Minnesota
Inside America’s Somali Crisis — Fear, Fraud, and Politics Collide
Inside “Little Mogadishu”: Minnesota’s Somali Community Under Pressure From Fraud Scandals and Trump’s Attacks.
MINNEAPOLIS — The nation’s largest Somali community is once again at the center of a fierce political storm. In Cedar–Riverside, the Minneapolis neighborhood long known as “Little Mogadishu,” residents find themselves navigating a double assault: a sweeping federal fraud scandal that has damaged public trust, and an escalating barrage of inflammatory rhetoric from President Donald Trump and his allies.
Trump’s latest comments — accusing Somalis of “ripping off the state for billions” and declaring “we don’t want them in our country” — were the bluntest yet.
They landed hard in a community already reeling from the fallout of the Feeding Our Future scandal, the largest pandemic-era fraud case in U.S. history, in which a number of Somali Minnesotans were charged or convicted.
Trump and members of his administration have also revived unproven allegations of widespread immigration fraud, including long-discredited claims about Rep. Ilhan Omar.
For many Somali Minnesotans, the political climate now feels like a return to the darkest years after 9/11, when suspicion overshadowed daily life.
A Community on the Defensive
Residents interviewed by Fox News Digital expressed frustration that the actions of a small group have branded an entire community as criminal.
They argue the portrayal erases the lived reality of tens of thousands of Somali Minnesotans who work in factories, trucking, nursing, tech, and small business — and who have spent decades building a stable community in the upper Midwest.
But the scrutiny is unavoidable. The fraud cases, combined with longstanding concerns over gang activity and the small number of Minnesotan youth who once joined al-Shabaab, have created a narrative that is difficult to escape.
A Neighborhood Transformed
In Cedar–Riverside, the demographic shift is unmistakable. Once a bohemian student-and-nightlife corridor, it now carries the visual and cultural imprint of a Somali-majority district: mosques replacing bars, Arabic and Somali signage replacing English storefronts, and the fading modernist towers of Riverside Plaza looming over a neighborhood struggling under poverty rates triple the state average.
During Fox News Digital’s visit, streets were quiet and storefronts shuttered. Men gathered outside mosques for prayer; volunteers in reflective vests assisted people suffering from addiction-related medical crises. Political posters for Somali-American candidates blanketed corners.
The cultural vibrancy remained, but the economic struggle was visible.
Between Aspiration and Hardship
Despite the negative headlines, the community is not monolithic. Younger Somalis spoke openly about wanting to blend into American culture, code-switch between identities, or enter creative fields. Others highlighted the intense pressures of being part of multiple minority categories at once — Black, Muslim, immigrant, refugee — in a society where each marker carries its own challenges.
At Karmel Mall, the bustling heart of the Somali diaspora, barbers, hair stylists, shop owners, and tech workers described a different narrative: resilience, ambition, and a community determined to prove its place in America.
Many emphasized that their stories — educational success, entrepreneurship, civic engagement — rarely make national news.
Yet poverty remains entrenched. Median household incomes hover around $43,600, and more than a third of Somali Minnesotans live below the poverty line. Leaders like CAIR–Minnesota’s Jaylani Hussein argue that these struggles are symptoms of a young, still-developing immigrant community — not evidence of cultural failure.
The Shadow of Politics
What troubles Somali leaders most is not the fraud scandal itself but the political reaction to it. Trump’s remarks have revived fears of mass suspicion, surveillance, and scapegoating.
Community elders worry that decades of effort to integrate into Minnesota’s social fabric could be undone overnight by rhetoric that conflates individuals’ crimes with collective identity.
Somali residents say they cannot escape the reality that the community is now part of America’s political battleground — a symbol used by both parties, though often without nuance.
“Minnesota has had thirty years with the Somali community,” Hussein said. “Ninety-five percent of it has been positive. Our children were born here — they are Minnesotans now.”
But the fight over “Little Mogadishu’s” place in Minnesota — and in American identity — is far from over.
