Unbiased AI-powered news
Rep. Ilhan Omar declined to answer Fox News Digital questions about updated filings that lowered the reported value of assets she and her husband hold from as much as $30 million to a maximum of $125,000. The 2025 disclosures list her husband's equity in a winery and venture capital firm at zero.
Fox NewsRep. , declined to answer questions from Fox News Digital about revised financial disclosures that lowered the reported value of assets she and her husband hold. A 2024 financial disclosure estimated Omar and her husband possessed between $6 million and $30 million in assets.
The 2025 filing shows their shared assets valued at a maximum of $125,000 and a minimum of $20,000. Combined debt estimates range from $30,000 to $100,000, with Omar carrying separate student loan debt between $15,000 and $50,000 and her husband holding credit card debt in the same range. The largest change involves her husband Tim Mynett.
His share in a winery previously valued between $1 million and $5 million and his stake in a venture capital advisory firm previously valued between $5 million and $25 million are both listed at zero in the new filing. Omar's office stated that the 2024 filing reflected the businesses' total equity rather than Mynett's ownership interest and that the original filing listed assets without accounting for liabilities.
, has voiced interest in the Ethics Committee opening an investigation into Omar’s personal finances.
Vice President JD Vance previously said the U.S. Department of Justice will open a probe into Omar’s alleged fraud as part of an anti-fraud taskforce. No formal investigations into Omar have been shared with the public at this time.
Single source — no framing comparison available.
The president left Turkey aboard an older Air Force One before boarding a newly refitted Boeing 747 gifted by Qatar for the return flight to Washington. The change occurred as regional tensions rose and followed months of questions over the aircraft's cost and security.
pbs.orgPresident Trump announced he will delist Syria after a 45-day congressional review. The move follows sanctions relief and a meeting with Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa.
Tarja Jaakola and Carsten Breuer said traditional stockpiling of drones risks rapid obsolescence by 2029. They urged strategic partnerships with industry and faster feedback loops drawn from Ukraine's experience.