Fox News97%
'DEVIL'S LIE': Ilhan Omar, husband dissolve wine company amid probe 93%
4/26/2026, 12:15:07 AM
BS Summary: This video contains 31 faulty reasoning types, including Negativity Bias, Ad Hominem, and Confirmation Bias, with Biased Writer Voice as the most egregious example at 50.6% saturation with 434 hits. Analysis detected 1,860 faulty-reasoning hits from 858 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 88.5% and a BS Rank of 93% (1,283 of 16,813 videos). This video is worse (more manipulative) than 92.40% of the video peer group.
Breaking news. Ilhan Omar's husband's wine company has been legally dissolved.
You are looking at the state of California certificate of cancellation for EST crew.
That is the wine company owned in part by Tim Wet, the Minnesota congresswoman's spouse.
Now, why would we and his business partner dissolve their wine business?
Especially in light of this fact.
The Wall Street Journal writing, quote, "A 2025 email between Omar's husband and his accountant states that the venture capital management firm is valued at 7.9 million and the winery at 1.5 million.
He owns roughly a third of both businesses, according to tax documents included with the lawyer's letter."
But why was the winery valued so high in the first place?
According to the New York Post, EST crew had all kinds of problems.
By 2023, wine makers said they were not being paid and investors sued and EST crew had only $650 by 2024.
Now, overall, the post says EST Crew only sold a handful of wines between 2020 and 2023.
Now, look at this.
Among the wines sold by Omar's husband was this beautifully labeled Malbeck.
You see a devious looking woman.
There's a red devil over her right shoulder.
Interestingly, the Malbeck is called, quote, "The devil's lie."
What a name.
Escrew also sold a Cabernet Savinan called Blockchain, a red blend called Overt, described in reviews as flimsy and tart.
But Omar's husband's wine venture appears to have come to an end.
In a supposed end to quote, "The devil's lie, Malbeck," comes just days after we learned that Ilhan Omar accidentally thought she was a multi-millionaire.
Funny how that happens.
Remember this from last week?
Omar amended her financial disclosure form which once showed her husband's businesses valued between $6 million and $30 million, blaming an accounting error.
And Omar now values his businesses between $18,000 and 95,000.
A change that came after her finances came under investigation.
But Tom Hman says stay tuned.
>> The whole file is being reviewed. Uh, a lot of smart people are on it. Stay tuned.
>> Joining me now is Nick Sorder, who has been on the Hill.
Nick, have you caught up with Ilhan Omar?
>> Oh, she's doing a great job hiding, Kaylee.
Uh, I I mean, I have a lot of questions for her, especially uh I is this husband her her brother husband or is this a different husband that owned the quote unquote winery?
Haven't figured that one out quite yet.
But, you know, there are people that have tried to go out to where this winery was located, and nothing was there.
The people at the address didn't even know what we were talking about when we went out there.
Uh, it was because it never existed in that location.
And it it's uh awfully coincidental that only days after her uh accounting error of millions and millions of dollars uh that this entity, this wine company, ends up being dissolved.
And and so there's a lot more questions than answers here.
And it's uh it's almost like where did that that millions and millions of dollars, where did that go?
Did it get loaded into suitcases and head off to Somalia?
I guess we got to find out.
>> Yeah. Or an accounting error.
She said she wasn't familiar with her husband's business.
Who knows? I do know this.
You're on the ground.
You go to different states.
You talk to voters a lot.
And this feeding our future scandal in Minnesota.
The Minnesota legislature has given Ilhan Omar until May 5th to turn over documents because she put in place legislation that paved the way for some of this.
I get the sense that voters really really care about fraud, which is why we cover it so much on this show.
Your thoughts having been on the ground?
>> Yeah, I mean just keep in mind Kaylee that the Feeding Our Future fraud was the largest COVID fraud scheme throughout the entire country.
$250 million was stolen by uh mostly Somali there in her district, right?
That money was supposed to go to hungry children.
She was having campaign events at the place where it was headquartered, where the fraud was headquartered.
And now she's trying not to answer any questions on it.
You would think that if you didn't have anything to do with it, you would give as much information as you possibly could as the representative from that district.
And you can see when people try to talk to her on the hill now, she's getting increasingly aggressive with them, throwing personal insults.
Uh she's scared.
And you know, with you heard what Tom Hman said just there a couple of minutes ago uh at at the Turning Point event about, you know, how they're investigating her.
And uh we also heard the news yesterday that the DOJ is increasing dennaturalization efforts.
So I mean she might be in hot water here.
I'm just saying that much.
And to Todd Blanch, I'll say this to you
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