Minnesota
Minnesota Killings Put Trump Immigration Crackdown Under Congressional Fire
Top U.S. immigration officials are set to testify before lawmakers on Tuesday in the first congressional hearing since two U.S. citizens were killed during federal immigration operations in Minnesota, intensifying scrutiny of President Donald Trump’s hardline enforcement push.
The hearing follows the deaths of Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, incidents that have fueled public anger and political backlash. Trump administration officials initially described both victims as “domestic terrorists,” but video evidence later contradicted those claims, prompting renewed calls for accountability.
Appearing before the Republican-controlled House Homeland Security Committee are Todd Lyons, acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement; Rodney Scott, commissioner of Customs and Border Protection; and Joe Edlow, director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.
Democratic lawmakers are expected to press the officials on enforcement tactics, including the use of masks, lack of body cameras, and raids that have swept up non-criminal migrants, families and children. They are also demanding reforms that would refocus immigration enforcement on serious criminal offenders.
The controversy stems from Trump’s intensified enforcement campaign in Minneapolis launched in January, which triggered clashes between masked federal officers and local residents. As criticism mounted, Trump’s border czar Tom Homan took direct control of Minnesota operations, sidelining Border Patrol commander Gregory Bovino and pledging a more targeted approach.
Despite internal guidance urging agents to avoid confrontations with protesters, incidents have continued, including arrests of U.S. citizens accused of following immigration officers.
Tuesday’s testimony is expected to be a flashpoint in the broader debate over immigration enforcement, civil liberties and the political fallout from the Minnesota killings.
Minnesota
Reports of ICE Ruses Deepen Fear Across Minnesota
Reports of federal immigration agents using deceptive tactics have heightened fear and confusion across Minnesota, as the state continues to see an intensified immigration crackdown.
In suburban Minneapolis, restaurant worker Luis Ramirez said he confronted two men dressed as utility workers who had been lingering outside his family’s business for days. The men wore high-visibility vests and hard hats, but Ramirez said their behavior and vehicle raised suspicions. He filmed the encounter, accusing them of surveilling his restaurant under false pretenses. Federal authorities declined to confirm whether the men were immigration officers.
Legal advocates and immigrant rights groups say similar reports are increasing, with alleged federal agents posing as construction workers, delivery drivers, or even anti-ICE activists. While not all incidents have been verified, they have amplified anxiety in immigrant communities and drawn criticism from civil liberties groups.
Naureen Shah of the American Civil Liberties Union warned that such tactics undermine public trust. “When people fear that a utility worker or delivery driver could be an immigration agent, it creates dangerous confusion and erodes confidence in basic institutions,” she said.
Activists in Minneapolis claim they have observed agents leaving federal buildings in unmarked vehicles, sometimes displaying symbols meant to blend into immigrant communities. Organizers also report agents appearing at construction sites in worker attire, though many of these encounters have not resulted in arrests.
State officials, including Governor Tim Walz, have raised concerns about agents allegedly swapping or using improper license plates, a potential violation of state law. In one case, a Minneapolis antiques dealer said two men attempted to buy recent license plates from her shop, prompting her to alert authorities.
Supporters of the crackdown argue that increased scrutiny from activists has forced federal agents to adapt their tactics. Former ICE official Scott Mechkowski said agents are responding to what he described as unprecedented levels of public interference.
For residents like Ramirez, the effect has been constant unease. “Everyone is on edge,” he said. “It feels like they’re everywhere.”
Minnesota
Measles Outbreak in Minnesota Exposes Vaccine Fears in Somali Community
Health officials in Minnesota are struggling to contain a measles outbreak that has disproportionately affected the state’s large Somali community, amid persistent fears linking childhood vaccines to autism.
Since February, 14 confirmed measles cases have been reported statewide. Seven of those cases involved Somali children, most of whom were unvaccinated. State health authorities say all but one case can be traced to an unvaccinated Somali infant who returned from Kenya earlier this year. Minnesota typically records zero or one measles case annually.
Eight patients required hospitalization, though no deaths have been reported.
Public health efforts have been complicated by lingering distrust of the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine within parts of the Somali community, driven by concerns that vaccination could cause autism. Those fears resurfaced after visits by Andrew Wakefield, the former British doctor whose claims linking vaccines to autism were discredited and retracted by medical authorities.
