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.

On Tuesday, Jan. 27, 2026, U.S. Representative Ilhan Omar was sprayed with an unknown liquid from a syringe during a town hall in Minneapolis, according to Minneapolis police and reporting from the Associated Press.

Police identified the suspect as 55-year-old Anthony Kazmierczak. Officers said he rushed toward Omar from the front row and used a syringe to spray the liquid onto her shirt before security intervened and he was taken into custody. He was booked into the Hennepin County Jail on suspicion of third-degree assault; officials said Omar was not injured.

The incident occurred moments after Omar criticized Immigration and Customs Enforcement and called for Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to resign. Witnesses and journalists at the event described a strong, vinegarlike odor, and photos showed a light-brown liquid in the device. Authorities said they were still working to identify the substance.

Omar initially declined to end the event and continued speaking for roughly 25 minutes after the man was removed. Video and subsequent reporting captured her remarks denouncing the attacker and insisting the meeting continue, including: “We are Minnesota strong and we will stay resilient in the face of whatever they might throw at us,” and, “We will continue. These f*ing aholes are not going to get away with it.”

Afterward, Omar told reporters she felt shaken but was not hurt, and she later wrote on X that she was “a survivor” and would not be intimidated.

President Donald Trump responded the next day in an interview with ABC News by calling Omar a “fraud” and suggesting, without offering evidence, that “she probably had herself sprayed, knowing her.” Trump acknowledged he had not watched video of the incident.

Separately, Trump has publicly asserted that the Justice Department and Congress are “looking at” Omar’s finances in connection with a large Minnesota fraud scandal. Publicly available reporting and official statements reviewed by major outlets describe scrutiny of political donations from individuals connected to Minnesota fraud investigations, including contributions that reached Omar and other Minnesota officials; however, there has been no public evidence presented that Omar is charged in, or formally implicated by prosecutors in, the underlying fraud cases.

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Reactions on X to Trump's claim that Ilhan Omar staged the syringe spray attack at her Minneapolis town hall are polarized. Trump supporters assert it was a hoax, citing the attacker's alleged left-wing ties and Omar's calm response. Critics accuse Trump of spreading unsubstantiated conspiracy theories and projecting his own past incidents. News outlets neutrally report the arrest and Trump's comments.

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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.

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.

President Donald Trump has threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act to deploy troops in Minneapolis, following deadly clashes between federal immigration agents and protesters. The escalation stems from a fatal shooting of a local woman by an ICE agent last week, sparking widespread unrest in the Twin Cities. Community organizers and Democratic leaders are resisting the surge of federal agents, while the administration defends its operations as necessary for public safety.

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President Donald Trump has instructed Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem not to send federal agents to protests in Democratic-led cities unless local authorities request help. This comes amid backlash over aggressive immigration enforcement in Minneapolis, including the fatal shooting of nurse Alex Pretti. The move coincides with negotiations over short-term DHS funding as Democrats push for restrictions on agent operations.

Federal authorities arrested three individuals following a protest that interrupted a church service in St. Paul, Minnesota, targeting a pastor affiliated with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The demonstration, linked to the recent fatal shooting of Renee Good by an ICE officer, drew swift action from the Trump administration amid escalating tensions over immigration enforcement. A judge rejected charges against journalist Don Lemon involved in the event, while Vice President JD Vance visited the state to assess the situation.

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Two days after a Border Patrol agent fatally shot unarmed U.S. ICU nurse Alex Pretti during a Minneapolis ICE raid—captured on video showing he was disarmed beforehand—backlash has escalated with bipartisan criticism, calls to oust DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, internal agency rifts, unfavorable polling, and fears of a government shutdown tied to DHS funding. President Trump defended Noem while deploying border czar Tom Homan to the state.

 

 

 

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