Somali Illegal Migrant Fraudster Photographed With Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, Rep. Ilhan Omar
A Somali immigrant long accused of fraud — and photographed over the years alongside prominent Minnesota Democrats such as Gov. Tim Walz and Rep. Ilhan Omar — was arrested Friday as part of President Trump’s intensified immigration enforcement campaign.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents apprehended Abdul Dahir Ibrahim and transferred him to the McCook detention facility in Nebraska, a site the Department of Homeland Security informally refers to as the “Cornhusker Clink,” according to federal records.
Ibrahim has been the subject of removal orders since 2004 and carries a lengthy criminal record, Fox News reported. Before ever setting foot in the United States, he had already been convicted in Canada for asylum and welfare fraud, earning fines and a one-year probation sentence.
While living in the U.S., Ibrahim amassed a dozen traffic and parking violations and frequently appeared in photographs with influential figures in Minnesota political circles. DHS publicly posted images of Ibrahim standing with Walz, Omar, and former Minneapolis mayoral candidate Omar Fateh, noting the connections in a blunt statement: “Criminal illegal alien, Abdul Dahir Ibrahim has been linked to Minnesota’s top sanctuary politicians.”
The agency’s message continued, “Ibrahim was convicted in Canada for Asylum and Welfare Fraud prior to his entry into the United States. On April 3, 2004, an immigration judge ordered Ibrahim removed, citing the significant amount of fraud associated with him. ‘Bye-bye, Abdul.’”
Among the photos DHS released was one showing Ibrahim handcuffed and being escorted by federal officers into an unmarked vehicle.
Fox News also disclosed that Fateh, a Somali-American socialist, submitted a letter of recommendation on Ibrahim’s behalf during immigration proceedings. Ibrahim had entered the United States through New York in 1995 after Canada deported him, but his subsequent asylum claims collapsed under scrutiny. In one rejected filing, he attempted to present his sister and her five children as his own wife and kids — a fabrication that prompted the immigration judge to note Ibrahim’s “complete lack of credibility.”
Despite the earlier removal order, Ibrahim later obtained temporary protected status, shielding him from deportation for a decade. His application for an extension remains pending. Last month, however, Trump announced an end to TPS protections for Somali nationals altogether.
ICE has since launched a sweeping enforcement push in Minnesota, fueled by mounting alarm over widespread fraud involving Somali nationals in the state, a crackdown under which Ibrahim’s arrest became one of the first publicly revealed cases.
{Matzav.com}