Local health leaders warn that Wakefield’s presence has deepened confusion, even as his supporters insist he encourages informed decision-making rather than outright vaccine refusal.
Medical experts stress that extensive global research has found no scientific link between vaccines and autism. Nevertheless, autism diagnoses among Somali children in Minneapolis schools have fueled anxiety for years, though officials say higher enrollment in autism programs does not by itself prove higher prevalence.
Minnesota health officials, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the National Institutes of Health are now involved in broader research efforts alongside advocacy groups to better understand autism trends.
Vaccination clinics, however, have seen limited turnout. A recent clinic in Minneapolis prepared 600 doses but vaccinated only 24 people.
Community leaders and Somali physicians are urging parents to vaccinate, warning that measles—once nearly eradicated in the U.S.—can be deadly and highly contagious.
“Parents are searching for answers, but misinformation is putting children at risk,” said one Minneapolis-based Somali doctor.
Health officials say rebuilding trust will be critical to preventing further spread as outreach efforts continue.
Health officials in Minnesota are struggling to contain a measles outbreak that has disproportionately affected the state’s large Somali community, amid persistent fears linking childhood vaccines to autism.
Since February, 14 confirmed measles cases have been reported statewide. Seven of those cases involved Somali children, most of whom were unvaccinated. State health authorities say all but one case can be traced to an unvaccinated Somali infant who returned from Kenya earlier this year. Minnesota typically records zero or one measles case annually.
Eight patients required hospitalization, though no deaths have been reported.
Public health efforts have been complicated by lingering distrust of the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine within parts of the Somali community, driven by concerns that vaccination could cause autism. Those fears resurfaced after visits by Andrew Wakefield, the former British doctor whose claims linking vaccines to autism were discredited and retracted by medical authorities.
Local health leaders warn that Wakefield’s presence has deepened confusion, even as his supporters insist he encourages informed decision-making rather than outright vaccine refusal.
Medical experts stress that extensive global research has found no scientific link between vaccines and autism. Nevertheless, autism diagnoses among Somali children in Minneapolis schools have fueled anxiety for years, though officials say higher enrollment in autism programs does not by itself prove higher prevalence.
Minnesota health officials, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the National Institutes of Health are now involved in broader research efforts alongside advocacy groups to better understand autism trends.
Vaccination clinics, however, have seen limited turnout. A recent clinic in Minneapolis prepared 600 doses but vaccinated only 24 people.
Community leaders and Somali physicians are urging parents to vaccinate, warning that measles—once nearly eradicated in the U.S.—can be deadly and highly contagious.
“Parents are searching for answers, but misinformation is putting children at risk,” said one Minneapolis-based Somali doctor.
Health officials say rebuilding trust will be critical to preventing further spread as outreach efforts continue.
Minnesota
Trump Orders Pullback of 700 Immigration Agents From Minnesota
After weeks of protests and national backlash, the White House signals a tactical retreat in Minnesota.
MINNEAPOLIS — The Trump administration will reduce the number of federal immigration agents operating in Minnesota by 700, marking a significant shift after months of heavy enforcement deployments that sparked protests across the state.
The announcement was made Wednesday by White House border czar Tom Homan, who said the drawdown would affect federal immigration personnel deployed in and around the Minneapolis–Saint Paul area.
President Donald Trump has sent thousands of armed immigration agents to Minnesota since the start of the year as part of an aggressive enforcement campaign, a move that drew widespread criticism from local officials, civil rights groups, and residents. The operations triggered repeated demonstrations, particularly after several controversial encounters between federal agents and civilians.
Homan did not provide a detailed timeline for the reduction but said the administration was adjusting its operational posture while maintaining its broader immigration enforcement objectives. He stressed that the drawdown does not signal an end to federal operations in the state, but rather a recalibration of resources.
The federal surge had placed Minnesota at the center of a national debate over immigration enforcement tactics, accountability, and the role of federal agents operating without close coordination with local authorities. Community leaders have accused federal agencies of escalating tensions through highly visible, militarized operations.
