Thursday, December 25, 2025

Somali fraud scheme exposes billions siphoned from US, one state set to crack down - John Solomon

 

by John Solomon

Somali fraud scheme not limited to Minnesota: Missouri State Treasurer Vivek Malek is imposing new requirements that remittance payment businesses ensure that customers are lawfully in the U.S. before they can send money to foreign countries. He hopes other states follow suit. 

The Somali immigrant fraud scandal in Minnesota has put an uncomfortable spotlight on foreign remittance payments schemes that siphon billions of dollars a year from America to overseas. Although national attention has been focused on Minnesota, another state is poised to launch a crackdown.

Missouri State Treasurer Vivek Malek told Just the News he is teaming up with the state legislature to impose new requirements that remittance payment businesses ensure that customers are lawfully in the United States before they can send money to foreign countries, and he hopes other states will follow suit.

Cutting off incentives for illegal immigrants

"Missouri is stepping up by cutting off one of the biggest remaining incentives for illegal immigration, which is unverified foreign money transfers, because the economy is something that drives everybody to come to the United States," Malek said in a wide-ranging interview with the John Solomon Reports podcast this week. 

Malek said his research found that more than $200 billion leaves the United States annually through remittances, with Mexico alone receiving over $52 billion. Some sizable portion of that involves illegal immigrants, most of whom crossed the border during the Biden years.

"It has been found that at least $4.4 billion in remittances sent to Mexico have been tied to cartel money laundering through small wire transfers," he said. "Cartels don't sneak money across the border or throw the bag across the border. They wire it. And if we are serious about crushing cartels, we have to shut down their financial arteries."

Malek, a lawful U.S. immigrant who worked 16 years to become a U.S. citizen, ran last year for the state treasurer's job on a promise he would help President Donald Trump end the scourge of illegal immigration. Part of that effort includes stopping illegal immigrants from sending money overseas that they earned in the U.S. without paying taxes, he said.

"I'm making this distinction very clear: legal versus illegal immigration. I am all for legal immigration. I am not for illegal immigration. And what we saw is the diversity of the last four years, during the Biden administration, the floodgates were open on the southern border," he explained.

The House Committee on Oversight and Accountability, in conjunction with the House Committee on Homeland Security, reports that over 1.7 million known "gotaways" — illegal immigrants who have evaded Border Patrol — are now living in the interior of the United States without documentation and without having undergone any vetting by immigration officials. 

"We did not know who entered, who came, and then these people are working here. They undercut the paychecks of American citizens, and then we are just left with a bill on our hands, and then, without paying any taxes. This money is going out of the country [but] we do not know to where," Malek added.

Just the News first reported in August 2024 that on Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz's watch, hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars were defrauded from social safety net programs intended to feed the hungry or help families with autistic children, with the perpetrators often being Somali immigrants in that state.

Somali immigrants sent money that landed in al-Queda-affiliated groups

Since then, more than seven dozen defendants have been charged by federal prosecutors, and authorities recently revealed some of the taxpayer monies that were stolen were sent overseas through remittance payments and some may have landed in the coffers of the al-Qaeda-aligned terror group Al-Shabaab. 

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer recently told Just the News he believes such fraud occurred in other immigrant communities in blue states and has begun a broader investigation.

Preventative effort to stop illegal immigrants from sending money overseas

Malek said his partnership with the state legislature is designed to enact a law in Missouri that will require remittance businesses like Western Union and Moneygram to verify a customer's lawful immigration status prior to processing a foreign remittance; retain verification records for five years to ensure transparency; and to report violations to state regulators, with penalties including fines equal to 25% of the transfer.

"I would like to see this as more of a preemptive effort," Malek said. "We already have a mechanism in our state where you cannot obtain a driver's license if you cannot prove your legal status in the state. So we are going to use the same mechanism for these money transfers. 

"You cannot initiate a money transfer overseas unless you can verify somebody's legal status in Missouri, and hopefully this takes over and goes to every state across the 50 United States, that we can stop this illegal migration of money to different countries," he added. 


John Solomon

Source: https://justthenews.com/accountability/waste-fraud-and-abuse/somali-fraud-scheme-exposes-billions-remittances-siphoned-us

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