One of original Minny fraud whistleblowers says Rep. Ilhan Omar needs to testify

A whistleblower, who claims her career was sidelined after she brought to light a $250 million COVID-19 fraud scheme in Minnesota, is urging that Rep. Ilhan Omar be compelled to testify. This comes as The Post released an audio clip of a fraud perpetrator attributing the surge in the feeding program’s popularity to Omar, which later turned out to be a fraudulent operation.

Faye Bernstein, an employee with the Minnesota Department of Health Services, was among the first to alert authorities about the extensive fraud, voicing her concerns to supervisors as early as 2019.

“It’s hard to imagine she was unaware, especially when she was making appearances at a restaurant we now know was a central hub for Feeding Our Future fraud—possibly the main one,” Bernstein shared with The Post. “Her past actions don’t paint a good picture.”

Bernstein referred to Omar’s widely criticized appearance on Somali TV Minnesota in 2020. During this appearance, Omar was seen serving meals at Minneapolis’ Safari restaurant, owned by Salim Said, who was later found guilty of defrauding the government out of $16 million, which was the largest amount in the Feeding Our Future scandal.

Bernstein’s remarks resonate with those of Aimee Bock, the founder of Feeding Our Future, who recently received a 40-year sentence. Bock told The Post in a recent feature that she found it difficult to believe Omar was unaware of the fraudulent activities. In response, Omar has dismissed these claims as “completely false.”

“If she truly had no idea, she needs to reconsider her staff’s competence, as someone failed to conduct a proper background check on that establishment,” Bernstein added.

She added: “I would love to see her come and testify. In the case of both Attorney General Ellison and her, their complete lack of contrition – their indignant attitude in dealing with these investigations has not served them well.”

“There is a level of respect that you need to pay, and you also sometimes need to admit you didn’t do a good job on something.”

Bernstein, a contract specialist lead, told Congress was demoted after reporting the fraud and called a racist by her superiors and colleagues who started a smear campaign against her. She testified before a Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship hearing on fraud this week.

“Now I redact documents. I have nine years of college, and I put black marks on documents,” she told the committee.

Bernstein said the Somali fraudsters seized on the famously nice culture of Minnesota — neighborhood warmth mixed with unending politeness — and “white guilt” in a state that is 81.5% white, according to the latest US Census data.

“It looks really disingenuous to me,” Bernstein said.

Meanwhile, an excerpt from an audio clip emerged of one of the convicted fraudsters attributing the growth of the since fraudulent meals program during the pandemic to “Squad” Rep. Omar.

The recording is from a meeting between Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison and a group that included Somali fraudsters, who complained state officials had cut funding to their fraudulent meal sites while pledging donations to his campaign.

“They have claimed the program grew too fast,” whined convicted fraudster Ikram Mohamed in the December 2021 clip, speaking about Minnesota’s Department of Education, which was responsible for administering the federal child nutrition program.

“So that is super unfortunate, but it might not be malicious,” replied Ellison.

“No, it becomes malicious,” insisted Mohamed, who also cried racism during the 54-minute meeting recorded by the fraudsters in secret.

“What happened is … the COVID hit …and a lot of the Somalis stepped up and said, ‘Wait a minute, I’m a restaurant. Safari stepped up, and Safari is all over it. Congresswoman Ilhan Omar is volunteering over there! I want to be like that,’” Mohamed continued in the recording.

Mohamed, who was a consultant for Feeding Our Future, pleaded guilty in March to opening fake meal sites using her brothers, sisters and husband’s names, to steal nearly $15 million. She’s awaiting a sentencing hearing.

It was Omar’s own MEALS Act that allowed Safari, a for-profit restaurant, to participate in the US Department of Agriculture meals program, normally meant for schools, for the first time.

Bernstein isn’t the only one demanding Omar explain her actions.

“She’s been able to get away with this for far too long,” House Majority Whip Rep Tom Emmer (R-MN) told The Post. “It was her people – the Somali fraudsters that she represents and works with that stole from the very fund that she created.”

“So this idea that there’s nothing to see here… she says ‘you’re just being racist, you’re just being an Islamophobe, you’re just picking on me because I come from Somalia – no.”

“And I hope one day she’s testifying in front of a criminal jury.”

Omar is not under investigation and has not been charged with any crime in connection with the COVID fraud scheme. On Tuesday, Vice President JD Vance said she was under investigation by the Department of Justice for immigration fraud stemming from allegations she married her brother to get him a green card, allegations she’s denied and called “sick.”

“The congresswoman posed for a photo op at the literal scene of the crime, Minnesota’s Safari Restaurant, which fraudulently claimed to have served millions of meals,” added Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa).

“She deserves an opportunity to clear her name by cooperating with investigators and providing information about these con artists she associated herself with, who took food from the mouths of hungry children.”

The Congresswoman has been under fire since her wealth skyrocketed up to $30 million in a year, according to her financial disclosure – which she amended after an ethics complaint was filed against her and chalked the whole thing up to an accounting error.

It comes as the feds this week laid the first charges in the daycare scheme, in addition to those against 15 individuals in the $90 million Medicare fraud, warning “this is just the beginning” against fraudsters who saw Minnesota as “their own personal piggy banks.”

Omar did not respond to The Post’s request for comment.

Ellison, who received $10,000 in campaign contributions days after the meeting, rejected claims he was bribed, saying he took the meeting in good faith to “stand up to injustice” and was unaware he was dealing with fraudsters at the time.

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