While the White House has framed the reduction as a tactical decision, critics view it as a response to mounting political pressure and public backlash. Minnesota lawmakers from both parties have called for clearer oversight, transparency, and limits on the conduct of federal immigration officers.
No immediate response was issued by the Department of Homeland Security regarding whether additional policy changes — such as new rules on identification, use of force, or coordination with local police — would accompany the reduction in personnel.
The drawdown comes as Congress continues to debate funding and oversight of federal immigration agencies, with Minnesota frequently cited as a flashpoint in the broader national struggle over enforcement, civil liberties, and public trust.
Minnesota
Somali Businesses in Minneapolis Collapse as ICE Raids Trigger Economic Shutdown
Fear Empties the Mall: How Trump’s ICE Crackdown Is Strangling Somali America.
At Karmel Mall in south Minneapolis, the heart of Somali-American commerce, silence has replaced the usual rhythm of trade.
Once crowded corridors now echo with Quran recitation and the hum of heaters, not customers. Clothing shops sit open but empty. Food stalls prepare meals no one comes to buy. Travel agencies cancel bookings that once sustained families. For three weeks, fear — not winter — has become the dominant economic force.
This is not an abstract immigration debate. It is a localized economic shock.
“Early afternoons used to bring 15 to 20 customers,” said Abdi Wahid. Now, he waits hours for one. Across the complex, dozens of businesses have stopped opening altogether. Workers stay home. Customers stay away. Even U.S. citizens avoid public spaces, carrying passports in their pockets as if they were foreign visitors in their own city.
The trigger is not crime. It is perception.
Trump’s “Operation Metro Surge” has turned visibility itself into a risk. The Somali community, already under political scrutiny after a fraud case, has become a rhetorical target. When a president describes a community as “garbage” and claims it “contributes nothing,” enforcement quickly becomes collective punishment in practice, even if not in law.
The fear now cuts across legal status. Citizens cancel travel. Families avoid mosques. Employees refuse to come to work. Bashir Garad, who runs a travel and accounting firm, has lost nearly all clients — not because they are undocumented, but because they no longer trust the system to protect them.
“They are citizens,” he said. “But they are afraid they won’t be allowed back.”
That is the deeper damage: the collapse of confidence.
ICE insists enforcement is based on “reasonable suspicion,” not race. But on the ground, suspicion has become visual. Wahid says the killing of Renee Good and the raid at Roosevelt High School convinced many that race itself is now enough.
The economic cost is immediate and measurable. Ibrahim Dahiye says his electronics business is down $20,000 a month. Employees stay home. Rent becomes a shared burden. Survival becomes a prayer.
This is not simply immigration enforcement. It is market disruption.
Karmel Mall is not only a shopping center. It is a financial engine, a religious center, a housing complex, and a social institution for the largest Somali community in the United States. When it slows, an entire ecosystem weakens.
There is a larger lesson here.
Targeted rhetoric reshapes behavior faster than any law. Even when enforcement claims neutrality, public signals determine economic outcomes. Once fear enters the market, legality becomes irrelevant.
What is unfolding in Minneapolis is not deportation policy. It is economic deterrence by atmosphere.
And the price is being paid not by criminals — but by shopkeepers, accountants, and citizens who now treat their own neighborhood as hostile territory.
Minnesota
Minneapolis Closes Schools After ICE Clash at High School Following
Minneapolis officials moved swiftly Thursday to close all public schools after a confrontation between federal immigration agents, teachers and community members erupted at a city high school — just hours after an ICE officer fatally shot Renee Nicole Good, a 37-year-old mother, during an immigration enforcement operation elsewhere in the city.
The clash unfolded Wednesday afternoon at Roosevelt High School, less than three miles from where Good was killed on a snow-covered street. According to the Department of Homeland Security, Border Patrol agents arrived at the school after a five-mile vehicle chase involving a suspect who allegedly rammed a government vehicle during an enforcement action. The pursuit ended as students were being dismissed, drawing agents onto school grounds at a moment of heightened tension across the city.
Witnesses described a chaotic scene. Armed federal agents poured out of unmarked SUVs near the school entrance as hundreds of students exited the building. Teachers and school staff attempted to block the agents from entering school property, urging them to stay away from students, according to multiple accounts. At least one educator was tackled and briefly detained, witnesses said.
