WASHINGTON – U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar was 19 years old in 2002 when she first applied for a Hennepin County marriage license with Ahmed Hirsi, a fellow Somali immigrant and "the love of my life."
Though the couple would have three children together, split, and later reconcile, they never legally married until January of 2018. By then Omar represented a state House seat from Minneapolis and was on her way to a historic and ultimately successful run for Congress.
Long-standing questions about her complicated marriage and immigration history have dogged her ever since, never more so than on Thursday when a state campaign finance board revealed that Omar and Hirsi filed joint tax returns in 2014 and 2015 — a period when she was legally married to another man.
The disclosure followed an inquiry sparked by a Republican lawmaker accusing Omar of using cash from her 2016 state House campaign to cover legal costs from her 2017 divorce from Ahmed Nur Said Elmi, a British national she had legally married in 2009 after her breakup with Hirsi.
Although the Minnesota Campaign Finance and Public Disclosure Board cleared Omar in the divorce case, the probe determined that campaign money was used for unrelated legal services pertaining to her joint tax filings with Hirsi. She was ordered to reimburse $1,500 in legal fees used to "correct" her 2014 and 2015 tax returns.
In all, she was assessed $3,469.23 in fines and reimbursements for the tax case and other violations of state campaign finance laws, most of them relating to non-campaign travel costs.
Omar's campaign provided a brief statement Friday from a spokesman in response to inquiries about her tax filings: "All of Rep. Omar's tax filings are fully compliant with all applicable tax law," the statement said. Omar declined an interview request for this story, and the campaign did not furnish copies of the tax returns in question.
But for Omar, who has long been in the sights of the Trump administration and conservative critics, the questions surrounding her faulty tax returns are unlikely to end soon. "Time to get federal IRS officials involved?" wrote conservative commentator Michelle Malkin on social media. "What say you all?"