including children, are on the edge of famine, which some attribute partially to the blockade that has choked the delivery of food and fuel into the country. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) violated House ethics rules in failing to disclose her husband’s assets and liabilities stemming from his marijuana and wine businesses, according to a conservative watchdog group.

Omar, a member of the progressive “Squad” in Congress, should be investigated by the Office of Congressional Ethics over the lack of disclosure, the National Legal and Policy Center argued in a complaint filed on Wednesday with the independent agency. The complaint cited a June story in the Minnesota Reformer on how Omar’s husband, Tim Mynett, and his business partner, Will Hailer, are being accused of fraud and breach of contract in connection to their marijuana and wine ventures, which collapsed.

Omar, over the last three years, has not disclosed to Congress the value of these troubled business ventures, NLPC said in the complaint, pointing to a reported $300,000 investment from a Washington, D.C., business owner, Naeem Mohd, in the wine business — eStCru.

“While Mynett and Hailer’s wine business seems to be a bust, they say they are now working to sell the intellectual property and trademarks associated with the brand,” NLPC’s counsel, Paul Kamenar, wrote in the complaint. “Indeed, Rep. Omar did not list any transactions by her spouse under Schedule B: Transactions for the last three years regarding any of his wine and cannabis businesses.”

Read the full story here.

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