News illustration depicting a man spraying Rep. Ilhan Omar with liquid from a syringe during a Minneapolis town hall event.
News illustration depicting a man spraying Rep. Ilhan Omar with liquid from a syringe during a Minneapolis town hall event.
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DOJ charges Minnesota man accused of spraying Rep. Ilhan Omar with water and apple cider vinegar at Minneapolis town hall

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Federal prosecutors say Anthony Kazmierczak assaulted and intimidated Rep. Ilhan Omar when he rushed the stage at a Minneapolis town hall and sprayed her with a syringe containing water and apple cider vinegar. Omar later said threats against her rise when President Donald Trump uses hostile rhetoric about her; Trump suggested without evidence that the incident may have been staged.

Federal prosecutors have charged a Minnesota man with assaulting and intimidating U.S. Representative Ilhan Omar after authorities say he rushed toward the lawmaker during a town hall meeting in Minneapolis and sprayed her with a liquid from a syringe.

According to a federal criminal complaint, the man, Anthony Kazmierczak, is accused of “forcibly assaulting, opposing, impeding and intimidating” Omar during the Tuesday evening event. Investigators said authorities later determined the substance was a mixture of water and apple cider vinegar.

An affidavit describing the incident says Omar was speaking at a podium when Kazmierczak moved toward her and sprayed the liquid. Video of the episode shows the man yelling and gesturing as a security guard grabbed him and wrestled him to the ground, prompting shocked reactions from audience members.

The complaint also describes what officials said Kazmierczak appeared to say as he approached Omar: “She’s not resigning. You’re splitting Minnesotans apart.” Court papers further allege that several years earlier, Kazmierczak told an associate that somebody should “kill” Omar.

Omar was not reported to have been seriously injured and continued with the event, according to news reports. In a news conference the next day, she said threats against her increase when Trump targets her with hostile language, saying that “every time the president of the United States has chosen to use hateful rhetoric to talk about me and the community that I represent, my death threats skyrocket.”

Trump, who spoke with ABC News after the incident, suggested without evidence that it may have been staged. “She probably had herself sprayed, knowing her,” he said, adding that he had not watched video of the attack.

Kazmierczak has also faced state charges in connection with the incident, according to reporting on the case.

Claims circulating in some commentary about Omar and Minnesota’s Somali community—including assertions of “billions” in fraud tied broadly to the community, and renewed allegations that Omar committed immigration fraud by marrying her brother—were not supported by the court documents describing the attack and were not substantiated with specific evidence in the reporting reviewed. Omar has previously denied the marriage allegation, and no new court filing connected to the attack was cited as backing those claims.

Was die Leute sagen

X users discussed the DOJ's federal charges against Anthony Kazmierczak for assaulting Rep. Ilhan Omar by spraying her with apple cider vinegar at a Minneapolis town hall. Journalists reported on the charges and the suspect's prior threatening statement. Conservative users called for Omar's prosecution and deportation while questioning the attacker's MAGA ties. Left-leaning accounts linked the suspect to Trump supporters and blamed Trump's rhetoric. Skepticism persisted about whether the incident was staged.

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Rep. Ilhan Omar continues town hall speech undeterred after syringe spray attack, as police arrest suspect in Minneapolis.
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Trump suggests, without evidence, that Ilhan Omar staged syringe-spray attack at Minneapolis town hall

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President Donald Trump claimed in an ABC News interview that Representative Ilhan Omar “probably had herself sprayed” after a man used a syringe to spray her with a strong-smelling liquid during a Minneapolis town hall. Police arrested the suspect at the scene, and Omar continued the event, saying she would not be intimidated.

President Donald Trump this week harshly criticized Minnesota's Somali community, calling immigrants from Somalia "garbage," saying they had "destroyed our country" and talking about deporting Rep. Ilhan Omar. The remarks, delivered while he discussed alleged fraud in Minnesota's social services system, prompted Omar to condemn the comments as racist and politically motivated.

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President Donald Trump targeted Minnesota Representative Ilhan Omar in a speech on affordability in Pennsylvania last week, calling for her deportation amid audience chants of 'Send her back.' The remarks echo a pattern of criticism toward the Somali American congresswoman that dates back nearly a decade. Omar, a Black Muslim refugee-turned-citizen, continues to serve her district effectively despite the hostility.

Late-night host Jimmy Kimmel addressed a fatal shooting by an ICE agent in Minneapolis, where a 37-year-old woman was killed during an immigration operation. He displayed a T-shirt mocking former President Donald Trump and highlighted local backlash against federal agents. The incident has sparked debate over the use of force and immigration enforcement.

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Das US-Justizministerium hat Vorladungen an Gouverneur Tim Walz von Minnesota, Generalstaatsanwalt Keith Ellison und Bürgermeister Jacob Frey von Minneapolis geschickt. Die Politiker werden aufgefordert, Dokumente zur Zusammenarbeit mit Einwanderungsbehörden offenzulegen. Walz und Frey sehen darin einen Versuch der Einschüchterung durch die Trump-Regierung.

Two U.S. citizens, Renee Good and Alex Pretti, were fatally shot by federal immigration officers in Minneapolis, igniting widespread protests and political scrutiny of President Trump's aggressive enforcement tactics. New polls indicate six in 10 Americans disapprove of the agents' actions, prompting calls for reforms including body cameras and a softer approach. The incident has strained the Justice Department and fueled Democratic demands for oversight amid ongoing deportations.

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One day after bystander video contradicted federal claims in the January 24 fatal shooting of ICU nurse Alex Pretti during an ICE operation in Minneapolis, unlikely allies from left and right—including Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Marjorie Taylor Greene—condemned the Trump administration's defense, accusing it of hypocrisy on Second Amendment rights amid the ongoing immigration crackdown.

 

 

 

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