“They came in like this was a military operation,” said Carol, a neighborhood resident who asked that her last name be withheld out of fear of retaliation. She said residents rushed outside blowing whistles and shouting at agents to leave the school. Video she recorded shows demonstrators chanting “Shame!” as officers pushed back the crowd.
The incident drew the attention of Gregory Bovino, a senior Border Patrol commander who has overseen enforcement operations in several major U.S. cities. Witnesses said Bovino stood at a school entrance as an agent appeared to film him, a moment that many residents said deepened their sense that the operation was meant to project force rather than restore order.
DHS, in a statement, said agents were assaulted by an individual who identified himself as a teacher and that members of the crowd threw objects and paint at officers. The agency said agents used “targeted crowd control” but denied deploying tear gas — a claim disputed by the Minneapolis Federation of Teachers, which said chemical agents were used. The union confirmed that an educator was arrested and later released.
Parents and local officials expressed alarm that federal agents entered a school environment during dismissal. “School property should be off-limits,” said Kate Winkel, a nearby resident who witnessed the confrontation. “Kids need to feel safe at school.”
The episode unfolded against the backdrop of mounting anger over Good’s killing earlier the same day. Her death, captured on video later analyzed by national media, has sparked protests and renewed scrutiny of the Trump administration’s aggressive immigration crackdown in Minnesota, particularly in neighborhoods with large immigrant and Somali-American populations.
By Thursday evening, Minneapolis Public Schools announced that all classes would be canceled through Friday, citing safety concerns and the need to assess the situation. “This incident involved federal law enforcement agents and is currently under investigation,” the district said, adding that schools would reopen Monday.
For many in Minneapolis, the back-to-back events — a fatal shooting followed by federal agents clashing with teachers at a public high school — have crystallized fears that immigration enforcement has crossed a line, turning neighborhoods and now schools into flashpoints in a rapidly escalating national confrontation.
Minnesota
MINNESOTA: 2,000 Federal Agents Deployed as Somali Brace for Federal Surge
FRAUD, FEAR, AND FORCE: Trump Administration Plans Major Immigration Enforcement Surge in Minnesota Amid Fraud Scrutiny.
MINNEAPOLIS — The Trump administration is preparing a sweeping escalation of immigration enforcement in Minnesota, with plans to deploy roughly 2,000 federal agents to the state in what officials describe as an expansion of ongoing operations tied to fraud investigations and broader immigration priorities.
According to two law enforcement officials familiar with the plans, the deployment will focus heavily on the Twin Cities metropolitan area and include personnel from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the U.S. Border Patrol. Gregory Bovino, a senior Customs and Border Protection commander known for overseeing high-profile enforcement actions in other major U.S. cities, is expected to be involved.
The move represents a sharp intensification of federal activity already underway in Minnesota, following weeks of increasingly pointed rhetoric from President Donald Trump and senior administration officials linking alleged welfare and child care fraud to organizations associated with members of the state’s Somali community.
Asked to confirm the deployment, Tricia McLaughlin, an assistant secretary at the Department of Homeland Security, acknowledged a heightened federal presence but declined to offer specifics. “For the safety of our officers, we do not discuss law enforcement footprint,” she said, adding that DHS has surged enforcement nationwide and has made more than 1,000 arrests of individuals accused of serious crimes, including homicide, sexual offenses and gang activity.
The enforcement push comes amid renewed political focus on long-running fraud cases in Minnesota. In 2022, federal prosecutors charged dozens of people in the Feeding Our Future case, alleging a nonprofit falsely claimed to provide meals to children during the pandemic while diverting tens of millions of dollars. At least 37 defendants have pleaded guilty. Court records do not clearly indicate how many of those charged are Somali.
Still, the case has been repeatedly cited by Trump, who has used sweeping language to characterize Minnesota’s Somali population, without providing evidence to support broader claims of community-wide misconduct.
Tensions intensified again late last year after a video by conservative YouTuber Nick Shirley alleged widespread fraud at Somali-run child care centers in Minneapolis. The video went viral after being shared by prominent political figures, despite state officials later saying inspections found the facilities operating within regulations. Several providers rejected the allegations outright.
Even so, federal authorities have frozen portions of child care funding to Minnesota, and state officials face mounting pressure as they work to meet federal documentation deadlines.
The impact on the ground has been immediate. Somali-Americans — most of whom are U.S. citizens — say the expanding enforcement has created fear and uncertainty. Some report carrying passports or citizenship documents out of concern they could be stopped or questioned. In one incident last month, a masked federal agent briefly detained a 20-year-old U.S. citizen of Somali descent before releasing him, prompting public outcry.
Local officials have also raised alarms. Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara criticized federal agents after video surfaced showing an officer kneeling on a woman during an enforcement operation — an image that resonated deeply in a city still marked by the killing of George Floyd.
Minnesota’s Somali community, the largest in the country, is deeply rooted in the state. Census data show that nearly 58% of Somalis in Minnesota were born in the United States, and the vast majority of foreign-born Somalis are naturalized citizens.
Community leaders warn that isolated cases of wrongdoing are being used to cast suspicion on an entire population. “A single case is generalized, and fear follows,” said Jaylani Hussein of the Minnesota chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations. “Families feel it immediately. Trust erodes. And communities that contribute every day to this state are left under a cloud.”
As federal agents prepare to expand their footprint, Minnesota has become a test case — not just for immigration enforcement, but for how far political narratives can reshape the lives of communities caught in their path.
Minnesota
FBI BOMBSHELL: MINNESOTA FRAUD BURIED TO PROTECT BIDEN ALLIES
A political firestorm is building in Washington after FBI Director Kash Patel revealed that major Minnesota fraud investigations were deliberately buried under the Biden administration.
According to investigative journalist Catherine Herridge, Patel has been tracking the sprawling Minnesota fraud scandal for months and believes the original probes were quietly sidelined because they risked implicating individuals politically aligned with former President Joe Biden.
The scope of the investigation is staggering.
Between May and December 2025 alone, the FBI opened 16 active investigations into 32 healthcare and in-home care providers, examining allegations that range from healthcare fraud and money laundering to cybercrime, public corruption — and even possible terrorist financing.
So far, 78 individuals have been indicted and 57 convicted, with investigators now expanding the probe nationwide to determine whether the same fraud networks operated beyond Minnesota and whether elected officials were involved.
At the center of the scandal is the infamous “Feeding Our Future” case, which exposed an alleged $250 million fraud scheme tied to federal COVID-era nutrition programs. Prosecutors say enormous sums were claimed for meals that were never served, with money allegedly laundered through shell entities to enrich participants.
The revelations have ignited bipartisan outrage — but especially fury among conservative lawmakers and media figures.
On Newsmax, host Rob Finnerty accused Democrats of orchestrating a cover-up and demanded congressional testimony from Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison.
“After watching conservatives prosecuted endlessly, the time has come for accountability on the left,” Finnerty said, calling for investigations to go “all the way to the top.”
With congressional hearings looming and federal agencies intensifying enforcement, the Minnesota fraud scandal is no longer a local issue — it is rapidly becoming a national reckoning over corruption, political protection, and the misuse of taxpayer money.
-
Interagency Assessment2 months agoTOP SECRET SHIFT: U.S. MILITARY ORDERED INTO SOMALILAND BY LAW
-
Somaliland4 months agoSomaliland Recognition: US, UK, Israel, and Gulf Bloc Poised for Historic Shift
-
Minnesota1 month agoFraud Allegations Close In on Somalia’s Top Diplomats
-
Middle East2 months agoSaudi Arabia vs. UAE: How The Gulf Rivalry is Heating Up
-
American Somali3 months agoWhy Frey Won a Significant Share of the Somali Vote Against a Somali Opponent
-
Middle East2 months agoTurkey’s Syria Radar Plan Triggers Israeli Red Lines
-
Editor's Pick1 month agoWhy India Is Poised to Become the Next Major Power to Recognize Somaliland
-
The Million-Follower Exile2 months agoWhy America Deported Its Most Famous Somali TikTok Star And Who Paid The Price
